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Is your inbox overloaded? Feel like your email is controlling your life? You need the ninja way of email management! In this short ebook, an edited extract from Graham Allcott's acclaimed How to be a Productivity Ninja, you'll learn the simple skills to get your inbox down to zero - and keep it there, day after day. Following Allcott's straightforward advice, anyone - from a student to a Chief Executive - can keep on top of their messages and feel in command, calm and up to date. You'll learn to be ruthless, to separate thinking from doing, and how to make your email inbox work for you - and not the other way around!
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Seitenzahl: 48
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2015
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GET YOUR INBOXDOWN TO ZERO
GRAHAM ALLCOTT
This is an edited extract fromHow to be a Productivity Ninja by Graham Allcott
AVAILABLE NOW WHEREVER BOOKS ARE SOLD!
Published by Icon Books LtdOmnibus Business Centre,39–41 North Road, London N7 9DPemail: [email protected]
ISBN: 978-184831-996-7
Text and illustrations copyright © 2015 Graham Allcott
The author and artist have asserted their moral rights.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, or by any means, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Managing our attention is the new key to Ninja-level productivity. The reason this is so crucial these days is simple: information overload.
Information overload – not just from email, but from the internet, social networking sites, 24-hour news, work intranets and the sheer speed and volume of modern knowledge work – is a much bigger challenge than it was even two years ago, let alone ten years ago, and this carries a major threat to our productivity. The more information we subject ourselves to, the more likely our attention moves away from the things we really need to focus on.
‘One of the most important soft skills you can have is figuring out how to deal with a high volume of email. And the only way to do that is to put some kind of a system in place that’s simple and repeatable and is going to allow you to have an actual life outside of email.’
– Merlin Mann, 43folders.com and creator of Inbox Zero
Email in particular is a prime offender here. Research carried out by the Universities of Glasgow and Paisley has discovered that one third of email users get stressed by the heavy volume of emails they receive.
When I was a busy Chief Executive, and before I had any need to invest time in thinking about my own productivity (since, as a Chief Executive, I had plenty of people in the organization to be productive on my behalf!), my email management was completely out of control and it stressed me out. I had an inbox with 3,000 emails not yet dealt with – and rising! – and I would all too often need prompting to meet necessary commitments and deadlines. This approach would frequently mean I would miss opportunities to be proactive as well as obviously miss the deadlines concealed way down somewhere in the depths of my inbox.
Of course, even more stressful than knowing you’ve missed something vital that you needed to act on is not knowing that you’re missing something vital that you need to act on! The fact that you don’t even know what other opportunities or threats lie buried in that stack of emails, and how important that information and those opportunities could potentially be, is at the root of the stress most people feel about their email, and the obligation people feel to be constantly connected to it.
People become a slave to their email account as it piles up even further and it quickly becomes a constant drain on attention. When I was a Chief Executive I was never off my emails: I was constantly distracted by new emails coming in, and spent half my time scrolling up, scrolling down, scrolling up, scrolling down – never actually fixing the mountainous problem in front of me, just regularly reminding myself that the mountain was still there to be climbed. Sound familiar at all?
THE PARADIGM SHIFT: CONNECTIVITY VS. PRODUCTIVITY
Today, my email practice is very different. I have a system in place that gets my inbox to zero several times a day, leaving me clear about what opportunities or threats are lurking, and miraculously, I’m also able to track and follow up on particular emails at the right times so that things don’t fall through the cracks and get lost in the back and forth of email. In this chapter I’ll show you how this works and by following the exercises in this book, we’ll get your email inbox to zero in the next couple of hours if you’re up for it.
BEING ‘CONNECTED’ REQUIRES VERY LITTLE THINKING. DEFINING THE MEANING OF INPUTS REQUIRES A LOT OF THINKING
It’s time for you to rethink email. Let’s start with the uncomfortable truth about the way that we work. As soon as more than one thing has our attention and we experience information overload, our instinctive reaction is that we want to feel busy in order to feel like we’re making progress. Because as a species we’re inherently lazy, we gravitate to the easiest way to achieve this illusion of progress.
We check for what’s new, we scroll up and down, we fiddle around creating archive folders, we check for other new information (for example on our social media profiles or the news or our phone) and generally begin to develop an addiction to being connected. What we’re addicted to here is the illusion of productivity for a minimal payoff of thinking.
Getting your inbox to zero breaks out of this bad habit and changes the way you see email; you instead become addicted to being safe in the knowledge that all of the decision-making and thinking work has been done. The system itself forces Ninja-like decisiveness and discipline that’s needed for you to make the difficult decisions about emails as soon as you read them, reducing procrastination time, increasing clarity about your work and vastly reducing the stress that email overload causes.
‘What gets measured gets managed.’
– Peter Drucker