Archive for digital coaching

Oct
20

Organizing emails with Gmail

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Now that I’ve switched from Outlook (It makes my stomach turn when I see it open on someone else’s screen these days), I am learning how to use Gmail more effectively. I am very amateur on the true power of Gmail at this point. I am however, getting very good at transitioning small business customers to Gmail and other Google apps. This would include setting up the accounts, imapping old folders, popping multiple accounts, creating labels and other handling other administrative tasks.

I haven’t had enough time to figure out the little tweaks that will I’m sure make Gmail even more efficient and effective. Organizing is much different in Gmail than in say Outlook or web-based email clients. Instead of creating a series of folders, and then moving an email to a particular folder for reference later; Gmail’s labeling system with the use of tags (Web 2.0 concept- I guess, but I could be speaking out of turn), allows users to tag an email with several labels instead of putting it into one folder. Although dragging and dropping an email into one solitary folder is simpler on the surface- and I love simpler- labels in the long run are much more intuitive. Need a for instance- here you go.

Say you get an email of a receipt from your backpack account. Well in my mind I need to label this with a star or with an @ action label, because I would like to print it for my tax file. I also want it labeled accounting. Just in case I needed to reference it by association, I may label it Backpack. Now six months from now if I needed to access this for tax purposes or to correct a bill, then I could by association look in one of two or three places. In the old way of doing it. I would be forced to choose one folder that best associates with the email. Well I probably couldn’t make that decision at that point, so I would just procrastinate and leave it in my inbox.

I’m still getting used to not dragging and dropping files but I can see the benefit in this new method of labels/tags.

This is not a new revelation to anyone in the digital world. I am going to link to a video which explains how Google Reader increases the efficiency and organization of online reading. Most small business owners I meet are not using this time saving method of keeping up with their favorite blogs.

Instead of the old way (going out to each website, news site or blog site to see what they’re up to) you can read your online news the new way using feeds. RSS feeds are changing the way we get info.

Check out this video from Common Craft.

I highly recommend Seth Godin’s blog.

I don’t agree with him on every issue, but he has some serious knowledge of trends in marketing and productivity- among other things. I bet we’re as different as night and day, but we have this in common- he knows marketing and I want to learn it much better.

He is very consistent in his blogging and it is usually encouraging to me. I read the Dip a while back and just recently finished Meatball Sundae and Tribes. I’m going to trim down the number of blogs I follow and this won’t be one of them.

Oct
13

Organizing Your Passwords

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To start with, I’m sure there are some high tech ways to keep passwords. I know people who use open ID and I’m sure I’ll be there with them soon enough. For now, I keep my passwords organized in a excel spreadsheet. I strive for the simplest thing at the current time. For me the simplest thing now is Excel. The spreadsheet is one of only a few actual documents I save to my desktop. The main spreadsheet has several sheet tabs labeled with some general categories I find helpful. For one I have a lot of Financial Passwords. If you’re worried about all the identity theft stuff- get LifeLock- they can clean me up to the tune of a million dollars if I suffer the misfortune. I have another sheet/tab of Social Media passwords. I have two sheets earmarked for my Web Tools as I call them. I have another sheet for General Business websites, and last I’ve got shopping websites.

In the sheet itself on each page, I have 4 columns and multiple rows. The column titles are:

  • Website
  • URL
  • Username
  • Password _ since most passwords are pretty short, I use this column if the website has any password clues or questions-which most financial sites have.

I also save this document on some of my web-based programs so I have it if I’m accessing the Internet from another location.

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