Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Adam Grant on how he manages his inbox and email productivity hacks
Adam Grant on how he manages his inbox and email productivity hacks Adam Grant on how he manages his inbox and email productivity hacks If thereâs an Emailer-in-Chief, it has to be Adam Grant. A leading academic thinker, heâs written extensively about the role of email (and why we absolutely should reply and not ignore our inboxes).I recently asked him about his own email habits. He generously shares his tactics for being responsive and offers the two things he did to make his email life a whole lot less burdensome. Hereâs an edited version of my interview with Adam, which was originally published on The Gmail Genius.How much time do you spend on email each day?Oh, my guess is three hours a day.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Does that seem like too much? How do you feel about that kind of time expenditure?It depends on the day. I do a lot of my work over email. When Iâm brainstorming ideas, or giving feedback on somebodyâs work, or trying to find a particular data point or story, Iâve found tha t the hour I might spend on 30 emails with 30 people is way more efficient than having two 30-minute meetings.I actually prefer email for a lot of the communication I do. I think I can usually answer questions much faster without getting majorly distracted from my work. I like the fact that it can be done asynchronously. I get to do it on my own time, as opposed to having to schedule a meeting. But are there days when I would like to spend much less time on email? Sure.You wrote an article in The New York Times arguing that we have a professional duty to respond to email. You noted research showing that workers who care about their jobs take email seriously. What else does the research tell us about email habits?As I wrote in the article, itâs a sign of conscientiousness. People who are dependable, disciplined, and organized are more responsive [to email]. It sends a clear signal that way.Second, itâs worth thinking about: in what kinds of jobs is this relevant? Most people in t he industrialized world today work in a service job. Thatâs roughly 80% of Americans and over two-thirds of people in Southeast Asia and Western Europe. If you think about what doing service means, itâs fundamentally about responding to other people and trying to meet their needs. Increasingly, a lot of services are provided electronically.Letâs say youâre doing customer service for an airline. Itâs amazing how much can be accomplished with a Twitter response or a live chat. This is true for knowledge work as well. If you think about what the knowledge economy is, itâs fundamentally people using their expertise to solve problems. They can do that from anywhere in the world with the communication technologies we have available. Basically, if you work in a service or knowledge job, itâs really hard to imagine being able to do your job effectively and help other people if youâre not responding.There has been lots of buzz about âinbox infinity,â which argues against Inbox Zero and being overly concerned about responding to every email. What was your response to the ideas in the article?Well, I definitely donât agree with it. I read that article - it was part of why I wrote mine, actually. I was like, wait a minute, this is really bad advice! Yes, of course, if you get 500 or 600 emails a day, responding to those each day would leave room nothing else. And unless thatâs your job, thatâs not going to work out too well for you.But, if youâre getting that many emails a day, thatâs a broken system. Iâve heard this from some journalists who are in that position. Thatâs a bad submission process. There should not be one personâs inbox that receives all submissions to a newspaper. There should be an online portal. There are all sorts of ways to reduce that load.As an individual, if youâre getting that kind of email, it usually means that youâre pretty visible inside either a huge organization or outside of your organization. I get a lot of cold emails. Between books and TED talks, I have millions of people who are engaged with my content. I get a lot of email, but itâs manageable. I donât aspire to be at Inbox Zero. I think itâs perfectly fine to have messages waiting, but I also donât like to leave them piling up. I try to carry 10 to 20 emails unanswered a day. During really busy weeks, Iâll probably come home and have 200 that need a response because I just havenât been on email.I think never responding is a terrible policy, especially if theyâre legitimate emails. Iâm not saying anyone should respond to spam or disrespectful or rude messages, and I donât think any stranger is entitled to your time. I think the middle ground that we should arrive at is: we do our best to respond to reasonable emails on a timeline thatâs convenient for us. We need to also think about: which of these are important to my priorities? And, which emails are important to doing my job well?I cited research showi ng that on days where managers have a heavy email load, theyâre less proactive in setting vision, clear goals, expectations and giving feedback. But itâs only true if email is not central to their job. If you manage people who do knowledge work or anything that requires electronic communication, email is a pretty important part of your job. If you have people working with you who are not in your physical office, itâs pretty useful to ping them quickly. Itâs really poor advice to tell people to ignore email altogether. Thatâs what Iâm pushing back against.You outlined the criteria for how you decide whether to respond to an email or not. Do those six approaches hold up? Would you change anything?I donât know that anything has really changed. One thing I do find surprising is how often people try to convince me that Iâm going to get something out of helping them. I think theyâre kind of missing the point. Generally speaking, if youâre a stranger asking me for my ti me, the goal is not to convince me that itâs going to benefit me. Thatâs not why I respond to strangers. Thatâs not why I generally respond to email.Most of the time, I respond because I think the request is meaningful to the person who is asking, or theyâre trying to help someone else. Or if I think what theyâre doing matters. I also respond if thereâs an easy way to suggest something that might be useful.The mistake people make is theyâre too short-sighted and transactional - assuming the only way to motivate me is to appeal to my self-interest. Anybody whoâs engaged with my work would know better, right? One of the reasons I studied givers and takers is that I really enjoy being helpful when itâs not a huge sacrifice. So I would add maybe a seventh point [to the article]: donât try to convince somebody that by doing a favor, it will be good for them. Instead, try to help them see how they can make a difference in a way thatâs beneficial to you and not costl y to them.Now that I think of it, Iâm surprised by the number of people who insist on meeting on their terms instead of yours - when theyâre the one asking. The worst thing you can do is email me out of the blue and ask to meet with you face-to-face next week or tomorrow or whatever. Youâre asking me for my time. Why donât you ask me what the most efficient way to connect is - when it might be convenient for me? If youâre the one reaching out, let the person who is going to help you decide what the times are and when.What has personally helped you the most with how you manage email? What has been most impactful?Honestly, I think the things that have helped me the most are FAQ and triage. There are common questions that come in [via email] and it didnât occur to me for a while - until I got so many similar questions in the same week - to create a single document for this. I put together answers to the most common questions I get and send it to anybody who asks about t hose topics. A bunch of those actually turned into articles that I published.The other thing is having a team and network of collaborators who are available and knowledgeable on different kinds of requests. Iâll give you an example. I get anywhere from 50 to 100 speaking inquiries a week. Thereâs no way Iâm going to end up taking even a fraction of those. Itâs immensely helpful to know people in my orbit who speak on similar topics, have overlapping expertise, and are interested in doing more speaking. Because I can start referring talks to them. That feels like a win-win because it helps the person who Iâm not going to be able to show up for. Hopefully, it also helps the person who gives the talk. I have a bunch of people for different kinds of requests that I know I canât field individually.I thought for a long time that I had to say yes to every request and I had to take them all myself. I realized one day that being a giver isnât about saying yes. There are times w hen I can say, âI canât do this, but I know someone else who would love to.âYou might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.