The Success Report
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Tag >> control your email
Recently I wrote a book called recently I wrote a book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. I intend to put together a number of articles where I extract these tips, ideas and strategies from the book for you to read. Each article will have five different tips and insights. You will notice that these tips and insights are simple, straightforward and useful in helping you manage an ever increasing inbox. Look out for the remaining articles which cover many of the strategies you'll find in the book. If you do have other strategies that you think would be useful to me to add in my next edition, why not send me an e-mail. 1. Double check who the email is going to One of the easiest mistakes to make is to send an email to the wrong person. It is easy to scroll down through the address book and click on a name and hit send only to find out that you ‘shot and missed’ when you selected the email addresses. This can be embarrassing at best and disastrous if you send confidential information to the wrong person. 2. If you have one or many email addresses, check them often The whole idea of email is to stay in touch faster than ‘snail mail’ , so check your business and personal email addresses regularly. 3. Set up an ’Auto Reply’ service when you are away Have you ever sent an email to someone and received an automated response back? It will be something like ‘I will be out of the office until next Tuesday. If you need urgent assistance please call Sally Smith on (03) 9533-9533’. Auto responses are a nice feature because at least you are kept informed as to why you are not hearing from someone you have sent an email to. Creating an auto responding message before going on annual leave is positive and proactive. You might also want to consider creating a message if you are going to be unavailable for a couple of hours. This is especially useful if you receive a lot of Emails. Most people who will send you an email and get back your reply stating that you are out of the office and will be back in the afternoon will at least be clued up to when they might receive a response back from you. 4. Follow the correct usage of grammar and punctuation Just because you are writing an email and not a formal letter doesn't mean you can drop the need for writing properly. Whether you are writing an email or a formal report, good grammar and spelling are essential. Glaring mistakes in your style or ability to use the English language throws a dim light on your competency as a professional person. So if you are writing to a customer with a major proposal and fail to use proper grammar, your proposal not only looks sloppy but also appears not very well thought through. If you feel that you do not have good writing skills, or you have poor English skills, for goodness sake take a writing course. If you don't know when to use a semi-colon compared to using a colon, then it's time for some revision. One final Thought While it might be alright to abbreviate your SMS messages, it's not when you are using Email. 5. Be Careful sending emails in HTML Most email software gives you the option to send email in plain text or HTML. HTML email allows you to add graphics such as graphic headers and footer. The problem is that HTML Emails and can often get caught by email filters. Consider using plain text. It means that your Emails have a greater chance of getting through to the people you are sending your messages to. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Is your inbox overflowing? Would you like to feel more in control of your inbox? In this article I will be sharing five strategies from my book, "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. After you have read these five strategies, why not have a look for the other articles where I cover other ideas and insights about using e-mail more effectively. 6. Learn to type (Properly) Your ability to type quickly and accurately is your ticket to a more productive day. If you still ‘hunt and peck’, take some basic lessons in typing or try using some inexpensive ‘learn to type’ software. 7. Make sure your email date and time Stamps are Correct The date and time stamp are taken from your computer clock so it is important to ensure your computer clock is up to date. Having the correct time and date on your computer helps those who you are emailing know how long ago you sent the email and if they should give your message priority. You can update your computer clock using the control panel. 8. Email is no place to get nasty Sarcasm and passive-aggressive conversations don’t work at all well in Email. If you have ever misinterpreted the tone in someone's email you already know the dangers of not being clear and concise with your email messages. 9. Structure a business email like a business letter Email usually follows general business writing principles. When writing an email to a colleague or client, it's important to establish your reason for writing the email in the first sentence or two. Then, after adding any facts or context, tell your reader clearly what you would like them to do next. In this way the person who receives your email can quickly establish its importance and value when they see it in their email preview pane during a quick email scan through their Inbox. Like business letters, your email sentence structures should be concise, logical and built upon one another. 10. Create and use an email signature An email signature sits just above the footer of your email and lists your name, title, company name, phone number, email address, and other useful information. A signature not only makes your Emails look professional, it saves time by not having to type this information into every Email. Even if you have a default signature, you can change it to another signature when you are writing an Email. For example, you might want one signature for your business email and another for your personal Email. You can ever add company logos of photographs for a more elaborate signature. To use one of your other signatures when writing an Email, simply click on ‘insert’ while in the compose email mode in Outlook. Scroll down on the drop down box to ‘signature’ and all of the signatures you have already set up will be shown to you. Pick the one you want and click it and it will appear anywhere in the email you want it to show up. If you are not sure how to create signatures, ask a colleague, contact your help desk, or try Googling it. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
If only your Microsoft Outlook program came with a manual that taught you how to better manage your e-mail! That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 11. Preview your emails in your’preview’ Set up the preview pane so you can ‘preview’ your email before you open it. This allows you to quickly look through your messages to determine if the message is spam, low priority, or something you need to action now. 12. Check ALL of your email addresses directly from outlook Hotmail, Yahoo, and Gmail won’t tell you this but you can check those Emails without ever opening your browser. These free email sites want you to log in so they can show you advertising. But you can set up your Outlook software to pull ALL of your Emails right to your Inbox. Do a bit of research with each of your email addresses and you can usually find the instructions for setting up another email source in Outlook. There is no limit to the number of email addresses Outlook will check for you. 13. Keep your address book constantly up to date Keeping a record of your favourite email contacts is extraordinarily easy in Outlook. The easiest way to add someone to your Outlook Address book is while looking at their Email. One of the easiest way to capture an address is to drag-and-drop the entire email directly onto the address book icon at the bottom of Outlook. Doing this will automatically create a new address entry. 14. Learn to live without printed emails Only print Emails if you really need a paper trail. You can keep all the records you want digitally, so don’t fall into the habit of printing out Emails. It’s a waste of your time and is not friendly to the environment. 15. Organise your address book with folders You will be surprised when the number of email contacts you have runs into the hundreds. With that many names in your address book, it’s hard to find the ones you use all the time. So organise your email contacts into categories. You can create as many categories as you want. Categories could include: Customers. Colleagues. Friends. Family, or Project Team Members. Do some research into setting up and using categories. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Wasn't e-mail supposed to make our life less complicated? Do you find yourself spending way too much time on e-mail every day? Would you like to reduce the size of your ever expanding inbox? That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 16. Delete junk emails as fast as they arrive (and set up the spam filter) Don’t let your email box fill up with spam, newsletters, or emails that you will not read again. An empty Inbox is an efficient email box. Learn how to use the ‘junk Email’ filter so that you won't keep getting email from people or organisations you don't want to hear from again. 17. Set outlook up to empty your deleted items mail box every time you exit Not a lot of good can come from hundreds of deleted items in your deleted folder in Outlook. Get rid of it every day (at at least every week) by setting up the option of deleting email every time you exit Outlook. If you have Emails in there you want to save, don’t delete them in the first place; instead put them in a folder to read later. 18. Be sure you understand the difference between cc and bcc CC stands for Courtesy Copy and BCC stands for Blind Courtesy Copy. The difference is that if you are sending an email to one person and wants others to see the Email, you add the email addresses of others who you want to see the email also and put their addresses in the CC box. The email is not for them to action. It is simply a courtesy to them in the loop. If you want to send the message to someone else but not disclose that you are doing so, you use BCC. Blind Courtesy Copy sends that person a copy of the Email, however their name is not shown to the others who also receive the Email. The pros and cons of Blind Courtesy Copy? CON Some people use blind courtesy copy as a way of protecting their butts. In other words, they will surreptitiously put the email address of their manager in the BCC area. While including your manager as a silent receiver can sometimes be a good idea (as a simple courtesy or to keep them informed of your progress with a client), it's rather sneaky if you are including them for ulterior motives or ‘political’ reasons. PROS One of the advantages of using BCC would be sending out something like a request or a memo to a group of suppliers or providers that are all competitors. For example you might want to get a price on a particular product from half a dozen of your preferred suppliers. First of all, you don't want all of the suppliers to know who you buy from. Second of all you don't want each of them to know who you are sending this email to. It would make good sense to place all of the email addresses of your suppliers in the BCC area. Obviously when you send out the email you will not be addressing it to a particular person so there will be no need for a formal greeting with a person's name at the very beginning of the Email. 19. Don’t use 'Emoticons’' or other email shorthand for business Smiley faces and other ‘emoticons’ can add a nice touch when emailing friends or when using SMS on your mobile phone. It's common for people to text you with phrases such as LOL for ‘Laugh out Loud’, SYS for ‘See You Soon’ or FYI to say ‘For Your Information’. So what is the business rule for using emoticons, acronyms and other abbreviations such as these? It’s a simple rule – don’t. Treat every work email like a business conversation on the phone. After all, you want your email to be taken seriously so stay away from anything cute or trendy when it comes to work Emails. Leave the fun stuff for your Hotmail or Gmail account. Work email is strictly for business. 20. Stay away from fancy fonts, colours or special effects A business email that is dressed up with frilly stationary and other special effects lessens the business impact of the communication. Fonts such as Tahoma 10 point or Calibri 11 point are the best fonts to use for sending and reading Email. Stay away from fonts such as Comic Sans and Times New Roman for Email. Times New Roman is great as a printed font, but not so good for reading off a computer monitor. Comic Sans is a very cute, child-like font. It is great for casual, personal Emails, but quite inappropriate in a corporate setting. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
I get really depressed when I hit send and receive and end up with 30 or 40 new e-mails coming into my inbox. How about you? Are you looking for a way to better manage your e-mail? Would you like to feel more in control, rather than having your e-mail control you? That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 21. Colour code important emails as they come In. One terrific function that can help you pick out Emails that are important is having Outlook colour code your Emails as they come into your Inbox. For example, you can create a colour rule so that Outlook will colour an email from a certain person, company or group. By using colour coding, certain Emails will stand out from the rest which is tremendously useful, particularly if you get a lot of Email. Setting up a message rule to colour code your Emails is just as easy as setting up a rule for moving Emails to certain folders. Just go through the same steps we described above but when you come to the action you want Outlook to take, check ‘Highlight It with Colour’. Then in the box where the rule is being created, you will see the word ‘colour’ there which is also a hyperlink. Click on ‘colour’ and you can pick the colour you want that email to become in your Inbox. 22. Do not let outlook automatically add people to your address book There is a setting in Outlook where anyone who sends you an email automatically goes into your address book. This is a good way to end up with thousands of addresses in your address book, many of which over time become essentially useless to you. Turn OFF that feature in the Options area. 23. Always do a speel and grammer check Just like in Microsoft Word, you should get Outlook (or your preferred email software) to check your spelling either as you are writing your email or just before you hit send. It’s a good idea to turn on spell check and leave it on whenever you are writing Emails directly within Outlook. The steps for turning spell check on are simple. Go to the ‘options’ menu in Outlook for details. 24. Set up message rules so outlook keeps things organised for you Outlook allows you to create ‘rules’ so you can have any email moved automatically to any folder you like. A rule can be set up based on who sent it, the subject line or almost any other criteria you choose. This is a great way to keep your Inbox empty of things like newsletters or email you know that are not important to read this week, but you do need to file away (for later). Just let Outlook send every email that you don't need to read (and has come into your Inbox), into its proper folder. You can look at them by category or based on what you want to see, not simply by what arrives in your Inbox. 25. Set a time at the end of the day to do email maintenance With so many people sending and receiving hundreds of Emails each week, taking time to manage your own email should become a part of your working week as much as brushing your teeth is part of your ‘getting-ready-in-the-morning’ ritual. So set aside a certain time towards the end of your week to do your email maintenance. This includes reading new Emails that you haven't had a chance to review or respond to earlier in the week. Managing your email also means cleaning out your Inbox by deleting Emails you don’t need, creating address book entries for contacts you will need again, updating your message rules, and making sure there are no important messages or tasks that have been overlooked, misplaced or misfiled. It's also a good idea to check your calendar (for appointments due tomorrow) as well as your task list for things to do today and tomorrow.
If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Do you go home at night and login to your e-mail? Do you sit watching TV with one eye on the TV program and the other looking at your inbox? How do you feel about that? Does your partner a key issue of spending more time on your e-mail than with them? That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 26. When it’s time to pick a new email address, make it easy to remember We have all seen those wildly creative email addresses. You know, the ones like, bigbadpete87687982@hotmail.com, or the-party-girlz-qw234@gmail.com. I am sure the owners of these email addresses are really nice people; however these email addresses aren't that easy to remember and may not give people a strong impression of the owner. Instead, try creating a simple, memorable and useable email address. Typical formats are: john.m.jones@youremail.com john.m.jones@youremail.com j.m.jones@youremail.com jones.j@youremail.com jones-john.michael@youremail.com Unless you are trying to be really funny, choose an email address that is easy to remember, easy to type and doesn't give the receiver of your Emails the wrong impression. 27. Use ’Nested Folders’ to organise your emails You can set up extra folders in addition to the ones that come preinstalled with Outlook. You can organise your business Emails, and personal Emails into main category folders. In fact you can even set up folders within folders (called nested folders). As an example, under a folder called ‘Clients’, you can have sub-folders with the names of your clients. You could create a folder called ‘Projects’. Then create sub-folders with the names of your current projects. 28. Follow up immediately when an email bounces From time to time email servers go down, or perhaps you have typed in an incorrect email address. Whether it’s for routine maintenance or some other reason, keep an eye on your Inbox for email bouncing back. Usually it's an incorrect email address that's the problem, but if the email address looks okay, sends it again in 30 minutes time. If that fails, call the person you are sending this to and check the email address. 29. Use email priority settings; but don’t overuse it Sending a ‘priority’ email is an excellent strategy for letting the recipient know that your incoming email message needs their immediate attention. Most of the Emails we send out will carry a ‘priority’ of normal. But you can raise the priority to high, which will make your email stand out in the list of Emails that your recipient receives. In the messages window, a red ‘!’ will appear indicating that this email is very important. Further, when the person then opens your Email, a yellow bar will appear stating, ‘This email is high priority.’ Remember the boy who cried wolf! Use priority settings with restraint. You don’t want to be ‘The Emailer who cried wolf’ by making every email you send out high priority. By saving this function for messages that really do need immediate attention, this feature will be useful for getting attention when it really IS needed. 30. Create a new subject line with each email you send Very often a subject will get ‘discussed’ at length with many Emails going back and forth. If your email partner is saving Emails, they will quite possibly keep all of the Emails about your topic in one folder. So change the subject line each time you email back so they can quickly find important information about your discussions and not end up with dozens of Emails with the same subject line collecting in their Inbox. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Could it be possible that you are addicted to e-mail? Do you get withdrawal symptoms if you haven't received an e-mail within 15 or 20 minutes? Do you constantly feel the need to look at your Blackberry or iPhone? If you have answered yes, you might be addicted to e-mail overload. Wasn't the world less complicated before e-mail arrived? Well, whether you like it or not, it is a reality. E-mail is here to stay and it is only going to increase in the weeks, months and years ahead. That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 31. Learn to tell urgent email from unimportant messages The problem with having a very active Inbox is that it won't take too long before you starts overlooking Email. So learn how to flag the important Emails and give them priority attention. Those other lower priority Emails can usually wait to be reviewed and answered after lunch. Seriously, unless you have nothing else to do, don't waste huge amounts of your valuable time with low priority Email; especially before midday. 32. The value of using a ‘‘Read Receipt’’ A powerful companion to setting an email to high priority is to request a read receipt once the recipient of your email has read it. In this way you can confirm that your message got to your recipient and that they have read it (or at least seen it). While people get annoyed with seeing too many read receipts in their Inbox, they do serve a useful function. Because you ask the reader to take the step of sending you an acknowledgement, they will probably consider that your email has some importance to you. WARNING! You should use read receipt with some care and discretion. You should not use it if you feel there is any chance it might offend or be considered a bit too pushy. Never use this function for trivial Emails. By the way, consider the fact that you are probably not going to get an email back on every read receipt that you send out, so use it only when the issue under consideration needs fairly urgent attention or confirmation. 33. Don’t rely only on a ‘’Read Receipt’’ While using read receipt can be useful, remember that getting a read receipt doesn’t mean the recipient read or even understood your Email. If your reader didn’t have preview on, they may not have understood what was in your message. If you need someone to read, understand and then action your Email, it's best to follow it up with a phone call. 34. Clean out your ‘’Sent Items’ folder often A Sent Items box with thousand of Emails is of no value and just makes your email system slower. Once every couple of weeks review your Sent Items folder and if there are any messages that you want to keep, move them to a folder. Any other Emails in your Sent Items folder that do not need saving can be deleted. 35. Learn what you should do if you lose an important email Outlook (and most other email programs) can help find lost or misplaced Email. For example, all sent Emails go to your Sent Items folder. Even if you delete an Email, it doesn’t leave your computer, it goes to your Deleted Items folder. So before you panic, look there first. If you believe the email you are looking for is gone from your email program, you can first of all check with your IT department or internet service provider. Sometimes there is a backup service which means that the IT department or ISP might have a copy. This request will be time consuming and not 100% guaranteed, so why not call the person who sent you the message, explain your situation and ask if they could resend the Email. This option is usually faster. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Do you dread going away for a few days on a holiday knowing that when you come back you will have hundreds of new e-mails in your inbox? Do you spend the first morning you arrive back at work going through a huge inbox? Would you like to reduce the size of your inbox and feel more in control? If you answered yes I have some great news; I can offer you some ideas and suggestions to take back control of your inbox. That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 36. Be careful about forwarding attachments Forwarding Emails is a great way to let others know of important updates you have received. But when you hit forward, any attachments go as well. Delete any unneeded attachments. This is especially important when forwarding an email to a group. 37. Find other ways to send large files instead of using attachments People HATE receiving huge files by Email. It is slow, clogs up the email server and can waste time. Instead try uploading large files (say more than 3 megabytes) to a shared folder on your organisation's server, or to a free service like www.mediafire.com. Once you have uploaded the large file, sites like www.mediafire.com will provide you a url link to the file. This link can be sent to your recipient in an Email, allowing him or her to click on the hyperlink and download the larger file from there. Please be aware that while these free services are very reliable, use your common sense. Don't send confidential or super-sensitive files using these free services. While the chances of these files being intercepted by a third party is low, it's better to be safe than sorry. For added security, try zipping the file and using an encrypted password. 38. Get to the top of your customers and colleague's email queue If you want your email to get noticed, make sure it hits your recipients email box last. For example, when you open your email in the morning, have you ever noticed how dozens of new Emails fill your screen, withthe older Emails dropping down from view? The best way to make sure yours doesn’t fall down in the list and will get seen is to send it at the end of the day or when you know they will be probably be checking and reviewing their Email. For example if you write an email and send it on Sunday night, (not Saturday morning), then it will be closer to the top on Monday morning when your recipient opens his or her email program. 39. Make sure your attachments work The best way to be sure any files that you send to others will work is to open it and try it first. Make sure that you only use formats that virtually everybody uses. PDF files, Microsoft Word, Excel documents or PowerPoint presentations are common. Beware. Some newer PDF and MS Office documents are not compatible with older Acrobat or MS Office versions, so send your attachments using the most common format or compatible version. 40. Use short subject lines Don’t use the subject line to type your entire message (unless it is really short and simple). Keep the subject line short but significant so the person reading your email will see the subject line, know what the email is about and open the email and read your message. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Isn't it interesting that most people in the workplace have never had any formal training about better managing their e-mail! E-mail is now the most important communication tool in the workplace. A few years ago most of us would pick up the telephone and call someone. Today, it's much easier to send them an e-mail. This all sounds very good, but why it is doing is that it is clogging up our inbox and taking us away from doing important work. Don't get me wrong, e-mail is a very important tool, but do you think that at times it is overused? Would you like to gain control of your inbox? If you answered yes I have some great news; I can offer you some ideas and suggestions to take back control of your inbox. That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 41. Use ’Blind Courtesy Copy’ (BCC) with care ‘Blind Courtesy’ copy (BCC) lets you keep others in the email conversation loop without alarming or notifying those who you are writing to. It gives you a lot of control to make sure ‘certain people’ stay in the loop without making it obvious to the recipient of your Email. Although it can have its advantages, it can also have many disadvantages. My tip is to use BCC with care and only use it if you feel it is necessary. 42. Put All your email newsletters and RSS feeds in one location Rather than clogging up your Inbox, create some simple email rules so that any newsletters or RSS feeds you are subscribed to go straight to a relevant folder. Friday afternoon is always a good time to scan through your newsletters; not Tuesday morning at 10am. 43. Careful opening any attachments The most common way a virus can get into your computer is in an attachment that comes with an Email. This is especially true of attachments from people that are not from your usual email community or from people sending email from home computers. You can see if an attachment is associated with an incoming email because you will see a symbol of a paperclip along the side of that Email. When in doubt, delete it! Even if you have anti-virus software installed, delete any email with an attachment unless it is from a trusted source or it's an attachment that you were already expecting. 44. Install a good email virus protection software It is almost impossible to have anything to do with the internet and not be aware of these things called viruses, malware and spyware. The severity of these internet ‘diseases’ can range from being big nuisances to being totally destructive. Some viruses can slow down your computer; some transmit information about you or your computer to someone far away so they can use your personal information. To keep net nasties from sneaking in via Email, buy one of the best email antivirus and anti-spyware software packages for your home PC. Right now Norton and McAfee are the top rated software packages that can do the job for you. They are worth the investment as they protect your important data and your identity. Every home computer should have a firewall, an anti-virus program, and an anti-spyware/ malware program. 45. Keep your anti-virus data constantly up to date If you go to the trouble of buying and installing a good anti-virus and anti-spyware program for your home PC, make sure it checks for updates every day. New viruses spring into existence overnight and it’s the job of companies like Norton and McAfee to stay on top of what is out there. By setting the software to ‘auto-update’ your computer frequently and without restrictions, you will know that the next big virus scare won’t affect you. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
Do you remember what it was like to be at work without having e-mail spurting into your inbox every few minutes? If you are a Generation Y employee, you probably grew up with e-mail. On the other hand, if you are a Baby Boomer and e-mail is something that you have only started using the past decade or so, learning how to manage and interact with e-mail could be a struggle. If you haven't received any formal training in learning how to better manage e-mail, you are probably doing your best at what comes naturally to you. What comes best isn't always what is best. If you answered yes I have some great news; I can offer you some ideas and suggestions to take back control of your inbox. That's why I have put together my new book called "The E-mail Manual". It is the book you should have received when you first started using e-mail. I think if everybody had a copy of this book on their desks and read it before they started using e-mail, there would be a fewer problems and issues with using and managing e-mail. Please enjoy these 5 email strategies. Be on the lookout for my other articles on how to better manage your e-mail and reduce the size of your inbox. 46. Use outlooks spam protection tools Within Outlook, the primary defence against spam is the blocked senders list. Using this tool you can add any email address to the blocked senders list and those Emails will be sent directly to your Spam Folder as soon as they arrive in future. By the way, do check your Spam folder every few days as occasionally ‘good Email’ gets sent to the Spam or Junk folder. Outlook allows you to create a new rule to make any ‘good Email’ sent to your Junk Folder safe. Next time an email from this person will go to your Inbox, not your Junk Folder. 47. Filter All unwanted emails as spam email should be treated the same way you treat your regular mail. You don’t welcome junk mail that comes in to your physical mailbox at home. You just throw it all away. So use the same methods to control unwanted email or spam. Send it to the Junk Folder to be discarded on your next shutdown. 48. Don’t give out your email address to just anyone Lots of web sites have special offers or ways to ‘harvest’ your email address. You should be aware that when you give your email address up too easily it can be sold or used to send you things that you would never ask for, including spam and viruses. So be careful who you let use your email address. See the next tip to solve this. 49. Never give out credit card information or personal data over email This really should be a no-brainer. Never send your credit card details in an email to ANYONE! If you are buying a product or service that needs a credit card, use PayPal, or a proper online shopping cart. 50. Using an alternate email address to reduce spam NEVER use your business email or your primary personal email account when signing up for stuff. Create a third ‘junk email account’ and use that instead. You can sign up for a free email address with Hotmail, Yahoo, or Gmail. Because you can read email coming to these accounts online, they never need to go directly to your Outlook program. They go to the server for the service that provides the free address. In that way you can trap the ‘junk’ from spreading to your computer. For anyone who is using email a lot, having more than one email accounts is a good move. It is possible to set up your copy of Outlook to collect email from those services to your desktop as well. But that defeats some of the purpose of having the alternative email account. If you would like to learn how to better manage your e-mail or inbox, why not consider my Zero Inbox training program? This e-mail management course is available in Australia and will soon be available online. You can visit, http://www.success.net.au/seminars/zero-inbox.html to learn more about how to better manage your e-mail and reduce your inbox. Alternatively, you can visit: http://www.zero-inbox.com/
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