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Four ‘super’ actions for keeping on top of work-email

New research has analysed 25 years of academic research to identify the four actions you should take to improve both well-being and productivity, while staying on top of your emails.

Now, a new study* has analysed 25 years of academic research to identify the four actions you should take to improve both well-being and productivity, while staying on top of your emails.

Published in the Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, the researchers studied the findings from 62 empirical papers, using action regulation theory – essentially how we regulate our behaviour in the pursuit of different goals – to develop a framework that offers practical recommendations to both organisations and individuals.

From this, researchers identified four super actions:

  1. Communicate work-email access boundaries: clearly state when you are not available to deal with email, stick to this, and don’t email others when they are not working.
  1. Regularly check and review your inbox: delete, sort and reprioritise.
  1. Only use work-email to send work-relevant communications.
  1. Be civil, courteous and considerate in work-email exchanges.

Dr Emma Russell, Reader in Occupational and Organisational Psychology and Co-Investigator of the Digital Futures at Work Research Centre, who led the study, said:

“Statista predicting that an estimated 4.6 billion people will be using email by 2025. However, people have been subjected to almost 25 years of often contradictory advice about how to manage emails at work.

“Our new research, based on a comprehensive analysis of 25 years of email research, shows that strategies to stay on top of work-email don’t have to come at the expense of your well-being.

“The evidence shows that these four ‘super’ actions both reduce stress and improve productivity.

“We hope that this will help people to make use of the email strategies that are most likely to work, whilst also enabling employers to foster healthier and more efficient email cultures.”

*Research fromthe University of Sussex Business School, Loughborough University and ESCP Business School, Madrid,

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