IT Hardwares

eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
Business & Money
Technology
Women
Health
Education
Family
Travel
Cars
Entertainment
SD Editorials
Online Guide and article directory site.
Foodeditorials.com
Over 15,000 recipes & editorials on food.
Lyricadvisor.com
Get 100,000 Lyric & Albums.
  • Business & Money
    • A Guide to Business
    • Guide to Finance
    • Ideas for Marketing
    • Legal Guide
    • Guide to Insurance
    • Lettre De Motivation
    • Guide to the Stock Market
    • Human Resource Career
    • Sales Marketing
    • Forex & Trading
    • Advertising & Marketing
    • Startup Guide
  • Technology
    • Guide to Technology
    • Cell Phones
    • Computer Software
    • IT Hardwares
    • Internet
    • Online Security
    • Cameras
    • Search Engine Optimization
    • Science & Technology
  • Women
    • Guide to Women
    • Relationship Advice
    • Marriage
    • Jewelry
    • Pregnancy
    • Fashion Style
    • Divorce Guide
    • Wedding Guide
    • Dating Guide
    • Natural Beauty
  • Health
    • Guide to Health
    • Guide to Medical
    • Plastic Surgery
    • Weight Loss
    • Sports
    • Body Wellness
    • Cancer Treatment
    • Common Illness
    • Health & Lifestyle
  • Education
    • Military Service
    • Politics and Policy
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Education and Teaching
    • Learn Languages
    • Colleges & Universities
  • Family
    • Quality Home Improvement
    • Hobbies and Interests
    • Family Guide to
    • Pet Guide
    • Loans Guide
    • Credit Cards
    • Gardening Guide
    • Home Security
    • Real Estate
    • Home Decor
    • Gift & Present
  • Travel
    • The Travel Guide
    • Adventure Travel
    • Cruise Ships
    • Beach Holiday
    • Travel Accommodation
    • Holiday Destinations
  • Cars
    • Information on Cars
    • Traffic Violations
    • Auto Insurance
    • Trailers
    • Sport Cars
    • The Bikes
  • Entertainment
    • Entertainment Guide
    • World Music
    • Photo & Video
    • Television & Games

How To Take Control Of Life

    View: 
In truth, having an overloaded schedule is nothing to be proud of, but there's no getting around the fact that I do have multiple responsibilities:



I pastor a church

I run a sports club

I help manage a campsite

I am webmaster of around 50 sites

I am a father of three

Of course some of these responsibilities are more time-consuming than others, and the load in each area is never static, but I generally manage to keep all the balls in the air. I'd put this down to four things fundamentally:

I have a strong team working with me

In so far as is possible, I allow those who do the work to make the decisions in their area

I schedule my time rigorously

I take control of my email

This last item might seem trivial compared to the first three, but it seems to me that nothing in this day and age can so easily destroy your working life as unmanaged email!

Billions of emails now travel around our planet on a daily (if not hourly) basis. This is great because it gives us the opportunity to build links and communication with people all around the globe in a way that could not have been imagined a generation ago. For the same reason though, it can also take over your working life.

I generally receive between 150 to 200 emails per day. I know some people who get many times that number. While some people may only get a handful, the more active you are in management, the more emails you are going to receive. It is unavoidable. The trick is to have a strategy for dealing with them. Let me outline my strategy as simply as possible. There are three steps:

Step one: use a good spam filter

When I say I receive between 150 to 200 emails, these are the legitimate ones. If I added all the viagra-selling emails and the other rubbish that is directed at me, it would be double that number.

I started using Spam Arrest to deal with my spam emails two years ago and would recommend it to anyone. I won't say more about that here, as I've written a full article on anti-spam solutions that you can find here if you're interested to read it.

This is the first step. Get the spam out of the way.

Step two: turn your automated inbox OFF

This is the most vital step in the system. Until you do this, you will have no peace.

Many things threaten to interrupt the best-planned working day, most obviously:

People coming to the door unexpectedly

Phone calls you weren't expecting

You can get an office assistant to screen out both people and phone calls, but what is the point if you allow your inbox to whistle at you every two minutes, telling you that somebody has a new message for you?

Of course you can ignore the swelling inbox, but when you've got that little notification whistle going off every 10 minutes, it can be like the old water torture - drip, drip, dripping on your forehead. It keeps grabbing your attention, and sooner or later your curiosity gets the better of you. 'I wonder who that could be, trying to reach me?' And so you take a peak, and all of a sudden your scheduled tasks have been sidelined.

TURN IT OFF!

The other side to this of course is that you need to schedule a time (or times) when you can manually download all your email.

Pick a time when your mind is reasonably sharp - first chore of the working day works for me. I actually check mine twice - first thing in the morning, and late in the evening.

If you're receiving a similar volume of email to me, set aside an hour but no more. You won't be able to deal with 100 emails in five minutes, but it's not going to drag on forever either. You'll see why in the next step.

Step 3: Divide and Conquer

This is the final step, and it needs to be done reasonably ruthlessly.

You have three kinds of emails in your inbox

Stuff that can be immediately thrown out

Emails that take less than 2 minutes to deal with

Emails that take more than 2 minutes to deal with

Here's the procedure:

Firstly, you download all that email and then glean through it, throwing out whatever is disposable.

Work your way right through the pile, picking up spam emails that made it through your filters, system error messages that aren't relevant, returned emails that you didn't send (because some spammer hijacked your address) and any number of other emails that you are not relevant to you at the moment.

I use the 'find' function in Outlook to grab hold of these in groups. I do a search on 'subscribe' for instance, to check for notification emails that tell me that someone has subscribed to one of my autoresponders. Once I've scanned the bunch to check that they are genuine addresses, I delete them.

Now this culling should cut down the size of your inbox by at least half. The next step is to go through the remainder of the pile and answer everything that requires a response that takes you less than 2 minutes.

You can say 'yes' to that delivery, 'no' to that offer, and 'thanks' to that person who sent you birthday wishes.

I generally find that I can make a genuine response to three-quarters of the people I am in regular email communication with in two minutes or less. Keep in mind Father Dave's no. 1 guideline to good email communication: Just because you deal with people efficiently doesn't mean you don't care!

After completing this step, I generally find that I've dealt with at least 90% of the email I started out with. Now here's the final trick -

SCHEDULE WHAT'S LEFT FOR ANOTHER TIME

I'm generally left with between three to ten emails that are going to require some serious attention. I schedule them for a period when I can devote the necessary time to them. This has multiple benefits:

The serious emails get the attention they deserve, instead of being squeezed in at the end of a long email-answering session.

You are now freed up to get back to your other scheduled tasks.

You introduce a rhythm into your communications with people that can be helpful to your long-term relationships.

The significance of this last point may not be immediately obvious to everyone, but it is especially relevant to me as a pastor.

I get a lot of people writing to me with critical issues that require some level of counselling. While I try to respond quickly to an initial cry for help, if the relationship develops into an ongoing dialogue, I've found it to be very helpful to slow the communication process down to no more than one reply per day.

This gives the person I am talking to time to think through what has been said and prevents them from becoming overly dependent on me. It also keeps me feeling positive about the relationship rather than overwhelmed.

Make sure you've got a good email program

As to the nuts and bolts of using this system, I find that Microsoft Outlook works great for me (and I mean 'Outlook' and not 'Outlook Express').

Whatever program you use, it helps a lot to be able to turn an email into a task and to be able to schedule a task straight into your calendar. Outlook makes this simple for me. I create a task, insert the email into the task, and then insert the task somewhere into the calendar. Maybe you've got another program that works equally well for you in this regard. If so, great!

Well, that's it! Take control of your email and you should find it much easier to have control of your time as a whole. I can't guarantee that this will give you more time to sleep. If you're like me, it may just mean that you're able to squeeze even more things into your schedule, but that's a subject for another article (best written by someone else).
How To Take Control Of Life
As you navigate the ins and outs of your Inbox, unsolicited emails and irritating viruses disguised as attachments may plague your Internet correspondences. To ensure the safety of emails you receive, as well as make sure your Inbox doesn't become a cluttered mess, a few suggestions on how to make life much easier can be found below:

Inbox Protection

To avoid an accumulation of unwanted emails, spam protection is a common way to reduce the amount of irritating solicitations you receive. Some mail systems allow users to identify spam that has infiltrated their Inbox, making sure specific email addresses don't pass through in the future. Other systems simply filter incoming mail and deposit them in a Bulk folder for later sorting. Today, Bulk folders can fill with close to 1,000 unwanted messages in one day. Also, if you are prone to receiving malicious links or images, some systems allow image blocking for further protection.

How to Sort Emails

Sometimes, users need to find specific correspondences that could have occurred months ago. Instead of scanning page after page of emails they have already read, sorting emails through specific term searches is a great way to save time and energy. For example, in Yahoo Mail, enter the word "dogs" as a search term and any email in your Inbox containing the word or a form of the word will appear. The same works when entering first and last names of senders.

How to Easily Sift Through Unread Emails

As you receive emails throughout the month, they can pile up. While some may take first priority in reading, others can wait until later, sometimes sitting in the Inbox for quite a long time before they are eventually forgotten. To keep up with Unread messages, you can easily find them all by filtering out all of the items you have already read. Most email systems provide this option and once clicked, all Unread emails appear in order for you to view or delete.

Inbox Management

Besides controlling what comes in, you may also customize numerous details regarding your Inbox. Many email systems allow their users to choose a color scheme for their Inbox. You may add Vacation responses that instantly alert those who send an email that you are away. Address books can be created, which makes responding to Inbox messages much easier. Shortcuts and nicknames for senders also make navigating your Inbox easier as you are better able to locate personal contacts.
More Articles from
Choose Desktop Pg88
Computer Problems And Solutions
Computer Protection For Free
Computer Random Access Memory
Computer Recycling San Diego
Computer Registry Clean Up
Computer Repair And Service
Computer Repair Schools Online
Computer Repair Work Order
Computer Run Like New
Computer Running Slow How To Fix
Computer Runs Slow Fix
Computer Runs Too Slow
computer sales & services
computer science & engineering
Computer Science Video Lectures
Computer Security And Forensics
computer service & repair
Computer Service & Repair
Computer Services & Repair
Computer Services And Repairs
» More on
Choose Desktop
  • Related Articles
  • Author
  • Most Popular
•How To Take Control, by Kevin Pederson
•How To Take Control Of Life, by Dave Smith
•How To Take Minutes Of Meeting, by Abrahamson Owen
•How To Take Photos Of Yourself, by Ronnie Hammond
•How To Take Pictures Of People, by James John
About Author
Both Dave Smith & Gabriel Adams are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Dave Smith has sinced written about articles on various topics from Social Issues, Travel and Leisure and Yoga Practice. Rev. David B. Smith (the 'Fighting Father') Parish priest, community worker,martial arts master, pro boxer, author, father of three.Get a free preview of Dave's book,Sex, the Ring & the Eucharist when you subscribe to his newsletter at. Dave Smith's top article generates over 201000 views. to your Favourites.

Gabriel Adams has sinced written about articles on various topics from Mobile Phone Reviews, Limousine Service and Entertainment Guide. Try the to help you control your inbox.. Gabriel Adams's top article generates over 4090000 views. to your Favourites.
Convert To Dynamic Disc
But you are still going to be in the minority for a long time to come just by implementing the above tactics
 
A Guide to Business | Guide to Technology | Guide to Women | Guide to Health | Family Guide to | Travel & Vacations | Information on Cars

EditorialToday IT Hardwares has 2 sub sections. Such as Computer Guide and Hardware. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors