Emails P*** Me Off!
Tammy Whalen Blake
Future proofing professionals and businesses with focus, productivity, strategy and action planning.
I need to get this off my chest: the relentless, all-consuming beast that is email. Email is supposed to be a tool for communication, but it has become the ultimate time vampire, sucking productivity out of every corner of our lives. The expectation of instant responses and the sheer volume of messages are enough to make anyone lose their mind.
Let’s start with the inbox itself. It’s a never-ending to-do list that grows faster than you can clear it. For every email you respond to, two more pop up. It’s like playing Whac-A-Mole with your sanity. And heaven forbid you take a vacation—coming back to a mountain of unread messages is the modern-day equivalent of Sisyphus pushing his boulder up the hill.
Then there’s the problem of emails that shouldn’t even be emails. I’m talking about the people who use email as a chat tool, sending a flurry of single-sentence messages instead of consolidating their thoughts into one coherent email. Or worse, the dreaded “reply all” apocalypse, where one person's minor comment triggers a cascade of replies, none of which are relevant to 95% of the recipients.
And let’s not forget the constant notifications. Ping! A new email arrives. Ping! Someone replied to your thread. Ping! A calendar reminder. Each ping is a tiny jab at your focus, making deep work impossible. Turning off notifications isn’t always a viable solution, either, because then you’re left with the anxiety of not knowing what’s piling up in your inbox.
The expectation of immediate replies is another beast entirely. It’s as if we’re all supposed to be on standby 24/7, ready to drop everything and respond at a moment’s notice. This expectation is not only unrealistic but also deeply unhealthy. It perpetuates a culture of urgency over importance, where the need to be constantly available trumps the need to actually get meaningful work done.
Finally, there’s the emotional toll. The dread of opening your inbox, the guilt of unread messages, the frustration of pointless emails, and the stress of staying on top of it all—it’s exhausting. Email should be a tool that works for us, not the other way around. Yet, here we are, prisoners to the incessant demands of our inboxes.
In a world where technology is supposed to streamline our lives, email stands as a glaring exception. It’s high time we rethink our relationship with email, set better boundaries, and find ways to manage it more effectively. Because as it stands, email isn’t just a time management problem—it’s a touchy subject that needs serious reform.
How do you handle the email beast? Share your suggestions in the comments!
Global HR Operations and Colleague Experience Director at BT
3 个月I totally agree , we seem to have lost the art of a conversation , I turn notifications off and set aside regular time to look at emails but I really wish they would disable the Reply All email button !
Maestro en Dirección de Empresas | Servicio al Cliente | Marketing Digital
4 个月Between the newsletters that we never see, but we don't take action and unsubscribe, to the emails that could be a slack message, everything you say is true. My way of maintaining peace of mind is, first, I don't have work email on my cell phone, two, I open it every two hours during my work break to answer the unimportant things, three, I dedicate 2 hours a day to it (one in the morning and another in the afternoon) to answer important emails. My clients have my cell phone, a message will reach me faster than an email if a fire has to be put out. Excellent article Tammy.
Director @ Full Metal Software | Improving Efficiency with bespoke software
4 个月The overflow of emails can be a bit much, especially when it feels like they don't stop! Tammy Whalen Blake
Vendor-Agnostic technology solutions provider - Reducing Cost & Improving Efficiency through Independent Advice & Competitive Price Sourcing for UCaaS and Contact Centre Solutions
4 个月Wow …some great comments about email Tammy and I agree. If there is one small tip, that may help anyone, that I recall from my corporate days it’s words of wisdom from an previous manager of mine. “ If the subject of an email constitutes an exchange more than 2 responses PICK UP THE PHONE and discuss it” It’s interesting, as I’m of a certain age, to remember when email first became popular after fax machines and how this age old conundrum and debate has continued to rage. add to that the other methods of communication from Whatsapp, DM, social media et cetera it does mean we are awash with demand to urgently communicate. In someways clever AI and automatiion can resolve some os the issues around volumes.
MD at oneHR?. Providing World Class HR & H&S Software to Business Owners and HR and H&S Consultants. Chair of peopleHUB community. #BIMA100- Entrepreneurs and Visionaries #Insider42 under 42 #NPWA Future List
4 个月Emails can certainly become overwhelming especially when returning from annual leave to a mountain of them.