How You Can Gain Control of Your Email Inbox with Gmail and Dramatically Boost Your Productivity

 

by Nickolove Lovemore
Nowadays some individuals can receive in excess of a hundred emails a day. Upon opening many prompt you to further action:

~ Go to this website

~ Watch this video

~ Listen to this recording

And then there are the emails that you actually have to physically respond to. In this way a single email can take up half an hour or more of your time. You can literally spend hours trying to keep on top of your inbox and just when you think you’ve conquered it, in pops another email.

It’s a situation that is causing a great deal of stress and anxiety. It’s also a situation that is leading to a significant loss of focus and concentration on other important daily tasks; a loss of productive time; a loss of income and even a loss of quality family time.

Finding ways to regain control of your inbox so you stop this virtual haemorrhage of your time and boost your productivity is therefore of paramount importance.

Among professionals, Google Mail or Gmail is rapidly becoming the preferred free email account system. One of the reasons for this is the effectiveness of its spam filter. It ruthlessly extracts mail spam mail which you can then delete with the click of a button. Otherwise spam mail is automatically deleted after 30 days.

Gmail also has a very efficient search function which makes it fast and easy to use key words to search your email account for relevant email.

However, there are some other benefits to using Gmail which can help to reduce the amount of time you spend processing email.

Here are 3 ways in which you can use a gmail account to reduce the time you spend dealing with email:

1. Label Your Email

Gmail allows you to label your email. This helps to make emails coming from a particular individual or company stand out from your other email. Once you’ve created a label you can also search your emails using that label.

2. Colour Code Your Emails

Taking the labelling of your email a step further, you can also colour code the labels that you create. When choosing a colour for a particular label I recommend choosing a colour that is normally associated with that individual’s website or even the person themselves. Colour-coding your emails make it easy for you to identify the emails that you definitely want to read.

3. Filter Your Emails

There are some emails from some individuals or companies that you may want or need to read promptly. In contrast, there may be other emails that you can check on a weekly rather than on a daily basis. With the latter, you can create a filter so that these emails are immediately sent to your designated folder and archived rather than going direct to your inbox.

In addition to archiving emails you can use Gmail’s filtering system to:

~ Mark the email as read

~ Star it

~ Label it

~ Forward it to another account, or

~ Delete

You can also “whitelist” emails coming from certain accounts so that they are never sent to spam.

When setting up your email filter you can search for all email that meet the filtering criteria you’ve set up, e.g.

~ From

~ To

~ Subject

~ Has the words

~ Doesn’t have

~ Attachment

You can then apply the filter to all of the emails that meet these criteria. If you wanted, you could then even archive all these emails just by pressing a button which is another advantage of the Gmail system - it allows you to use a wide range of shortcuts.

True, you have to spend some time learning the shortcuts but once you do you’ll find that you can significantly reduce the time you spend processing email and dramatically boost your productivity.

For a FREE video with 7 expert tips on how you can increase your productivity and boost your profits visit Maximise Your Productivity. And for an excellent series of time management interviews (audio + transcripts) plus some very special bonuses visit Learn Expert Time Management.

Article Source: PLJMagazine.com









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