Time Management Tips - Organizing E-mail
How do you focus on your urgent
e-mail and organize the rest for your review? Think about how you handle
your paper mail. You probably sort your paper mail quickly before you read
it to figure out what to look at first, what to read later, and what to
throw away. Here are some similar ways to automatically process and
prioritize your electronic mail for better and faster results:
(Although the following tips refer to
Microsoft Outlook, many of these features are similar to those found in
other mail systems. For specific how-to steps, and more e-mail and Outlook
tips, visit The Software Pro website.)
1. Color Code to Identify Key Messages
Color code priority messages to quickly
identify e-mail from your most important contacts such as management, staff,
or team members. To apply colors in Microsoft Outlook, highlight a message
from a contact, choose Tools > Organize, select the option Using Colors and
pick how you want to color-code your incoming messages from the specific
contact.
2. Streamline with Categories and Folders
Stop using your Inbox as a reference system
filled with messages that don’t require an immediate action. To further
organize your messages, create categories and folders with useful labels
such as Team Members, Projects, Personal, and others. The Categories feature
in Microsoft Outlook, for instance, helps to organize and view active
messages into groups within your Inbox. Create and use e-mail folders to
store messages that you have already handled and wish to keep for history or
folders for e-mail that contains informational reading and general
reference.
Note that folders and categories sort in
alphabetical order which is not likely to place your priority items at the
top. Adding a letter or number at the beginning of a label, such as a-Team
Members and b-Projects, will sort these towards the top of your Inbox.
3. Filter with Rules
Rules are instructions or filters that
automatically categorize, organize, and prioritize messages based on
conditions that you set. As new messages are received in Microsoft Outlook,
right-click on the message and left click on the command Create a Rule to
apply a category or move the message to a folder. If all you do is apply
rules, you may be able to get through e-mail in half the time it took
before.
4. Learn Easy Navigation
Stop wasting time by moving in and out of each
message and start applying simple navigation tricks. In Microsoft Outlook,
for instance, you can move in your Inbox with the up or down arrow key to
select a message. Then press [Enter] to open the message. To move to the
next message directly from the current e-mail, look for toolbar buttons with
arrows or press [Ctrl] + > for the next message and [Ctrl] + < for the
previous e-mail. Press [Esc] to close the active message.
5. Sort to Find Messages
To quickly sort your e-mail messages, click
once on a column heading for the new order you want such as sender, subject
or date. For instance, to sort messages by the sender, click once on the
Sender heading. By clicking twice on a column heading, the sort order
changes from ascending (A-Z) order to descending (Z-A) order. By the way,
the abbreviations RE and FW in the Subject line are ignored when you sort
messages alphabetically by subject.
Implementing these ideas for overcoming e-mail
overload can help you become more productive and free you from your Inbox.
© 2004 by Dawn Bjork Buzbee
Dawn Bjork Buzbee is The Software Pro™ and a certified
Microsoft Office Expert and Microsoft Office Specialist Master Instructor.
Dawn shares smart and easy ways to effectively use software and technology
through her work as a speaker, trainer, and consultant. Visit
http://www.SoftwarePro.com for great Microsoft Office software tips and
tricks or to contact Dawn.
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