Re-energize the economy with productivity, not cost cutting!

Maybe we are looking at this all wrong… Businesses are downsizing because they can’t afford the employee salaries and extras. Don’t they realize that most workers who rely on e-mail to communicate could be sucking the business dry with unintentional productivity theft?

Sometimes it is not just cost saving. Rather, if you can reclaim the productivity that has been lost because of a near pandemic of productivity sapping e-mail habits throughout organizations, you’ll see it in your bottom line.

Consider the impact of getting 10%-20% more out of each worker? Now THAT’S what will re-energize the economy. See our prior posts for how to make this all work…

PDF Creator    Send article as PDF to

E-mail Addiction – A good thing???!

New research released at the end of 2008 by Basex indicates that the U.S. economy loses $900 billion per year to information overload – including email addiction. So why does a recent online advice column in the San Francisco Chronicle have readers believing that email addiction is a good thing?

The column, written by David Robinson, says to a reader who worries that he might have an email addiction and asks how to break the habit, “Perhaps you don’t have to. Taking a break once every hour or so while you’re working on a big project is not only natural but probably a good way to keep your level of effort from tapering off.”

This advice is problematic at best.  Once you’re disrupted by an email, it takes an average of four minute to get back on track per interruption. Allowing yourself to be lulled into checking your email every time you have a new message is costing you time, and your company money.

This is why we declared this week the second annual international Clean Out Your Inbox Week.

We want people to use Clean Out Your Inbox Week to develop effective and efficient email habits by working as a group and setting up rules for email use. As an example, turning off the automatic send and receive feature and checking your email only five times daily, have helped individuals and companies reclaim hours of productive, billable time – not to mention saving them the stress of worrying about constantly checking their inboxes.

Email is an effective communication tool that we depend on more and more, however, we’ve developed a dependency to email that saps productivity. Lots of people can’t keep up with their Inbox and, since they don’t know how to break these habits, simply declare email bankruptcy. While starting fresh helps in the short term, it does little to change the ineffective habits that got them behind in the first place.

To read the complete San Francisco Chronicle advice column response, visit http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2009/01/11/JOBSrobinson.DTL

PDF Printer    Send article as PDF to

Is checking e-mail during business meetings career suicide?

AOL’s recent study has affirmed to me a lot of what I’ve suspected. 38% of the people in the survey have checked their e-mail in a business meeting. This does not mean when they are waiting for the meeting to begin, it means during the meeting.
What could these people be thinking?
I saw another study recently where top executives were surveyed regarding their opinions of people who use their blackberries or PDAs during a business meeting. A full third of them considered it to be unacceptable. So if one out of three top executives considers checking the Blackberry as inappropriate, and 38% of the survey admitted to doing it, it looks like some careers could be in jeopardy!

For the full survey visit http://www.crazyforemail.com/.

PDF Creator    Send article as PDF to