How Scoble Absorbs 10,000+ E-mail

I’m not dumb. I just have a command of thoroughly useless information.

-Calvin of “Calvin and Hobbes”

Last week, we covered how celebrity tech-blogger Robert Scoble reads 622 RSS feeds each morning. In Part II, we answer the question:

How does he manage to read and organize tens of thousands of e-mail?

This exclusive 5-minute interview provides some great tips for avoiding e-mail overload, including:

The companies he recommends for e-mail systems

Definitions: are you a “piler” or a “filer”?

How to use reverse spam filtering to save time

The GTD rule he violates in favor of filing

Folder structure: how many does he use?

Why Robert doesn’t store all e-mail

Innovative use of a “Done” folder to prevent rereading

The interview cuts off at 5 minutes because my memory card reached capacity. What are a few of the things we discussed after the camera stopped rolling? See below the video for some great tips that weren’t caught on film.

What did you miss afterwards? Here are a few of the highlights:

1. Keep all Outlook .PST files under 2GB in size to optimize speed and prevent crashes:

Creating a new .PST file is not intuitive. Here’s the menu flow to get it done: Tools –> Options –> Mail Setup –> Data Files –> Add. Robert has three separate .PST files as folders in his left-hand Outlook view, which are essentially “Old”, “Middle/Someday”, and “Hot”. These are in addition to his “Inbox”, which he considers his “working set”.

2. Remove infrequently used .PST files:

Right-click and “close” infrequently used .PST folders and other folders. This does not delete them, thus Google Desktop can still be used to search for these messages. I suggest you double-check this before doing anything resembling deleting/removing.

3. Rename or append frequently-used folders to appear at the top of the list:

This one is from me. Robert has 20+ folders, as do millions of us. Once you identify the most frequently used folders, add “A-…”, “B-…”, “C-…”, etc. as prefixes (in descending order of frequency) on the folder names to reorder the folders alphabetically and bring the most useful to the top. Cut down on mouse travel time and eliminate wasted visual scanning.

4. Responding to fewer e-mail is the holy grail:

Robert told me that, based on his analytics over time, each e-mail he replies to produces between 1.5 and 2 additional e-mail in return. Sending e-mail multiplies the e-mail you receive. Replying to more people more often — the goal of most people — actually creates more work instead of cutting it down.

For more strategies, including template e-mails, that can be used to cut e-mail volume in half and cut frequency to once per day or once per week, see “The Low-Information Diet” and “Interrupting Interruption” in The 4-Hour Workweek.

Did you enjoy this topic and behind-the-scenes look? Please take a second to Digg it here and I’ll do more!

The Tim Ferriss Show is one of the most popular podcasts in the world with more than one billion downloads. It has been selected for "Best of Apple Podcasts" three times, it is often the #1 interview podcast across all of Apple Podcasts, and it's been ranked #1 out of 400,000+ podcasts on many occasions. To listen to any of the past episodes for free, check out this page.

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[…] Email Organisation(timferriss) How does he manage to read and organize tens of thousands of e-mail?This exclusive 5-minute interview provides some great tips for avoiding e-mail overload […]

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[…] Scoble shares his email tips on the mighty Tim Ferriss blog Last week, we covered how celebrity tech-blogger Robert Scoble reads 622 RSS feeds each morning. In Part II, we answer the question: […]

Brian Keith
Brian Keith
16 years ago

Tim,

When Scoble answers less email, is that because he is walking over to talk to people, or calling them more, or just ignoring things that don’t need his attention?

Brian

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[…] tip comes from Robert Scoble via Tim Ferriss. In an interview about how he handles his huge email load, Robert told Tim that each email reply he […]

Amy Ewart
Amy Ewart
16 years ago

“Multi-tasking is dead. It never worked and it never will. Intelligent people love to sing its praises because it gives them permission to avoid the much more challenging alternative: focusing on one thing.

“Single-tasking,� creating an environment that permits the start-to-finish completion of high-impact tasks, will be the defining feature of top performers in a world of ADD-enabling technologies.�

Amy Ewart
Amy Ewart
16 years ago

As he was relating some examples of his work day, I gasped because it sounded exactly like my work day! And I realized it is wasn’t effective. Timothy goes on to say that our society has an epeidemic of Information Abuse and Information Addiction. The concept that they must be available and stay connected all the time and that checking e-mails 100 times a day and having a Blackberry attached to your head is how you will become more productive. As a virtual assistance firm, this was what our clients paid us for. They hire us to be available, so they dont need to be. So needless to say I was really pondering “how does a Virtual Assistant who is hired to read, sort and research endless information on behalf of their clients apply this concept of unplugging?�

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[…] Tim has also posted a second installment of the interview with Scoble, this one about how he manages… over 10,000 email… Sheesh: How Scoble Absorbs 10,000+ E-mail […]

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Dan
Dan
16 years ago

Tech dependence. I know news agregation is this guys job but he should be living his life. In fact so should I. No more comments from me. I’m going sailing or something. Bye.

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[…] Tim Ferriss’s 4-Hour Workweek […]

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[…] email, the more compelled they feel to send email. Technologist Robert Scoble has said that for each email he sends, he gets 1.75 to 2 messages in return. This phenomenon highlights the unscalable nature of most time-management approaches: striving to […]

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[…] email, the more compelled they feel to send email. Technologist Robert Scoble has said that for each email he sends, he gets 1.75 to 2 messages in return. This phenomenon highlights the unscalable nature of most time-management approaches: striving to […]

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[…] check email, the more compelled they feel to send email. Technologist Robert Scoble has said that for each email he sends, he gets 1.75 to 2 messages in return. This phenomenon highlights the unscalable nature of most time-management approaches: striving to […]

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[…] email, the more compelled they feel to send email. Technologist Robert Scoble has said that for each email he sends, he gets 1.75 to 2 messages in return. This phenomenon highlights the unscalable nature of most time-management approaches: striving to […]

sarpreet
sarpreet
15 years ago

want 100000 mails per day

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[…] email, the more compelled they feel to send email. Technologist Robert Scoble has said that for each email he sends, he gets 1.75 to 2 messages in return. This phenomenon highlights the unscalable nature of most time-management approaches: striving to […]

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[…] emails a day. The real problem with email, according to Technologist Robert Scoble, is that for each email he sends, he gets 1.75 to 2 messages in return. So, in theory, sending 50 emails, begets 100, which beget 200 and so […]

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[…] to fewer email.  Tim Ferris notes that “each email he [Robert Scoble] replies to produces between 1.5 and 2 additional e-mail […]

Abraham
Abraham
13 years ago

The videos don’t seem to work. The youtube links in them work but the embeds aren’t working on my Chrome browser.

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Judi Bola
11 years ago

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Tech dependence. I know news agregation is this guys job but he should be living his life. In fact so should I. No more comments from me. I’m going sailing or something. Bye

Sbobet
Sbobet
10 years ago

It’s a type of light that wraps? around the camera lens. They should have used softboxes instead of a ring light