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NowForms - Productivity

Friday, April 11, 2008

Statistics on Time Management

  1. During the last 25 years, our leisure time has declined by 37% while our work week has increased by a full day.
  2. Spending 10 to 15 minutes every morning mapping out your day can save up to 6 hours a week.
  3. Americans as a whole waste more than nine million hours each day looking for lost and misplaced articles, amounting to a national loss of nearly $150 million per day.
  4. An average interruption during the work day consumes ten to twenty minutes in getting back on track, not counting the actual time with the interrupter.
  5. The typical businessperson experiences 170 interactions per day and has a backlog of 200-300 hours of uncompleted work.
  6. 80% of our interruptions usually come from 20% of the people with whom we work.
  7. Americans spend 1.3 billion hours a year preparing tax information.

What can you do?

Learn more: See our tour and learn how to extend the functionality of your current enterprise with a feature rich document management* and distribution system. Install the software and inherit added value such as distributed, remote, or cluster printing; scalable faxing, bulk email, automated file conversions, email confirmations and imaging. Designed in modular fashion so you only purchase what you need.

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It’s Time to Stand Up to Your Email

Here’s a Wall Street Journal article from today, that talks about how to go about keeping sane with email. Before you read on, it’s fair to remind you that one way you can manage your email is by using NowForms Outlook print to capture feature.


Thanks to the avalanche of messages they receive every day, many professionals and office workers say they suffer from email overload. It doesn’t have to be that way. People feel “they are complete slaves to email,” says Julie Morgenstern, founder of Julie Morgenstern Enterprises, a New York-based time-management consulting firm. “They can’t control their knee-jerk response to check and it absolutely impairs their productivity,” she says. One reason we let email rule our time: It’s often the easiest task. “People’s workloads are so intimidating now….You use email as an escape,” Ms. Morgenstern says. “It gives you a false sense of accomplishment.” There are ways to handle the overload.

Take Action

Many people check email but don’t take the time to decide what to do with it, says David Allen, chairman of David Allen Co., an Ojai, Calif.-based productivity consulting firm.

“Most people’s in-boxes are these numbing events,” Mr. Allen says. “They have all these different kinds of things that mean different things in the same place.”

One of Mr. Allen’s tips: the two-minute rule. “Anything you can finish in two minutes you should do right then.”

For emails that need more time, one option is to file those messages in folders — including “action” items, “waiting” items that can be deleted once a temporary issue is complete, and “reference” items.

“If your actionable things are set up separate from your reference items, that’s going to clean up your head and life a ton. If you have different meanings inside of one pile, you go numb because your brain can’t sort it,” Mr. Allen says.

Still, a better strategy is to push emails out of your in-box and onto a tasks list, says Mr. Allen, referring to some email programs’ “tasks to do” option. Or, simply write the task down on your own list.

Merlin Mann, San Francisco-based editor of 43Folders.com, a site focusing on personal productivity, says the key is to “get really good at deciding what the email means to you the second you open it.” He says “checking email and not doing anything about it is the worst habit.”

You Decide When

Another strategy to take control of your in-box: Turn off “you have mail” alerts that interrupt you as you work. Instead, decide on a regular schedule to check your in-box, whether it’s once every 30 minutes or three times a day.

“That creates a much more peaceful and productive work environment,” says Mike Song, a Guilford, Conn., productivity consultant, and operator of HamsterRevolution.com.

“Turn off all notifications, and then when you do go to email, go through every piece of email and figure out what it means to you,” Mr. Mann says.

If you allow your in-box to dictate your workday, responding to messages immediately, it means “you are not in charge of your own career, your own job,” Ms. Morgenstern says. “Everyone else is controlling you.” Instead, “give yourself 30 minutes every couple of hours to go through email — open, make the darned decision, delete or file it, and move on.”

Another idea, if your job allows it: Ignore your in-box for the first hour every morning, instead focusing on an important project. “Once you open the email there are a million and one interruptions,” Ms. Morgenstern adds. “It’s very hard to settle your mind down and concentrate.”

Ignoring email for the first hour is not easy. “The first day [clients] try this they actually don’t get anything done. They’re so distracted with worry about ‘what’s in my in-box?’ ” Ms. Morgenstern says.

“By the third day they’re able to focus and the productivity spike is so dramatic….They don’t have this big, undone critical task weighing over their heads. It’s behind them. That fuels their energy and they get more done the rest of the day.”

Reduce Email

Another way to avoid email overload: Receive fewer emails. Unsubscribe from mail you don’t need, and reduce the number of messages you send. “Because of the boomerang effect of email, if you become more judicious, you eventually get less and less email,” Mr. Song says.

This includes clicking “reply all” less often. “Over 80% of all professionals feel their colleagues overuse ‘reply to all,’ ” Mr. Song says, based on research he’s done at client companies.

Also, make messages and subject lines concise. That helps the recipient decide how to act on the message and to find it quickly later. “A poor quality or low quality message takes longer to read, longer to comprehend,” Mr. Song adds.

Use Available Tools

Email tools can automatically filter low-priority email to folders you check less frequently, say, once a week. In some programs, that’s as easy as right-clicking on a message.

Also, “a lot of people don’t know that you can drag a message from the in-box over to the calendar,” says Peggy Duncan, an Atlanta productivity expert and operator of PeggyDuncan.com.

And, use templates or, in Microsoft Outlook, the “signature” function, to easily insert often-typed messages. “I have all kinds of signatures saved,” Ms. Duncan says. “I have signatures on how to start a business, signatures with directions to my office.”

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