I forgot the quote but it is very spot on imho: your inbox is someone elses todo list. Especially starting the day with email is one of the worst things you can do imho. It puts you into reactive mode.
You want to stay pro-active and actively chose the things you need to be on top of.
I keep a few tabs open on email threads that are important to me and for people I'm close to I usually tell them to reach out to me via facebook (white-list opt-in vs opt-out).
I can not emphasize enough how big of a game changer that was. People think about handling email and inbox zero all the time and obsess about it as if processing all emails in a day was the key to getting stuff done. I think that's too narrow of a pov.
Disclaimer: CEO & Product @ blossom.io
The nice thing about this is that I can add to the task list easily by e-mailing myself and check on past things by just looking through things I've sent to myself. :)
Disclaimer: I built Devarist.
I'm a little worried that there seems to be a lack of searching through notes. I understand that might just be a feature that's not enabled for the free version, but personally I'd like to see how every feature of the site would work, if possible, before upgrading (even if the search is only for the limit of the past 10 notes).
Search is near the top of my Trello board, it's coming soon.
-Do it
-Decide When
-Delegate It
-Delete
Everything email gets responded, forwarded, allocated to a task with dates or placed in the calendar with time booked. I try and limit this review to the morning/lunch and afternoon. Otherwise I turn of all email notifications (with a few VIP's set up) and crack on with the day.
Inbox Zero seriously depreciates my effectiveness. Not every email is a task, some are echos of tasks and some are simply OK to let sit.
By becoming task-based, a lot of the people-based stuff can be left behind. And making people-stuff tasks, well, the people part that has just become a task, and is not a check-off and not a meaningful interaction.
I recommend taking a look at the relationships and tasks you with to garner/complete and go from there. Managing yourself is not managing day-to-day tasks, but is.
You don't want to miss an email from your team or from your investors but at the same time it is perfectly fine to not chase inbox zero, that's a very menial and time-consuming effort if not busy-work.
I have a weekly calendar, one column for each day and it is 8.5x11 landscape. I plot out my week with things like errands, standard weekly things like "put out the garbage", "pick up co-op share", etc. Add in work tasks, etc. Cross off when done. Circle when not finished.
I also have a "shit list" as it is entitled. Tasks here need to get completed or bad things happen :-)
So I carry around a few pieces of paper and my trusty pen.
http://jamesclear.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/eisenhower-...