Hi,
I have Outlook at work and receive the vast majority of my input via email.
My process since implementing GTD c3 years ago has been to review my Outlook inbox in the morning and at regular intervals throughout the day.
I'll open an email and if it's not something that can be done in two minutes or trashed I flag it for follow up without no date.
I then move that email into reference folders in Outlook. I have a portfolio of c17 customers and have a dedicated reference folder for each customer.
Those flagged emails then show in my list manager - Microsoft To Do.
At the end of each work day I'll go through those flagged email in To Do and add a hash tag that links them to a particular project if needed and process them into the relevant contexts.
I quite like this method as the To Do I have created has a snapshot of the email which I can scan for more info. before deciding whether it is something I want to action at that moment.
If i do decide to action it there and then To Do has a link straight to the email which opens in Outlook Web. I therefore don't have to go looking for an email in Outlook if I need more information or need to reply to it.
If an outgoing email has a waiting for, I'll flag the outgoing email for follow up and move it into my waiting for list in To Do.
This seems to work well for me but are there any drawbacks?
In some sense I am having to double decide as I make decision in my Outlook inbox and another decision when I open the flagged email in To Do.
However, to me the first decision is a very high level decision as whether the email is actionable. When processing the flagged emails in To Do I know I'm only looking at actionable items and will make a more in depth decision about what the next action is and where it needs to be done at that point.
This helps me keep my Outlook inbox at zero for most of the time which I find less stressful.
I would welcome people's thought's on my approach.
I have Outlook at work and receive the vast majority of my input via email.
My process since implementing GTD c3 years ago has been to review my Outlook inbox in the morning and at regular intervals throughout the day.
I'll open an email and if it's not something that can be done in two minutes or trashed I flag it for follow up without no date.
I then move that email into reference folders in Outlook. I have a portfolio of c17 customers and have a dedicated reference folder for each customer.
Those flagged emails then show in my list manager - Microsoft To Do.
At the end of each work day I'll go through those flagged email in To Do and add a hash tag that links them to a particular project if needed and process them into the relevant contexts.
I quite like this method as the To Do I have created has a snapshot of the email which I can scan for more info. before deciding whether it is something I want to action at that moment.
If i do decide to action it there and then To Do has a link straight to the email which opens in Outlook Web. I therefore don't have to go looking for an email in Outlook if I need more information or need to reply to it.
If an outgoing email has a waiting for, I'll flag the outgoing email for follow up and move it into my waiting for list in To Do.
This seems to work well for me but are there any drawbacks?
In some sense I am having to double decide as I make decision in my Outlook inbox and another decision when I open the flagged email in To Do.
However, to me the first decision is a very high level decision as whether the email is actionable. When processing the flagged emails in To Do I know I'm only looking at actionable items and will make a more in depth decision about what the next action is and where it needs to be done at that point.
This helps me keep my Outlook inbox at zero for most of the time which I find less stressful.
I would welcome people's thought's on my approach.