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So I was super excited to hear about
Lots of people were.
When I joined the waiting list to download it, there were 600,000 people in front of me. In the hour before I finally got it, there were 700,000 people waiting behind me.
So, it was pretty disappointing that, after two weeks of waiting to use Mailbox, I deleted it two days after downloading it.
There's one reason why it didn't work for me: Mailbox makes you deal with one email at a time.
You have to open or swipe (to the left, further to the left, to the right, or further to the right) each individual email.
I get several hundred emails a day.
I have received 5 emails since beginning to write this post.
I do not have the time, nor the energy to make hundreds of individual decisions about email every day.
I believe Dr. Oz, who, during our Ignition conference last December, said that people have the capacity to make about 15 decisions per day before they start to get exhausted – and start making mistakes.
When I go through my email – which I do about 3 times per day – I go into the iPhone's default mail app, tap "Edit" on the top right, and then quickly tap every email I don't need to ever read (most of them) and then tap the bright red "archive" button.
It feels like one decision, an answer to a single question: "Are there any emails I need to see?"
Then I go back over the emails that remain and respond to the ones that need immediate attention. I flag the rest – emails I need to respond to, but not right away. I always get to them eventually.
When I'm doing email from my desktop, it's the same process, but even better, because in Gmail I can shift-click to select multiple emails to archive or delete at once.
Besides the "edit" button on my iPhone or shift-click in Gmail, there is one more feature that saves me when it comes to email – the iPhone app's "VIP" list.
You can set it up so that emails from a select group of people set off a push alert that vibrates your phone and makes a noise. I use this function for emails from my bosses, my family, and my most important sources.
Mailbox – who needs you?