Hello. I am entering a complaint at the calculation laboratory. I decided to lose the physics lesson, and now I have to appeal to my position with my boss's assistant. I messed up. (FUCK BSU!) I swear, this is the week of hell. My boss said that I was "not mentally stable," so I asked myself to take a week off. I like it. It is good with you. I think she thinks I'm really depressed, I think so, but I do not think I need to make it work. Ayways I will not complain. Resting these days is a good thing, especially I get reward for them.
What did you first began on that day? Please browse my mail. I spend a bit of time browsing my inbox, reading funny content, canceling annoying e-mail subscriptions, and replying to customers. The advantage of early reply mail is that when my customer enters the office at 9 am, there is a reply in the inbox. I am writing a book and some e-books (it will be sent to subscribers for free newsletters), and I found that the best time to write is in the morning before the world wakes up . I had a cup of coffee in hand and scribbled notes I made on the previous day. To avoid getting in the way of the phone means that I really can keep in my mind and can do quite a bit of work.
So we are here, send the apocalypse by email. I remember the numerous names needed to organize Inbox, Zero in Inbox, Create E - mail, Reply to E - mail, and Copy to E - mail. Please imagine that you rely entirely on e-mail for 2 hours a day (and do not count cheeky periodic checks in 10 minutes). Where is the time to finish work? "Experienced reply mail" is not what the employer looks for in the resume. It is not a job to answer e-mails. Even if you clear the inbox, you will not get the result. We are cheated on the GTD blog, zero in the inbox is what we crave. This e-mail epidemic has created its own article type. The article titled "Email Habits for High Efficiency People" is very popular. Here, here, and see an example here.