{"id":143349,"date":"2021-04-22T09:59:10","date_gmt":"2021-04-22T09:59:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.next-action.co.uk\/?p=143349"},"modified":"2021-04-23T13:28:53","modified_gmt":"2021-04-23T13:28:53","slug":"have-you-really-cleaned-your-plate-or-are-there-leftovers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.next-action.co.uk\/2021\/04\/22\/have-you-really-cleaned-your-plate-or-are-there-leftovers\/","title":{"rendered":"Have You Really Cleaned Your Plate, or Are There Leftovers?"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Monika Danner has worked in corporate HR and leadership roles for more than 15 years. She has been a GTD\u00ae practitioner since 2014 and works as a certified GTD trainer for Next Action Partners in Germany.<\/em><\/p>\n

Remember buffets? It\u2019s been a while since they\u2019ve been available, and for our health that might be no bad thing. Science has long since proven that unlimited abundance does us humans way more harm than good. Apart from a fact, after most buffets there is quite a bit of food left over, which is no longer really in-keeping with our sustainable zeitgeist.<\/p>\n

We are experts in clearing up old leftover waste, but not in the kitchen \u2013 we help change habits where our clients\u2019 focus often is: on their over-full inboxes. When we introduce the idea of working from a zero base in their email inbox it is usually a surprising concept for many of our clients. But when they implement as we suggest, they get to work with easily digestible \u2018next actions\u2019 instead of overflowing buffets of unclear \u2018stuff\u2019, to stay with the analogy.<\/p>\n

For us, the email inbox is merely a temporary collection point that gets emptied regularly. We clarify everything that comes in, take care of two-minute actions, archive references, put good ideas on our someday-maybe list for later, and identify clear next steps and desired outcomes from what\u2019s left. Then we can get down to the real work with a clear head. Rule of thumb: every 24-48 hours the inbox is back to zero.<\/p>\n

Not so fast…. For some, unfortunately that’s not the end of it; they have a second mailbox. Not a personal one, but one they share with colleagues. Typical addresses start with info@, office@, recruitment@, or sales@… The names vary, but the principle is the same: if you send something to the address, you don’t know who will answer, and you don’t need to know. It can be one person, it can be 15. The main thing is that you get a prompt response.<\/p>\n

For teams with a lot of inter-departmental and customer contact, the advantages are clear:<\/p>\n