Making Email Work for You – 12 Steps for Breaking the Crackberry Addiction

Recent stories of companies banning internal email or shutting down mobile access during the holidays may inspire envy from some employees, but extreme actions treat the symptoms rather than the root causes of email woes and mobile addiction.  

Instead of throwing the digital baby out with the bathwater, leaders must transform their team’s communication culture and email norms. Here are 12 steps for those seeking to recover from email overload:

  1. Involve your team in assessing and transforming the culture around email/mobile devices. Identify pain points around email usage today, and then clarify how your team would like to use email in the future. Create and agree to an action plan (e.g., develop off-hours email protocol; conduct training for email effectiveness).

  2. Schedule regular team updates to reduce the need for one-off emails. While “too many meetings” can be a challenge, having regularly scheduled time to discuss new developments, ongoing issues and upcoming activities for an initiative is valuable. Conducting effective meetings (e.g., clear agenda, effective facilitation, documentation of key outcomes) can reduce lengthy email chains and provide a valuable forum for team members to connect.

  3. Encourage employees to leverage mobile flexibility in a way that works for them. Many employees appreciate the ability to communicate remotely instead of being tied to a computer. Others may choose to read email outside of work hours to stay in the loop as emails arrive. This flexibility allows both night owls and early birds to catch up on email at their leisure. Just be sure to set clear expectations about expected response times (see next item).
  4. Be clear about when you will and won’t respond to messages. Communicating expectations for when you will respond to messages helps prevent unwelcome surprises and frustration. Leaders must work with their teams to set appropriate guidelines, such as creating an after-hours out-of-office message asking the sender to call if the request is urgent or identifying hours when employees are not expected to check email and agreeing to call or text if there is a true emergency.  
  5. Improve email quality by including all critical information. Senders should provide the key facts, but refrain from including unnecessary details and extraneous information. Use the subject line to summarize the topic and what is required of recipients (e.g., ACTION REQUESTED BY 2/1: Presentation Content for Investor Meeting).
  6. Don’t let your inbox be your “to do” list; leverage your email system’s productivity tools. Using your inbox as a primary record of “to dos” can be overwhelming. When you receive an email that requires additional time for resolution, add the item to a master task log that contains all of your outstanding “to dos” (including those generated from outside of email). Microsoft Outlook and other systems provide user-friendly task management tools that can be synched with your PDA.

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Recent Comments

I work at a startup and we're developing a tool that helps solve lots of these problems in one go. Check it out at http://zeninbox.com/signup and feel free to drop me an e-mail if you wan tto chat about what we are doing.

Posted By: Robin Message on Feb 2012

Wow, thank you for a topic very little discussed 'Email Management.' For myself, I arise early in the morning to manage my email message communications. I've found in todays hyper-digital world, the flow of E-information is constant so having email protocals or systems in place to better define engagement is critical. I believe professionals and organizations can benefit from implementing tips describes in articles which in turns could decrease organizational discontinuity and employee frustration to increase shared communication beyond the organizational lines.

Posted By: Rashid Brown on Mar 2012