michael-mccracken.net

Processing Email

I watched Merlin Mann’s Google Tech Talk about processing email yesterday, and even though I’d followed his posts on Inbox Zero when they came out, it’s good to get a reminder, and Merlin’s an entertaining speaker - I recommend you watch it.

He talks about strategies for keeping an empty inbox based on processing email as it comes in, and deciding what to do with each message as you read it so nothing just sits there reminding you of vague, unspecified amounts of work you need to deal with sometime.

You may have to accept on faith that an empty inbox is a worthwhile goal. Some people disagree, but I think it’s safe to say that for most people, moving the things you get as email into more appropriate places like notes apps, calendars or to-do lists is a great way to get in control of your work. Process it, then get to work. I’ve been doing this for a while, and it’s a good feeling to know you don’t have any surprises laying forgotten in old mail.

One point from Merlin’s talk that I’d like to comment on is that email is just a medium, and it’s worth thinking about whether it’s really the best medium for what you’re trying to do. This has been in my mind lately as I’ve been working on a project with a series of parallel email-based heavily technical conversations, sometimes with three or four people replying every couple of minutes. I struggle with the feeling that email is just not the best way to do this, but it seems like the only way to include everyone.

Merlin made the point that sometimes email dysfunction is just a symptom of an organizational communications problem, and no amount of email system adjustment can solve it. I agree - if you’re really just tracking bugs, use a bug tracker. If you’re coordinating things in real time, use IMs or IRC. If you’re collaborating on a document, use something like Google Docs. Please stop overloading email.

Previously:
Free advice about a pro email client
July 6, 2007

If you’re thinking of writing a commercially successful pro email client for Mac OS X, here’s some advice along the lines of what I wrote yesterday:

Make sure you’ve tried a lot of email clients. Try everything you can get your hands on. Really use each one - figure out what makes it different, and what [...]

read the rest.
It could work: a 3rd party email client for OS X
July 5, 2007

Brent Simmons started a discussion yesterday about email apps for OS X. To summarize: Apple Mail doesn’t do enough for everyone, and the alternatives aren’t so great either. But because it is free, there’s no incentive for a third party to do better.

Paul Kafasis agrees, saying “Don’t compete with Free and Don’t compete with Apple”. [...]

read the rest.
The read-once email client and reference emails
June 8, 2007

I’ve been dreaming of a new kind of email client, one that only lets you look at a new email once. That’s right - you get to scan it for 30 seconds and then you have to do something with it or it gets archived out of sight. And you can only look at one [...]

read the rest.
Feed, Endorsements & other Links

my bookmarks

© 2005 - 2007 Michael McCracken.