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	<title>Stef Lewandowski &#187; broken</title>
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		<title>Declaring Inbox Victory!</title>
		<link>http://steflewandowski.com/2008/07/inbox-victory/</link>
		<comments>http://steflewandowski.com/2008/07/inbox-victory/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:06:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>stef</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[birminghamuk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[broken]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[email]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fixing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gmail]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inbox]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inbox victory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[victory]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.steflewandowski.com/?p=443</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
I declare inbox victory! With the help of the Andrew Dubber method, I have successfully recovered from &#8216;inbox death&#8216; and now have a joyously empty screen in front of me where once sat some 28478 items, 14514 of which were unread, with 1446 &#8217;starred&#8217; to reply to. It was bad. Broken bad.
But now, when I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://img.skitch.com/20080710-g9c1hjywpmmt52nj83gkwkjcj2.png" alt="Inbox Victory!" width="500"></p>
<p>I declare <a href="http://fffff.at/inbox-victory/">inbox victory</a>! With the help of the <a href="http://www.andrewdubber.com">Andrew Dubber</a> method, I have successfully recovered from &#8216;<a href="http://www.steflewandowski.com/2008/07/help-email-is-broken-for-me/">inbox death</a>&#8216; and now have a joyously empty screen in front of me where once sat some 28478 items, 14514 of which were unread, with 1446 &#8217;starred&#8217; to reply to. It was bad. Broken bad.</p>
<p>But now, when I open up my <a href="http://gmail.com">Gmail</a> account, I am presented by a serenity that I have not experienced since, umm, perhaps when I actually opened the account in the first place?</p>
<p>So a huge thank you to Andrew for setting a side a day of his life to drag me kicking and screaming through the cold turkey email purge that was today. It was liberating but very very hard. </p>
<p>At one point it all got very emotional and existential, and I was playing the resistant, know-it-all &#8216;but surely&#8217; creative. Andrew wouldn&#8217;t have any of it and patiently sat there through six hours of coffee-fuelled hammering of the keyboard to get me here.</p>
<p>And also a big thank you to the staff at The Kitchen Garden Cafe for providing the &#8216;get out of the bubble&#8217; environment where it could happen. Shame about the looping reggae music all day, but hey, it gave me some idea of how long we&#8217;d been there.</p>
<p>For anyone interested in the process in detail. Here are my raw notes of the process from today, starting from the moment I opened my Gmail account, turned off the phone, took a sip of coffee and jumped into the digital maelstrom&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>How I got control of my inbox back:</strong></p>
<blockquote style="padding: 1em; background-color: rgb(238, 238, 238);"><p>
My notes:</p>
<p>Since March 2005 I still have unread email</p>
<p>Step 1. Mark all as read</p>
<p>Stef argues &#8211; mark anything unread as &#8216;never-read&#8217;</p>
<p>Step 2. Delete all spam messages  &#8211; 223000 </p>
<p>6876MB originally,</p>
<p>Deleting the spam broke email</p>
<p>Then 6 spam left &#8211; 2 spam per minute</p>
<p>6111MB free</p>
<p>That cleared 760 MB</p>
<p>before:2008/6/1 label:never-read</p>
<p>Mark all anonymous email as read</p>
<p>All items never read before june</p>
<p>Get rid of all of the numbers &#8211; All mail, select all, mark as read</p>
<p>Write down all my projects &#8211; about 50</p>
<p>Install Ghost Action</p>
<p>Select all Drafts and hit &#8220;discard drafts&#8221;</p>
<p>Archive all mail before June 1st using this search: before:2008/6/1, then select all conversations and click Archive</p>
<p>Go through each label in turn and select all and click the Archive button &#8211; this removes them from the inbox</p>
<p>Now 1964 in the inbox</p>
<p>Go to &#8220;Anonymous&#8221; filter, containing anything that is sent to me as a BCC, mailing list, spam that got through somehow.</p>
<p>Select all.</p>
<p>Delete.</p>
<p>10491 emails deleted</p>
<p>Delete all Facebook messages &#8211; 1384 messages</p>
<p>Create filters for things rather than deleting them each time</p>
<p>Empty trash: 16222 emails</p>
<p>5511 MB &#8211; 77% full</p>
<p>Apply &#8220;Delete on receive&#8221; filters. Eg. mailing lists</p>
<p>I still have 1600 filtered messages in my inbox from the last month</p>
<p>Archive anything that has gone to anything other than stef@3form.net</p>
<p>using label:office label:Inbox</p>
<p>Inbox: 1559</p>
<p>Google Calendar &#8211; delete all conversations</p>
<p>Twitter &#8211; put direct messages to my phone instead of email. Go to http://twitter.com/accounts and make changes</p>
<p>Delete all old twitter messages</p>
<p>Inbox: 1253</p>
<p>&#8220;Ecademy &#8211; I never want to hear from them again&#8221;. Set up a filter.</p>
<p>1209</p>
<p>Remove comments on projects I get notifications for. Eg. Big Picture &#8211; archive them.</p>
<p>1112</p>
<p>Working backwards in the inbox attacking each message at a time.</p>
<p>Anyone who emails me too much with stuff that I don&#8217;t care about. Delete, with a filter so I don&#8217;t receive their messages again. Eg. huxley.com</p>
<p>I now have less than a twentieth of the emails I started with.</p>
<p>1098</p>
<p>Filters for photobox, etc.</p>
<p>1056</p>
<p>Archive everything from close working colleagues</p>
<p>922</p>
<p>Ooh! Discovered &#8220;Filter messages like these&#8221; function under the &#8220;More Actions&#8221; drop down menu.</p>
<p>Viadeo.com &#8211; crap. Gone. (Gets a laugh)</p>
<p>894</p>
<p>Expedia mailshots, lasminute mailshots</p>
<p>label:never-read and label:Inbox</p>
<p>Archive them</p>
<p>523</p>
<p>Search for &#8220;out of office&#8221;. Filter.</p>
<p>Archive Emily&#8217;s emails to me</p>
<p>482</p>
<p>Archive dubber!</p>
<p>438</p>
<p>Archive estelle</p>
<p>Archive anything Wordpress admin related</p>
<p>398</p>
<p>Archive everything marked &#8220;never-read&#8221;</p>
<p>336</p>
<p>Delete all &#8220;out of office autoreply&#8221;</p>
<p>333</p>
<p>Start &#8217;starring&#8217; the ones that need to stay in the inbox. Then tick all the ones that need to be deleted.</p>
<p>Delete the ticked ones.</p>
<p>Then do &#8217;select unstarred&#8217; and click &#8216;archive&#8217;</p>
<p>Again &#8211; work backwards so that the items that appear at the bottom are ones you have already filtered once you hit delete.</p>
<p>Select all unstarred and then archive. Repeat, working backwards through the pages using &#8220;newer&#8221; until the last month&#8217;s mail has been filtered.</p>
<p>Lots of &#8220;please moderate&#8221; &#8211; delete them.</p>
<p>254</p>
<p>217</p>
<p>Naymz. Nuked &#8211; it&#8217;s lame.</p>
<p>212</p>
<p>Went to a conference called 2gether08 &#8211; it was good. Archive everything but make a rule that filters anything with &#8220;receipt&#8221; and &#8220;your order&#8221; to an &#8220;accounts&#8221; label to make accounting easier.</p>
<p>Make an &#8220;invitation&#8221; filter to flag up anything that might be of interest. I think paper invites are best.</p>
<p>I was on a kids TV show this month. Archive the lot.</p>
<p>173</p>
<p>Okay. Lots of starred items. Just archive them.</p>
<p>1369 starred conversations. </p>
<p>Inbox: 147</p>
<p>Hmm &#8211; must have missed Dubber. Search dubber label:inbox and archive them.</p>
<p>111</p>
<p>Filter google analytics reports to skip the inbox and mark as read.</p>
<p>Ha! Lots of &#8220;test&#8221; emails. search for subject:test and delete.</p>
<p>79</p>
<p>My emails FIT ON TWO PAGES.</p>
<p>Okay.</p>
<p>The inbox is empty.</p>
<p>Nice.</p>
<p>Next. Ghost Action.</p>
<p>Set up contexts.</p>
<p>Where I do things &#8211; home, phone, driving, etc.</p>
<p>Then add projects. 50 things I am involved in. Go through all recent email to define these no matter how small.</p>
<p>Search: before:2008/1/1 label:starred</p>
<p>Remove star. Basically I am not going to respond to emails that are this old. Yeah. Sorry.</p>
<p>381 starred messages! From 1400</p>
<p>Working from oldest first.</p>
<p>Delete anything that has a big file attachment that you don&#8217;t need. Rubbish demos from people with the whole MP3 attached etc.</p>
<p>February already. Andrew says &#8220;If it was urgent and I hadn&#8217;t heard for three months I&#8217;d have got in touch another way&#8221;.</p>
<p>Okay. Feeling guilty about not responding to so many emails. Really exciting projects I couldn&#8217;t be involved in, things I wanted to do but couldn&#8217;t. Great people I didn&#8217;t just send a quick &#8220;cool&#8221; back to because I was so busy. The chances of even a &#8220;sorry&#8221; being relevant are minimal.</p>
<p>So.</p>
<p>before:2008/5/1 label:starred</p>
<p>Remove Star.</p>
<p>Phone messages I missed are in there. Ugh.</p>
<p>Guilt.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s this?! Something in my inbox?!</p>
<p>Unstarring things one at a time</p>
<p>72</p>
<p>I have 62 emails to send.</p>
<p>Move them all to the inbox.</p>
<p>Remove all the stars.</p>
<p>I have 62 items in my inbox.</p>
<p>I have no starred items.</p>
<p>I have nothing in my spam folder.</p>
<p>Ace.</p>
<p>Send apologetic emails to a handful of things that I have missed and that don&#8217;t seem too far in the past to be strange to bring up.</p>
<p>Eg. Kevin Johnson sent me a Linkedin mail about a potential project. I didn&#8217;t get back to him at the time. So I sent him a note to apologise.</p>
<p>Okay. An email that requires a long response to Simon Redgrave on a few points.</p>
<p>Archive the email so it is not in the inbox, add an action in Ghost Action saying &#8220;Email Simon Redgrave&#8221;</p>
<p>Respond. Archive. Delete. Action. And so on&#8230; 52</p>
<p>Send some painful emails to people who&#8217;ve been waiting for ages. Get some positive responses back&#8230; looks like they appreciate just having the email which is great.</p>
<p>25&#8230;</p>
<p>Down to the last hard-core 5 emails. Make some tasks to handle things that require more considered responses, but email each person telling them that that&#8217;s what&#8217;s happened.</p>
<p>Down to the last handful.</p>
<p>EMPTY INBOX! Woot!</p>
<p>Tweet away on the fact&#8230;</p>
<p>And of course some joker takes it upon himself to pitch in with just one more email for me to respond to&#8230; thanks <a href="http://peteashton.com">Pete</a></p>
<p>And relax.</p>
</blockquote>
<p><strong>What next?</strong></p>
<p>I have some more of Andrew&#8217;s time tomorrow. Apparently it&#8217;s all about putting processes in place to make sure I stay this way, and become filled with zen-like productivity. Here&#8217;s hoping&#8230;</p>
<p>If you&#8217;ve managed inbox victory recently &#8211; let me know if the comments! If not, and you want to &#8211; I hope my notes come in useful. Set aside a day and just make it happen. </p>
<p><strong>You can do it if I can right?! </strong></p>
<p>Let me know in the comments&#8230; and good luck.</p>
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