inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not?

by Rob Paterson

Email usage has dropped 28% in the last 12 months! (Matt Forcey)

A recent study by Nielsen that focused on how Americans spend their time online, unexpectedly found that email usage has dropped by 28% over the last year.  Since we’re certainly not communicating any less, what are people doing as an alternative?  Not surprisingly, the data show that social networking use increased by 43% over the same time period.  A separate analysis determined that Mobile Internet use has also increased dramatically.

When I used to have a real job, one of the things I hated about being on vacation was the dread of what woud face me in my email inbox. As it became easier to access email remotely, I began to check in every day just to keep the load and the surprises down. Today when accessing email remotely is commonplace nearly all my pals in the conventional workplace tell me that they do the same. (The full report is here)

The young, under 30, hardly use it at all – they don’t even use the phone.

voice-text-by-age

But what about the rest of us who still work for and with organizations that make email the centre of the communications system? Can you push back and get more productive? Here are two well known people who have confronted this question and have won the battle.

My old pal Luis Suarez at IBM is best known for his war against email and the misuse of it that crushes productivity.

I have been consistently getting less and less email by the week, and, even more exciting, way below the 20 emails per week mark!, which surely is making a good progress from when I started 2.5 years ago. Remember, at the beginning, before starting this experiment, I used to receive 30 to 40 emails per day! And now, 2.5 years later, it’s just 17 emails per week! Yes, indeed, you are reading it right! I’m now averaging 17 emails received per week, while the majority of my online interactions are now happening through social software tools.

So, to me, it is not just a drop of 28% in the past 12 months, but way over 90% of the email I used to get! And, not sure what you would think, but that’s *huge!* Yes! Being able to state how email is no longer the only game in town for me, quite the opposite!, actually, is a good thing. It proves it can be done! It proves I am not the only one who can make it happen. And this is when it gets really exciting! When you see other folks increasingly paying more and more attention as to how they interact with their email Inboxes and how they effectively start looking for ways of reducing such email clutter.

Very exciting, indeed! Even more when you notice it’s folks around you who are starting to ask you how you can help them eliminate most of their incoming emails and instead progress towards a much more receptive adoption of social software tools for business. That’s why I’m pretty jazzed up about seeing a whole bunch of fellow co-workers who are continuing to make efforts to reduce their email workload. To the point where entire teams are figuring out strategies to make it work for them and over the last couple of weeks I have been working with a couple of them where there is plenty of promise ahead! Yay!

But it gets better! Because over the last few weeks as well I’m starting to notice how even customers want to figure out ways on how they themselves can get rid of, or reduce substantially, their incoming email. And they seem to keep finding me out there as they search how it can be done (Double yay for #lawwe), which is really good news, because I have been invited a couple of times already to go and present to them how they themselves could live “A World Without Email“.

Why and how did Luis do this? Here is a link to an excellent interview with Luis conducted by the Doyenne of the Social Media world in Canada, Nora Young at Spark (CBC Radio). The interview was almost exactly a year ago and as with this post was timed to appear as we all struggled back to work and a full email inbox.

Luis’ main issue with email is that it makes it too easy for someone else not to care or know if you are busy and to impose work upon you or to engage you in their politics at no real cost to themselves. For instance – if I was to send you a large document as an attachment – there are many steps that you must take to read it – and then it all gets even worse if you wish my comments etc. Far easier to share a document. For instance, how many times have you got a “Cover my ass” CC or BCC? When what was really needed was a real debate? How many tomes have you been really busy and have a colleague impose a deadline on their stuff on you? This is the kind of behavior that Luis objects to.

Or what about all those newsletters that you don’t have time to read? Or those missives from on high from senior management that tell you how great they are or how we all have to ull up our socks?

Luis is not the only person pushing back. Jason Fried CEO of 37 Signals has an impassioned plea about how the workplace itself crushes productivity.

Yeah, my feeling is that the modern workplace is structured completely wrong. It’s really optimized for interruptions. And interruptions are the enemy of work. They are the enemy of productivity, they are the enemy of creativity, they are the enemy of everything. But that’s what the modern workplace is all about, it’s interruptions. Everyone’s calling meetings all the time, everyone’s screaming people’s names across the thing, there’s phones ringing all the time. People are walking around. It’s all about interruptions. And people go to work today, and then they end up doing most of their real work after work, or on the weekends. So, people are working longer hours, people are tired – I’m working 50-60 hours this week. It’s not that there’s 50 or 60 hours worth of work to do, it’s because you don’t work at work anymore. You go to work to get interrupted.

What happens is, is that you show up at work and you sit down and you don’t just immediately begin working, like you have to roll into work. You have to sort of get into a zone, just like you don’t just go to sleep, like you lay down and you go to sleep. You go to work too. But then you know, 45 minutes in, there’s a meeting. And so, now you don’t have a work day anymore, you have like this work moment that was only 45 minutes. And it’s not really 45 minutes, it’s more like 20 minutes, because it takes some time to get into it and then you’ve got to get out of it and you’ve got to go to a meeting.

Then when the meeting’s over, you’re probably pissed off anyway because it was a waste of time and then the meeting’s over and you don’t just go right back to work again, you got to kind of slowly get back into work. And then there’s a conference call, and then someone calls your name, “Hey, come a check this out. Come over here.” And like before you know it, it’s 4:00 and you’ve got nothing done today. And this is what’s happening all over corporate America right now. Everybody I know, I don’t care what business they’re in. Like when I talk to them about this, it’s like “Yeah, that’s my life.” Like, that is my life, and it’s wrong.

And so I think that has to change. If people want to get things done, they’ve got to get rid of interruptions.

Email is just part of this uncritical work culture that forces many to do their work after hours at home!

So what do Luis and Jason offer up as an alternative?

Luis still thinks that email has a place – in calendar management and in private one on one matters such as salary etc. But he has found that he can push back and negotiate a better way for nearly every category of work. Want me to work on your document – then share it with me! Have an issue to solve – open a conversation in public! Want to avoid being put upon by others – work in public so that people can see when you are busy – so if you use shared documents – people can see you are editing or drafting.

The whole point is to learn how to protect your time.

Jason has  the same advice.

So, this isn’t really a plug, but we use our product called Campfire, which is a real time chat tool. That is our office. Campfire is our office, and that’s a web based chat tool where there’s a persistent chat room open all the time. Anyone who has a question for anyone else in the company posts it there and in real time, everyone else can see it if they’re looking at it. But if they’re busy, they just don’t pay attention. And then if non one responds, then that means someone is busy. Not like, I’m going to keep calling their name until they turn around. That’s what it’s like in most offices. Or you ring someone and they’re not there and so you call their name, and they’re not there, so you go to their office and you bang on their door. If someone doesn’t respond in Campfire, it means they’re busy. And unless it’s a true emergency, where you really need an answer right now, then you just let them be and they’ll get back to you in three hours. And the truth of the matter is, there are almost no true emergencies in business. Everything can wait a few hours. Everything can wait a day. It’s not a big deal if you get back to me later in the day for me to know right now.

And the other thing about interruptions and calling people’s names, and ringing them on the phone and stuff, it’s actually really an arrogant sort of move because you’re saying that whatever I have to ask you is more important than what you’re doing. Because I’m going to stop you from doing what you are doing for me to ask you this questions that probably doesn’t matter anyway. So, we’re very cognizant of this, and we make sure that we only ping people, that’s what we call it, digitally and in ways that will not really get in their way if they’re really busy.

He uses his own tool but of course there are many tools that we can use – the tool is not the key it is the idea of working in public that is.

How do you get others to play? Well if you are Jason – it’s easy you are the CEO! But Luis is not the CEO. He publicly told the world that this was his intent. He pushes back and negotiated with his own team and colleagues – and the value of this spread out.

Here is a mind map from Luis that shows you his process and his results

Share and Enjoy:
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Print this article!
  • TwitThis
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Digg
  • Google
  • StumbleUpon
  • SphereIt


7 Tweets

11 Comments »

Luis SuarezAugust 25th, 2010 at 12:39 pm

Hi Rob! Thanks much for the link love and for putting together, so nicely, what I have been trying to attempt do over the last couple of years. It’s interesting to see how two of the main issues I keep fighting day in and day out with this living “A World Without Email” are the political & bureaucratic flavour of processing email (Specially, the .cc and the .bcced ones) and also the “CYA” emails (as in Cover Your A**e!) where folks want to demonstrate they have done their job dumping theirs on to you and letting folks who wouldn’t need to know know about it big time.

It’s amazing we are in 2010 and we still see plenty of those behaviours. Both of them, in my opinion, due to a one single issue that keeps coming back time and time: lack of trust amongst knowledge workers, their managers and the business altogether.

Narrating your work is a very brave move, for sure! One that would surprise plenty of people all around, but, eventually, it will help you bring forward that transparency and trustworthy environment one can really excel at … to help increase not only your own productivity, but that one of those around you, too! Yes, it takes time, energy and lot of effort, apart from educating and persevering with your colleagues, but eventually the payoff is tremendous!

To me … 17 emails received weekly at the moment… Best part is that, once you start, there is no way back!

Rob PatersonAugust 25th, 2010 at 12:52 pm

Thanks Luis – you are inspiring – you also prove that anyone can do this – lots of support from all over is building

Here is John Cleese saying that the key to creativity is to create a space where you cannot be interrupted!
http://workincolour.com.au/blog/post/81/have-you-seen-john-cleese-on-the-creative-process/

Om Malik too is onto this too – http://gigaom.com/2010/08/24/voice-who-needs-it/

Luis SuarezAugust 25th, 2010 at 12:59 pm

You are welcome, Rob! Thanks for the follow up! Greatly appreciated! This is just amazing, just as you were commenting on my comments I was watching the very same video clip you were referencing, i.e. the John Cleese one! Spooky, I know! And funny enough his point reminded me clearly of something that I got started a little while ago and which I am surely enjoying quite a bit at the moment: avoiding multitasking using “The Pomodoro Technique”.

I blogged about it over here: http://www.elsua.net/2010/08/02/how-to-avoid-multitasking-the-pomodoro-technique/ and ever since that time my chunks of creativity keep increasing by the day with various focused and interrupted areas that surely keep adding further up into my day to day productivity.

Oh, thanks for sharing Om’s great read! Quite an inspiration as well!

Sydney ShoreSeptember 2nd, 2010 at 9:01 pm

What an enlightening read! I never really thought of email as that obstructive, although it’s probably more because we communicate more via IM pings more than any medium.

elsuaAugust 25th, 2010 at 12:40 pm

@robpatrob Excellent write-up, Rob! Took the liberty of adding a comment to it over at http://bit.ly/bpiOtx // Want me to cross post it?

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

mostashAugust 25th, 2010 at 12:52 pm

Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not? http://bit.ly/9LoEqC

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

social_medioAugust 25th, 2010 at 12:52 pm

Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not? http://bit.ly/cHFhqr

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

onstrategyAugust 25th, 2010 at 1:46 pm

Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not?: Email usage has dropped 28% in the last 12… http://bit.ly/8XW0e5 http://bit.ly/9W1EsO

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

querdeknerAugust 26th, 2010 at 3:30 am

That is a good question! via FastforwardBlog Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not? http://bit.ly/bUGX0t

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

marinesetwasAugust 26th, 2010 at 12:34 pm

Reading: Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not? http://bit.ly/cTnD8Y #yam

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

darwinecoAugust 31st, 2010 at 9:42 am

Summer’s Over – Going back to email hell – Or Not? http://bit.ly/ajPwrO good pts from @robpatrob

This comment was originally posted on Twitter

» Subscribe to the RSS feed for these comments

Your comment

Want an image to appear near your comment? Go to gravatar.com

HTML-Tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Additional comments powered by BackType