1603 Articles match "Email"

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Friday, March 19, 2010
And, more importantly, what are yours? Posted via email from Social Architect ...Tags: Photo cred: [link] The sacred cows I mention below have been on my mind for sevral months now, but I was inspired to take action after a community management panel that I attended at SxSWi. My intention with this post is not to suggest that we do away these sacred cows, but to start
 
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
etc. Today we use email, Twitter, Skype etc. Interesting view from Bob Frankston (whom, along with Dan Bricklin , we have to thank for spreadsheets) of the plumbing beneath/between all this crrrrazzzy online stuff. Bob was challenged to reduce his thinking "on infrastructure to four bullet points in five minutes." quot; Excerpt from Frankston's
 
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Email:  events@ata.asn.au I’ve been asked to speak in Melbourne on April 15th (evening) about the impact of social media, online communities, social networks and call centres. As you probably know, I believe that while marketing and PR want social networks to be about them and their needs, the customer usually has a specific question they want answered, best suited to Customer Service engaging on support and FAQ issues.
 

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Email Email remains the most common communication method within the enterprise. Email can be used for point-to-point communication as well as group communication (through distribution lists or by addressing the message to additional people). While IM is more of a real-time system, email implements a store-and-forward model. Ross Mayfield put forth a pretty interesting question on Twitter (see below). It's a great question - my thoughts below:
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Home Blog Help Sign in and show my conversations 9cays Take the pain out of group email. Tired of getting group email that you dont want? Tired of reading through badly formatted quotes at the bottom of messages? Tired of people claiming they never got your message? 9cays is for you. Every 9cays conversation has... Its own email address Email to the conversations address goes out to all the participants.
1647 the total number of incoming emails over at 52 week period, averaging 31,6 emails a week, 4,5 emails a day during those 52 weeks! With a highest number of 60 emails in a single week, and 3 , the lowest number in a single week as well. suppose if you take 3 minutes per email I guess I spent around 13,5 minutes a day working through my corporate email; or if you take, say, 10 minutes per complex And so we move forward into the next challenge on my quest of eventually giving up on e-mail at work. Yesterday, February 15th, it marked the
This week though, that post will go up and I am surely hoping it would help folks find their way to, finally, move away from corporate email. But today I am going to go back and share with you folks further insights on the weekly progress reports from my daily living “ A World Without Email “, plus a couple of interesting links I have bumped into over the last few days. You would remember how last week I was a bit concerned Last week I mentioned in Twitter how during the course of the week I’d be putting together a rather compelling and thought-provoking entry where I would detail how folks could kill over 85% of the incoming e-mails they get on a daily basis .
We all complain about email but who does anything about it? which prompts me to post this single slide about how to radically improve your use of email. And, sugest that you read Gil's post where he reviews Mike Song, Vicki Halsey, and Tim Burress's book, The Hamster Revolution , apparently about information overload and, yes, email management. Even if Gil Yehuda's post were awful (it's anything but), I'd still want to blog it just for this title . OK, a few people (loud clearing of throat)...which
dates back to around two years, more precisely a few weeks after I started this initiative of living " A World Without Email ". How am I capable of giving up corporate email altogether and still do the stuff that I do on a daily basis. with the whole experiment itself, so they could overcome them and start walking away, slowly but steadily, from corporate email. Now that I have gotten off my chest that reflection on something I have been meaning to write about for a while now, I think it is time to move into the next one. Perhaps, in a follow-up blog post I will talk
You may remember my last blog post on the topic of the weekly progress reports of living “ A World Without Email “, where I mentioned how I was in the process of putting together an article where I would be able to share with folks how they could kill over 85% of the incoming emails they get on a daily basis. So, what happened last week then, you may be wondering, with regards to my weekly progress report on giving up email at work, right? Well, it is proving to be a little bit of a challenge to eventually share it out there, because there is just so much that I want to include in that current draft (#3 at the moment) that I doubt it would fit in within a single entry.
over at Twitter (Where I nowadays get most of my dynamic feeds, I must admit) I got a couple of strong reminders to eventually share with folks a quick update on how I have been doing over the last few days, in this case, weeks, living " A World Without Email ", that is, giving up e-mail at work. That way I will avoid boring you to death with countless progress reports entries on this blog on detailing what it is like not using email at work. During the course of yesterday a couple of tweets (Thanks, Sandy & Stewart !) And here I am, once again, putting together