#AuthorToolBoxBlogHop
I like to be organized. It’s true, especially when it comes
to being a writer/author. I am my boss. I am the manager of my business.
Organization is key when you’re running a business, and that’s precisely what
you’re doing.
Previously I mentioned how I keep track of my expenses and
earnings. I’ve also hinted at how I use email folders to save receipts and blog
tour emails.
Well, I have a lot more email folders than that.
As a matter of fact, I have email folders for each of my
published works. Whenever I send or receive an email regarding one of my books,
I move it into that book’s email folder. Every email from my editor and
publisher is put into these folders. Emails for promos that are in the works,
including blog tours, are also added.
I also have folders for the works I am querying. The emails
I send out are moved to these folders. When I receive a rejection, I have a
folder marked as “Rejections.”
What other folders do I have?
- Book
Club (emails to the moderators for the IWSG book club)
- Comments
(lovely emails or blog comments I’ve received)
- Editing (client emails)
- Fey’s
Sparklers (my street team)
- Giveaways (emails I send to giveaway winners)
- Guest
Posts (for guests of my blog)
- IWSG
- Mom
(these are the emails regarding my mom’s children’s books)
- My
Newsletter (my newsletters that go out)
- Promo
Info
- Receipts (online receipts and PayPal emails)
- Rejections
- Reviews
- SAVE
(works-in-progress I have put on the back burner)
Once or twice a year, I delete emails I don’t need anymore,
such as for completed blog tours and review requests that weren’t answered.
I return to these emails a lot if I need to recall or double-check something, find a document I received or sent, and make sure I sent an email. These emails also make a great record and can provide "proof" of a conversation or confirmation if you ever need it.
I return to these emails a lot if I need to recall or double-check something, find a document I received or sent, and make sure I sent an email. These emails also make a great record and can provide "proof" of a conversation or confirmation if you ever need it.
I love my email folders, and I add to them every day.
QUESTION: Do you organize your email folders? How?
QUESTION: Do you organize your email folders? How?
I never thought of organizing the actual emails. I often copy their content to a Word file and keep those organized though.
ReplyDeleteCopying and pasting them into a Word document sounds like too much work for me. LOL
DeleteYes, I do, mostly. Sometimes, like during this move, they get away from me. Then I must make time to go in and purge my email inbox. For some reason it's easier for me to keep up on my gmail account than my bellsouth email. Maybe it's that in gmail they go in categories to begin with and that makes it easier to go through...
ReplyDeleteI have an account with Yahoo, so I'm not sure what a gmail account is like.
DeleteIt's good to be your "On Boss" through your writing Chrys.
ReplyDeleteSome great tips and reading.
Yvonne.
Thanks, Yvonne!
DeleteWay back when, I set up a "Writing" email folder and everything related to writing went in that. At the time, I never thought to break that up even more. Now, though? The amount of stuff in there is staggering. Sheesh! I better get to organizing.
ReplyDeleteIt's a lot easier to find an email when folders are broken up into more specific categories.
DeleteI don't believe I have any e-mail folders! You're so much more organized than I'll ever be.
ReplyDeleteIt may sound odd, but I love my email folders. They come in handy daily for organizing and I go to them a lot to find information or email threads.
DeleteI organize my email folders too. I have them for tours, individual authors I deal with a lot, and anything else I have learned I want to have on hand. I go through and delete unnecessary ones once a year.
ReplyDeletesherry @ fundinmental
I also go through and delete emails I no longer need, such as for blog tours that have come and gone, about once or twice a year.
DeleteI don't have any folders either! Outside of spam of course.
ReplyDeleteYou should set up some email folders for IWSG stuff.
DeleteWow! That's really organized! I don't think I get enough emails at this point to need that many folders lol. I did have a separate folder when Hero Lost came out, though, to keep all of the emails with the other authors and the blog tour stuff organized.
ReplyDeleteKeeping the emails for Hero Lost in a separate folder was a good idea. I would've done the same thing. ;)
DeleteYou are very organized! I have no email folders for my home. As for work, I do but not as clean as yours. Good for you! So many have no organizational style since they come in with a big box for me to look through.
ReplyDeleteA big box for you to look through? That almost sounds like paper mail. lol
DeleteI do use folders! Finally. I'm doing something right. LOL. I even have folders for personal things like the kids' school correspondence, order tracking, and coupons.
ReplyDeleteLOL!! That made me chuckle. Everyone is different and is organized in their own way. :)
DeleteThe folders are a great idea. Yes, I have email folders for different subjects. Being the unorganized person that I am, I forget to put the information in them. Must do better. Thanks for the reminder. Guess I'd best go through my emails. Have a great day.
ReplyDeleteSometimes in can be easier to just delete emails or not do anything after you send one or reply back to one. I really made it a habit. Now it happens automatically.
DeleteHi Chrys - I really should look into these ... you are thoroughly professionally organised = go to top of the class: something I need to aspire too - thanks for a great post reminder! Are you using gmail? Cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteNo, I'm not using gmail. I'm using Yahoo. I believe all email providers offer a way for you to create other folders, though.
DeleteI have e-mail files too, but so many for writing. I have a yahoo and gmail account and have files on each. It's really helpful.
ReplyDeleteEmail folders do help a lot.
DeleteI have a few folders for the main stuff and then one catch all one for the others. Think I have 10 years worth of emails on one account lol
ReplyDelete10 years' worth of emails? Yikes. That is a lot. lol
DeleteI do keep email folders, although I really need to go through and update and reorganize them. They are very useful for keeping something on hand without leaving it in your inbox.
ReplyDeleteIt is a great way to keep things orderly and keep the inbox empty. :)
DeleteI love your organizational skills and your ideas for folders. Keeping things where they belong makes it easier to find something when you need it.
ReplyDeleteTeresa
Exactly. I use my email folders daily, and have had occasions when I had to look back at old emails.
DeleteI use email folders, but I don't think I'm that organized. I like some of your folders and might use them myself to be more organized.
ReplyDeleteAwesome! Use my folder examples to organize your email account/emails. :)
DeleteFor a long time I only filed emails after I had read and resolved them, or read and evaluated them and decided they were information I needed to keep but not respond to, but in the recent past I've found that the growing volume of emails one receives grows to be too much. Fortunately I heard about another strategy, which I'm currently trying. The gist of it is look at an email for no more than 30 seconds and determine if it's something that can be resolved in under 2 minutes or not. If yes, go ahead. If not, or if you're not sure, file it away in a folder that is specific to the topic/nature of the email, and is exclusively full of unresolved emails. Then add a line to the "to do list" for that folder. Granted, it's quite possible that some emails may never get resolved, but as you say, if a year goes by and those emails are still not addressed, it may be they need to be reevaluated. It is staggering how much information can flow through a single inbox. And much of it is well intentioned, either a kind and free offer of information that may be helpful, or an opportunity/request, but at the end of the day, time (and mental energy) are always what is in shortest supply (I find).
ReplyDeleteThat's interesting. I always read my emails and resolve them right away because I have publishers, editors, clients, and bloggers I need to communicate with. If it's an email that needs a response, I reply. If it's one that's junk (as we all get those) I delete it right away.
DeleteYou sound very organized! I organize my email folders by certain groups and topics. From time to time, I do a reorg and consolidate some of the folders.
ReplyDeleteVery smart, Cynthia!
DeleteWow, you have all your organizing worked out.
ReplyDeleteI try. :)
DeleteThe email folders idea is why I prefer a local drive email program to one in the cloud. My Outlook account has emails from a decade ago that I'm not yet willing to part with. Yes, the file size is crazy but I have multiple terabytes of space so I have no worry about that!
ReplyDeleteEmails from a decade ago? Wow! I'm sure there are emails I'll end up keeping for a very long time, too.
DeleteI do organize my folders! One of the things I'd like to do eventually is not have my writing-related email commingling with the rest of my stuff. Great post (and it may have inspired a post on a related note from me ;) )
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to the post that this one inspired. :)
DeleteI have one suggestion if you're interested. Delete 'rejections' and replace it with 'passes'. It made it easier for me. Less personal. :-)
ReplyDeleteI love my email folders too. hehehe
Anna from elements of emaginette
That's a good suggestion! You're right. "Passes" is a much better term. Thank you!
DeleteOrganization is in my genes. I've always had email folders, pretty much the same way you have yours set up. I still have paper files, too. My current WIP notebook (a big 3-ring binder) has gotten a bit overwhelming, so I'm moving some of it to a second notebook. I need to have my information at my fingertips or I get edgy.
ReplyDeleteI have a few paper files, too. :)
DeleteI've gotten out of habit with organizing my emails. Lately, it's all been "eh, just go in the big bin and I'll deal with you later." Of course, that just leads to more procrastinating!
ReplyDeleteAnd procrastinating can lead to a big problem. lol
DeleteHow interesting! I love that you're so organized, and can totally see the need for deleting emails once a year. I should really adopt that good habit! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Elle! And you're welcome. :)
DeleteFey's sparklers is the cutest title! I used to spend time organizing email folders but now it's just spiraled out of control. Sigh. Thank you for the reminder to get myself organized again :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Erika! I thought of "Sparklers" because of the sparks I use as a theme and image for my brand.
DeleteYou're welcome. ;)
You are truly organized! Good for you!! Big Hugs!
ReplyDeleteI try. Thanks!
DeleteI have a few folders to organise my emails, and I'm sure as I get closer to finishing a book the number will grow :) It feels much more organised than a cluttered inbox, and more efficient than deleting everything in case I need to come back to things later!
ReplyDeleteI hated having a cluttered inbox of opened emails that I didn't want to delete but didn't know what to do with them. Email folders to the rescue!
DeleteYou have done way more organizing than I have--and I can totally see the value. I need to do something much more like you have.
ReplyDeleteGive it a try and see how you like it. :)
DeleteI do use email folders. I also have multiple email addresses - personal, business, author, reviewer, junk (although I do find they overlap e.g. people will send a review request to my business or personal email, because that's the address they have).
ReplyDeleteI also use a free tool called Boomerang to help manage emails I don't need to deal with right now e.g. review requests. And yes - I still haven't reviewed your book! I haven't been reading as many craft books this year, but that means I now I have a backlog and need to get on top of them.
Yes, I organize my emails. I have folders for each event I do, guests for my blogs, special projects related to specific books, etc...
ReplyDeleteInteresting! I didn't even know that you could organize your e-mails into separate folders. But then again, I'm always far behind when it comes to technological stuff. I do, however, have multiple e-mail accounts: two for my two jobs, one for my personal e-mail account, and one for my blog account. Partly it's because I'm afraid that if I put them all in the same account, I might accidentally reveal my online alter ego as Neurotic Workaholic, and incidentally, that did happen once when I sent an e-mail to my students; fortunately, none of them seemed to notice or care because they didn't say anything about it.
ReplyDeleteDo you use the Google Email folders where it sends your emails to the correct folder right away? Like "promotions", "social", and "primary"? Or a roll up service like "Unroll.me"? I don't know how I handled email before Unroll.me. Then again I get a lot of junk email, some of which I occasionally want but most of which I don't. I do love using folders though. And using the star feature for important emails. It's much easier to find emails you want/need when they are in the correct folder and starred, if they are important.
ReplyDeleteIt's crazy to think how much email has changed in the past 10 or so years. Even crazier if you think about further back than that! Wonder how it will change in the next 10 years? Will it become more intuitive? Or will it be more of a privacy risk?
Great tips! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDelete