📬How do you organize your e-mail inbox?

Raphael Salaja
16 replies
My inbox isn't much different from the average inbox. Upon signing up for various sites, newsletters, and other email lists, my inbox quickly became crowded. So I'm looking for some tips on organizing my inbox. Hopefully someone can share some tips that would help out everyone!

Replies

Sebastian
Unread first. That's it.
Aliaksandr Kandratsiuk
@1988seb If you need to find some emails how you manage it? I see you don't sort emails)
Raphael Salaja
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
@1988seb Simple, and easy
Jen Fox
I like to organise my inbox like I do my daily tasks. The most important stuff at the top and the rest below. We use gmail so labels, stars and flags keep all my topics sorted. I mark anything I don't care to see as spam and delete the rest. At one time I used tool called Sanebox, it was very helpful for filtering out garbage emails. My only complaint is that the other saneboxes became bloated over time because I never looked at them. Another helpful tool for me are rules. I'll set rules and triage incoming mail into different folders for reading later. Hope this helps!
Brenna Donoghue
@jennifersafox Wow, seriously impressed by how organized your inbox is!
Jen Fox
@brenna_donoghue @raf_underscore Thank you. No worries! the important thing is to do what works for you. :)
Raphael Salaja
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
@jennifersafox @brenna_donoghue This is truly amazing stuff, thanks for the tips
Brenna Donoghue
I used to organize emails into folders based on subjects... and frankly I ended up with too many folders and it was hard to find cross-subject emails. I've since simplified my folders to: 1. Inbox 2. Today (reply/action today) 3. This week (reply/action this week) 4. This month (reply/action this month) 5. FYI (where most end up) In this way, they're organized as to-dos and easily searchable. And I delete anything that doesn't seem long-term important.
Raphael Salaja
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
@brenna_donoghue Thank you for these tips.
Stephen
I use a program called gnus for Emacs, which I will not recommend to anyone here. Gnus allows you to assign a score to an email based on any criteria that you can come up with. Content in the subject line, in the body, maybe the sender? I then assign a colour to each email depending on the score and have a hierarchy of which colours I should tackle first. The goal is that all incoming emails are scored and coloured but that's unachievable, so I'm happy with this affecting ~80%.
Jonathan Massabni
My favorite one so far : "Inbox Zero". it's a different approach but works well. It's basically keeping the inbox empty at all times to avoid confusing it with a "to-do" list!
Raphael Salaja
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
@jonathanm Interesting, I'll be sure to check it out
I use folders and labels to organize my inbox. This makes it easier for me to search through all the messages related to a specific topic or project. I also use filters and rules in outlook so that only particular types of messages get delivered directly into my Inbox folder.
Raphael Salaja
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
Indie Developer Toolkit for Notion
@qudsia_ali I see, it's easier to clean up when everything is separated.
Rich Watson
NVSTly: Social Investing
NVSTly: Social Investing
Gmail has labels that I use to help organize. Still a complete mess though, I just start important stuff or mark it as unread to keep it at the top. 🤣😂🤣
Aliaksandr Kandratsiuk
In my outlook I organised emails into folders based on subjects. Until today it works. I realised here that I wont be working as soon as I have many amount of folders and it will be difficult to find and managed it. Also don't keep emails I really don't need.