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Is
Your Email Culture Strangling You? (750 words)
By
Marsha Egan
Email.
Our lives wouldn’t be the same without it. It is a tool that has
revolutionized the workplace, improved communication, and
allowed employees to accomplish more in less time. However, if
mismanaged, it can have a devastating affect on productivity and
profits.
Have you
ever stopped to think of what your organization’s email culture
is? How do your employees use email? How do they manage it? How
do they send it? How do they save it? The habits they adopt,
whether they are positive or negative, can be contagious and
suddenly your business has it’s own email culture.
Here is
just one example of how an email culture can evolve. A boss
realizes that he needs to call an urgent meeting with 3 of his
managers. He sends an email needing a response in the next 15
minutes. Two of the three see the email and respond. The third,
who was working on an important project, did not have his email
on, missed the request, and angered his boss.
Number
three has just now learned that he can never turn his email off
for fear of missing an important email. But it doesn’t stop
here. It rolls downhill. The three managers have now been given
“permission” to use email as an URGENT delivery system. They use
it in their departments, and very quickly, the entire
organization is infected with this virus. No one can turn off
his or her email for fear of missing something vital. Employees
become slaves to the “brinnng” and stop productive work anytime
an email comes in, even if it’s just spam.
And
that’s just one example. Think of the practices of copying
everyone under the sun, just so you don’t miss someone. Or how
about using email as a chat room with multiple recipients to
resolve dilemmas? Or how about using email to critique someone’s
performance? One person does it, others do it. Culture is
changed.
Email
can also be extremely costly if not used effectively. When you
consider the average recovery time from any interruption is
about 4 minutes, you can imagine the cost to your organization
when people look up every time an email is received. Do the
math. If you stop what you’re doing every time you receive an
email and get 30 emails in one day, that equals 120 minutes of
recovery time—two hours of waste! And that doesn’t include the
time spent handing the email. Now multiply that by every
employee, everyday, and you can see how profitability can
seriously begin to drop.
In order
to instantly combat this loss, give everyone in your
organization “permission” to turn off auto-receive, and instead
schedule email deliveries every 90 to 120 minutes. This can
shorten recovery time to about 30 minutes – a saving of 90
minutes added right back to your bottom line.
Here are
a few other tips to help you create a positive office email
culture excerpted from my new eBook, Reclaim Your Workplace
Email Productivity: Add BIG BUCKS to Your Bottom Line:
-
NEVER use email as an urgent delivery system. If there is an
urgent matter, pick up the phone or walk down the hall.
-
Move
everything OUT OF your inbox. Your inbox should not be a
holding tank and your employees can manage their time better
by putting emails appropriate folders so that no important
information is ever lost or hard to find.
-
Make
Subject Lines VERY specific. By including details in subject
lines, you will help others sort and prioritize their work.
Instead of having a subject read, “Wednesday Meeting,” have
it read “Please bring the attached handout to the Wednesday
2:00 Staff Meeting.”
-
Copy
only the people who REALLY need to receive the email. Each
“extra/nice to copy” person you add will have to open and
read the email, adding unnecessary tasks to their already
full days. Multiply this times the number of unnecessary
copies, and the productivity drain adds up.
For more
information, please visit www.eganemailsolutions.com.
Marsha
Egan, CPCU, PCC, is CEO of the Egan Group, Inc., Reading PA. An
ICF Certified Professional Coach, she is a leading authority on
email productivity. She works with companies who want to
recover lost time and money due to wasteful email practices. Her
recently released ebooks, Help! I've Fallen into My Inbox and
Can't Climb Out! Five Email Self management Strategies that Will
Add Hours to Your Week
and
Reclaim Your Workplace Email Productivity: Add BIG BUCKS to Your
Bottom Line
can be found at
http://EganEmailSolutions.com. |