I’m a university professor and I often found myself getting stressed/anxious/overwhelmed by email at certain times (especially end-of-semester/final grades). The more emails that started to pile in, the more I would start to avoid them, which then started to snowball when people would send extra emails like “I sent you an email last week and haven’t got a response yet…”, which turned into a nasty feedback loop.

My solution was to create 10 new email folders, called “1 day”, “2 days”, “3 days”, “4 days”, “5 days”, “6 days”, “7 days”, “done”, “never” and “TIL”, which I use during stressful times of the year. Within minutes of an email coming into my inbox, I move it into one of those folders. “never” is for things that don’t require any attention or action by me (mostly emails from the department about upcoming events that don’t interest me). “TIL” is for things that don’t require an action or have a deadline, but I know I’ll be referring to a lot. Those are things like contact information, room assignments, plans for things, policy updates.

The “x days” folders are for self-imposed deadlines. If I want to ensure I respond to an email within 2 days, I put it in the “2 days” folder, for example.

And the “done” folder is for when I have completed dealing with an email. This even includes emails where the matter isn’t resolved, but I’ve replied to it, so it’s in the other person’s court, so to speak. When they reply, it’ll pop out of “done” back into the main inbox for further categorizing, so it’s no problem.

So during stressful, email-heavy times of year, I wake up to a small number of emails in my inbox. To avoid getting stressed, I don’t even read them fully. I read just enough of them that I can decide if I’ll respond to them (later) or not, categorize everything, and my inbox is then perfectly clean.

Then I turn my attention to the “1 day” box, which probably only has about 3 or 4 emails in it. Not so overwhelming to only look at those, and once I get started, I find I can get through them pretty quickly.

The thing I’ve noticed is that once I get over the initial dread of looking at my emails (which used to be caused by looking at a giant dozens-long list of them), going through them is pretty quick and smooth. The feeling of cleaning out my “1 day” inbox is a bit intoxicating/addictive, so then I’ll want to peek into my “2 days” box to get a little ahead of schedule and so on. (And if I don’t want to peek ahead that day, hey, no big deal)

Once I’m done with my emails, I readjust them (e.g., move all the “2 days” into “1 day”, then all the “3 days” into “2 days”, and so on) and completely forget about them guilt-free for the rest of day.

Since implementing this system a year ago, I have never had an email languish for more than a couple weeks, and I don’t get anxiety attacks from checking email any more.

  • @JujuM
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    39 months ago

    This is very satisfying!

    I have the very inelegant tactic of pinning stuff but pinned items have lost all meaning now I have about 15 things pinned to the top of my emails!

    The day thing is helpful because it is so hard to filter by importance when it’s just one big block of emails.

    Nice idea!

    • Seigest
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      fedilink
      English
      29 months ago

      This is what I am doing as well. The new outlook UI makes pinning things much easier. I devote some time to pinning important stuff. Some task which are lower priority I move to my Trello for further sorting when I have time.

      I avoid the flagging system as it’s too easy for me to ignore. Trello I can mark stuff as blocked, assign dates and ad notes and such.