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"content": "<p>Done my new spreadsheet to have a GTD-style overview over all of my goals and tasks. I think I start to seriously be addicted to Notion.</p><p>Anyone interested in a bit more productivity posts here on Spinster? I’d love to talk about something else than men once in a while, they’re not worth all of our attention :awesome:</p>",
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"source": "Done my new spreadsheet to have a GTD-style overview over all of my goals and tasks. I think I start to seriously be addicted to Notion.\n\nAnyone interested in a bit more productivity posts here on Spinster? I'd love to talk about something else than men once in a while, they're not worth all of our attention :awesome:",
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"content": "<p>In the spirit of “don’t make men the entire point of being here”, I present another <a class=\"hashtag\" data-tag=\"productivity\" href=\"https://spinster.xyz/tag/productivity\">#productivity</a> hack: A three-folder email system that will give you more overview and that “inbox zero” so many people think is kind of important, I guess.</p><p>We all know that you can’t just delete every email you get. Some need to be archived in case you need them again, others need some follow up. One system I read about a few years ago that I kind of adapted creates three subfolders to your inbox: follow up, hold and archive.</p><ul><li>follow up means you need to react soon, but maybe answering on your phone or without some additional piece of information you have somewhere else isn’t a good idea or even impossible (example: you need to update your info on some account you have, but you are currently working and want to do it in the evening)</li><li>hold is when it’s still a current conversation or task you have but you have to wait for something like an answer from the person you’re talking to (and believe me, this one will be mostly full of tracking numbers for online orders)</li><li>archive is everything you need to keep (consider using tags like “personal” or “job-related” if your mail provider or software supports them to make looking them up easier): contract info, your idiot ex that you prepare to get a restraining order against (I also suggest printing at least some of those to file them and secure them in case your mail provider has some data loss in the future)</li></ul><p>Here is a similar system that leans more on David Allen’s “Getting Things Done” (if you’re interested in that, get a summary, the book is awful to read): <a href=\"https://getout.events/3-email-folders-that-can-quickly-help-you-get-to-inbox-zero\"></a><a href=\"https://getout.events/3-email-folders-that-can-quickly-help-you-get-to-inbox-zero\" rel=\"ugc\">https://getout.events/3-email-folders-that-can-quickly-help-you-get-to-inbox-zero</a>/\nHere is GTD’s approach on email: <a href=\"https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mg9NFGrSQxL4S3eF-5Dwr0w1UdT2JQy7/view\"></a><a href=\"https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mg9NFGrSQxL4S3eF-5Dwr0w1UdT2JQy7/view\" rel=\"ugc\">https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mg9NFGrSQxL4S3eF-5Dwr0w1UdT2JQy7/view</a></p><p>Like always when talking about inbox zero, please don’t stress yourself because of it. I quite like it for my personal emails, but if you have an email account where you get a <em>lot</em> of emails, it might just not be the best idea to first file everything and you can skip the follow up folder completely in favor of just cleaning out everything you don’t need anymore or already answered to.</p><p>Another thing to consider before going into such systems is to clear out your newsletter subscriptions. All of us have too many and that unsubscribe button at the end of it should work.</p><p>Somewhat related and something to laugh at the end 😉 \n<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dceyy0cX6J4\"></a><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dceyy0cX6J4\" rel=\"ugc\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dceyy0cX6J4</a></p>",
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"source": "In the spirit of \"don't make men the entire point of being here\", I present another #productivity hack: A three-folder email system that will give you more overview and that \"inbox zero\" so many people think is kind of important, I guess.\n\nWe all know that you can't just delete every email you get. Some need to be archived in case you need them again, others need some follow up. One system I read about a few years ago that I kind of adapted creates three subfolders to your inbox: follow up, hold and archive.\n* follow up means you need to react soon, but maybe answering on your phone or without some additional piece of information you have somewhere else isn't a good idea or even impossible (example: you need to update your info on some account you have, but you are currently working and want to do it in the evening)\n* hold is when it's still a current conversation or task you have but you have to wait for something like an answer from the person you're talking to (and believe me, this one will be mostly full of tracking numbers for online orders)\n* archive is everything you need to keep (consider using tags like \"personal\" or \"job-related\" if your mail provider or software supports them to make looking them up easier): contract info, your idiot ex that you prepare to get a restraining order against (I also suggest printing at least some of those to file them and secure them in case your mail provider has some data loss in the future)\n\nHere is a similar system that leans more on David Allen's \"Getting Things Done\" (if you're interested in that, get a summary, the book is awful to read): https://getout.events/3-email-folders-that-can-quickly-help-you-get-to-inbox-zero/\nHere is GTD's approach on email: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mg9NFGrSQxL4S3eF-5Dwr0w1UdT2JQy7/view\n\nLike always when talking about inbox zero, please don't stress yourself because of it. I quite like it for my personal emails, but if you have an email account where you get a *lot* of emails, it might just not be the best idea to first file everything and you can skip the follow up folder completely in favor of just cleaning out everything you don't need anymore or already answered to.\n\nAnother thing to consider before going into such systems is to clear out your newsletter subscriptions. All of us have too many and that unsubscribe button at the end of it should work.\n\nSomewhat related and something to laugh at the end 😉 \nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dceyy0cX6J4",
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