Get Your Gatekeepers Up

27 08 07 - 14:38 - Bookmark this post

This is a guestblog by Craig Huggart. I blog on Getting Things Done and work-life balance at Tech Rest.

Castlegate Do you have a secretary? Not I but maybe you do. Even so, having your electronic gatekeepers on guard helps cut down on interruptions.

Earlier today I sent a message to a friend and received this "Out of Office" reply:

Thank you for your email.  I will be responding to emails between 11:00 & 1:00 and after 3:00 pm.

A thing of beauty! This helps take email management to a new level. Most people know that responding to emails in blocks of time is more efficient be few do it. What this reply does so well is that it sets reasonable expectations of when you will respond.

Another idea you may want to try is setting your phone so that all calls role to voice mail. This works really well for me.

So get your gatekeepers up and get more rest!

See also:


Like this article? Subscribe to the RSS feed!

so what happens when my auto-responder then sends a message back to his auto-responder with my email checking times – won’t his just send on back again? Could get confusing or am I missing something?
rob - 28 08 07 - 21:02

@rob: A good autoresponder only sends a message once, exactly to prevent the problem you describe.
Jeroen Sangers - 30 08 07 - 17:36

Craig, interesting view. But how do you work around those emails which need your immediate attention like a change of scope in a project you are working on or on a lighter side, someone wants to have some coffee with you in 30 minutes to talk through some upcoming actions? I like the idea but I don’t think you should use it very rigid. Flexibility is always key I think
Frank Meeuwsen - 14 09 07 - 12:32




Since this weblog is no longer active, comments are disabled too. Please use a trackback from your own weblog if you want to comment on an article. Thank you.

Frank Meeuwsen

About

This is an article which is part of my weblog "What's the Next Action". It deals with everything GTD and the five phases of projectplanning as written by Dave Allen in his book "Getting Things Done".

The previous article on this blog is called 'Original guestbloggingpost found again'.
The next article on this blog is called 'How Do You Use Projects in GTD?'.
You can find all the articles on the frontpage.
You can contact me via email on punkey at gmail dot com.

Explore

Archives

February 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004

Last Comments

Gemini (Advanced Workflow…): This is an excellent document. I wan…
Fun and my diet (The next action: …): Nice to meet you, I’m from Japan. G…
free online flash… (Vote for the best…): Congratulations a good site!!! Thank…
Scott STEPHEN (Join the GTD-Feed…): I have a blog ("O&A Coaching":www.oe…
Jan G (5 GTD systems I s…): Hi. I have both ThinkingRock 2 and M…
Pawel (Nozbe makes me bl…): After three days of testing nozbe.co…
Kevin Crenshaw (Join the GTD-Feed…): Priacta would like an invitation, pl…
Scott Carlson (AutoHotkey and Th…): I have a similiar script to Luke, bu…
Tayla (How to make copy …): тαу.ℓα (: ιѕ вσяє∂
Emil (Enlarge your text…): dsf

Webfeed

XML: RSS feed Save time and energy, use my Webfeed
Current subscribers:

Save

Try

Nozbe

Explore

Miscellany

Powered by Pivot - 1.40.4: 'Dreadwind' 

XML: RSS feed Webfeed
Del.icio.us webfeed My Del.icio.us GTD feed
Subscribe in NewsGator Online



Powered by FeedBlitz