5 ways to stop email ruling your life Posted on October 9, 2018
1. The two minute rule
Most email stress comes from the fact that no one ever knows exactly how long it’s going to take to reply to emails. It’s an understandable fear but the truth is most people spend far too much time writing emails. Almost every email anyone receives can be answered in two minutes.
Start setting yourself a timer for email replies, stick to it religiously and your inbox will stay in a manageable state. If you give yourself just two minutes to reply to every email you can power through 10 emails in just 20 minutes which will save both your time and your sanity.
2. The twice a day rule
Inbox burnout is often caused by over-checking your inbox. It’s become habitual for many people to check their inbox every 20 or so minutes but this is a huge waste of time. Set a morning and an evening email checking time and only check your email at those times. There’s no point in opening your inbox unless you plan on sending or replying to your emails.
Knowing you have an inbox full of unanswered emails that you don’t have time to reply to is pointless. You should only ever open your inbox if you’re actually going to do something once you’re in there.
3. Unsubscribe
There are a number of programs that allow you to bulk unsubscribe from those annoying email lists you signed up to years ago.
The reason why most people have so much spam and junk mail is because it’s really time-consuming to manually unsubscribe from email lists, so most people tend to put this task off. Unsubscribing from unwanted emails will significantly improve the state of your inbox.
4. The deal or delete rule
This rule works brilliantly for people who feel the need to respond to every email. You don’t have to reply to every single email. Many people have email paralysis because they feel the need to reply to the 20 people who sent them questions that could easily have been Googled.
If this sounds like you, try the ‘deal or delete’ rule. When you open your inbox you have to either deal with the email or delete it. Those are the only two options. You’ll find yourself deleting a lot more emails than you thought you would.
5. The deal with it now rule
This one is more for people who get large volumes of email and end up with a bursting inbox at the end of every week. Set yourself a rule that if you open your inbox, you have to get it to zero every single time. If you only have five minutes to spare, don’t open your inbox.
That way you will only go into your email when you have a chunk of time to deal with it and it will save you from wasting 10 minutes every half an hour browsing your inbox instead of dealing with it.