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We
have all grown used to e-mail. It's part of our daily lives. Many
of us are using it on the go, in transport, anywhere, and at anytime.
I have even known people in Canada who were using e-mail on their
blackberries while brushing their teeth! But does this mean that
we are using it properly?
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by Yann A
Gourvennec
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our recommended strategies for better
performance |
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12
WORST PRACTICES OF E-MAIL USAGE IN THE WORKPLACE AND THE
RECOMMENDED STRATEGIES FOR INCREASED PRODUCTIVITY (FOREWORD)
We have all grown used to e-mail. It's part of
our daily lives. Many of us are using it on the go, in transport,
anywhere, and at anytime. I have even known people in Canada
who were using e-mail on their blackberries while brushing
their teeth! But does this mean that we are using it properly?
In this article I will provide insight into what I consider
are worst e-mail practices and I will recommend strategies
which can help you improve the way you work as well as your
efficiency.
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Introduction: we have all become 'anoraks'
In the Internet world e-mail can be considered one of the oldest
web-related applications together with the late Gopher and newsnet.
But e-mail per se already existed in pre-Internet era. As far
as I am concerned, I have been a user and observer of e-mail usage
since its inception in the late 1980's when I was working for
one of the leading IT providers of that time. That IT provider
made the decision to extend the usage of e-mail (then in proprietary
format) to the entirety of the company's users (i.e. 125,000 users
across 35 countries but sadly enough far fewer today). The main
issue with electronic mail at the time was about the requirement
to make all employees including managers actually use it, the
latter being rather reluctant. Indeed, many of them had difficulties
coming to terms with the fact that their status was no hindrance
to using the tool by themselves (many couldn't associate typing
with manager status, at the time it used to be secretarial work
only). We were number 3 in the IT world at the time, but it didn't
make any difference in fact, strangely enough. All this to show
our younger readers how far we've travelled in terms of IT usage
since such prehistoric times.
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A little less than 10 years after, the Internet revolution was
making IT a cornerstone of work efficiency not only in businesses,
but also schools, not to name the entertainment revolution in
the home. In business, it has now virtually become impossible
to name any profession not resorting to IT for their normal day
to day operations. Luddites are now few and far between. To an
extent, we have all become nerds. So much so that IT has now become
just one more of our working tools, just like pen and paper, the
mobile phone and other tools, just an ordinary tool, and no longer
a subject for nerds/anoraks to discuss amongst themselves using
incomprehensible three letter acronyms.
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However, despite the fact that IT has become ubiquitous, and
even in spite of the Internet in particular, can we venture to
say that we are all using it properly? In fact, there are many
signs showing us that we are not. E-mail usage (be it in the business
world or even on the open Internet) is very often inadequate,
and can even be the source of conflicts in more in many ways.
Besides, e-mail usage has to face up to new and increasingly
worrying problems: exponential rise of spamming, e-mail overflow,
e-mail addiction through devices like blackberry and other mobile
Internet devices, not to name viruses. What I'm proposing here
is an analysis of e-mail usage, its good and bad practices, and
the strategies that are required in order to protect oneself from
the side-effects of bad e-mail usage, and also more positively,
positive strategies for better using this tool.
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