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Who Is Jan Wencel?

Life Contained founder, Jan Wencel, works with people who want to cross more...and more important things off their list on a daily basis.

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Life Contained's Personal Productivity Blog

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Personal Productivity Tales: Engineer in Chicago

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email exhale

I'm working with an engineer in Chicago to help with an overflowing email inbox. Following are a few of the brave decisions he made to streamline and declutter:

  • Subscribe to a one-folder archive system instead of organizing into email folders (I'll post more on this conceptin the coming weeks)
  • Install X1 to find anything in the "dump" within seconds (I'll post more on X1 in the coming weeks)
  • Check email fewer times per day--moving from 15-20 to roughly 5--so he can increase his email processing time and decrease interruptions
  • Reduce the number of emails in his inbox--from a couple thousand to roughly 50 (or to only those from the last rolling seven days)
    • He went through steps on his own similar to the ones posted here and got his number under a thousand with great determination, but relatively little time
    • We'll work together to get him closer to his goal by establishing a task tracking system he can use to defer work & delegated tasks; he's considering paper planners as a possible solution
  • Reduce the number of years of information sitting in Outlook by archiving a .pst file.
  • Customize Outlook to perform routine tasks to his liking
What kinds of things are you doing to streamline email?

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Assertiveness Tip: Workable Compromise

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The assertiveness tip for today is the second in a series of tips from author Manuel Smith, creator of the 1970s seminal piece When I Say No, I Feel Guilty. Following is a helpful passage from the book to help those looking to obtain a more assertive posture. Enjoy!

WORKABLE COMPROMISE

"Many people learning to be assertive, often for the first time in their adult lives, do not understand why verbal skills like BROKEN RECORD are used. They ask: 'What do I do when the other person doesn't give in or is assertive to me also?' The answer to the question is that our true sense of self-respect has a priority over everything else. Consequently, if you keep your self-respect through exercising your assertive rights with skills like BROKEN RECORD, you will feel good even if you do not achieve your goal immediately...It is practical, whenever you feel that you self-respect is not in question, to offer a workable compromise to the other person."

What Smith tells us here is simple. As long as you don't loose your self-respect or dignity, remember that you have been assertive and are using healthy compromise skills.

In what situations can you see yourself employing a workable compromise?

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