In her recent book, E-Mail: A Write It Well Guide, Chan offers the following suggestions:
1. Turn off your computer's "you've got mail" signal. This is critical, says Chan. You must wean yourself from the temptation to open every e-mail the instant it arrives.
2. Check e-mail only at certain times. Even if you're expecting an urgent message, try to check while you are between other activities, not in the middle of them. And when you scan your message list to see whether that urgent e-mail has finally arrived, avoid the temptation to open other new messages.
3. Cluster your responses. Instead of responding to every message as you read it, Chan says, if one person has sent several messages, read them all, combine your responses into one succinct message. Write a new subject line. You'll save time—and so will the recipient.
4. Don't check e-mail while talking on the phone. Checking e-mail while you're on hold is one thing; reading and responding to e-mail while you're in the middle of a conversation is another. Both activities will suffer.
5. Never check e-mail in the middle of a meeting. It's distracting and rude.
6. If you really need to concentrate, remove yourself from temptation. Get away from your computer, says Chan. Take your work into a conference room or library, or go to a café. Use your laptop—but don't connect it to the Internet. (And leave your BlackBerry® behind.)
7. Focus on the e-mail you are writing. When you're crafting an important e-mail, ignore new messages that appear in your message list. You can look at them when you have finished.
8. Don't check e-mail just because you are bored. Checking e-mail should be a purposeful activity. If a break is what you need, take a break. Get up from your desk. Get some coffee. Take a walk.
9. Use the phone for discussions. E-mail is great for passing on information and asking questions, but it's usually more productive to discuss something over the phone than in a steady stream of e-mails.
10. And here's one of our tips for helping to control e-mail—just go to HR.BLR.com. It's a trusted source that answers all those questions you're writing all those e-mails about. EEO-1 reports? COBRA changes? Layoffs? FMLA intermittent leave? ADA accommodation? In HR, if it's not one thing it's another. You need a go-to resource, and our editors recommend the “everything HR in one website,” HR.BLR.com.
As an example of what you will find there, here are some tips on hiring, taken from a supervisor handout on the website:
We should point out that this is just one of hundreds of such handouts and other supervisor training aids on the site.
You can examine the entire HR.BLR.com program free of any cost or commitment. It’s quite remarkable—30 years of accumulated HR knowledge, tools, and skills gathered in one place, and accessible at the click of a mouse.
What’s more, we’ll supply a free download copy of our special report Critical HR Recordkeeping just for looking at HR.BLR.com. If you’d like to try it at absolutely no cost or obligation to continue (and get the special report, no matter what you decide), go here.
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