Skip to content
Productivity

How to Cut Your Email Time in Half

Check out these tips on how to increase productivity and reduce the amount of time you spend checking email in half.

How to Cut Your Email Time in Half

Successful sales professionals need successful communication; however, the constant connection that we maintain through emails, phone calls, texts, push notifications, and social media can be overwhelming, stress-inducing, and productivity-killing. According to a poll by Adobe, 40% of employees wish they had less email. People who check their emails constantly can be more stressed out and less productive than those who only check their emails occasionally. 

how-to-cut-your-email-in-half

For tips on how to increase productivity and reduce the amount of time you spend checking email in half, check out an article published on the Fast Company blog.  

Learn about trackable mobile-learning video lessons that leave no room for excuses.

Mark Jewell

Mark Jewell

Mark Jewell is the President and co-founder of Selling Energy. He is a subject matter expert, coach, speaker and best-selling author focused on overcoming barriers to implementing projects. Mark teaches other professionals and organizations how to turbocharge their sales success.

SUBSCRIBE-CONCEPT-876110004_727x484

Subscribe to our Blog

Get daily “drip-irrigation” reinforcement. Each day you’ll get bits of wisdom, news, highlights of upcoming courses, and quotes to keep you inspired and motivated.

Latest Articles

How You Sign Business Emails Matters

How You Sign Business Emails Matters

Emails are an integral part of our work, and with each one we hope to get a response. What if just two words can make all the difference?

8 Common Sales Misconceptions

8 Common Sales Misconceptions

Don’t believe all the myths! Here are some common stereotypes you'll find surrounding the sales profession, disproven one at a time.

Sing Your Refrain

Sing Your Refrain

Your messaging should be woven into your language like the refrain of a song, whether it’s in a voicemail, an email, or a presentation.