![]() Don’t just delete the junk mail on this clean sweep. Unsubscribe from messages your executive doesn’t need. ![]() Seeing them in a sorted group allows you to handle in bulk. Maybe you can delete all emails from Target, or file all company newsletters. Based on who sent the email, you can determine the right course of action and handle them all at once. Sorting by sender will allow you to see who is sending emails to your executive. If your executive is not comfortable with a mass deletion of their old emails, sort by date and tackle the load year by year. If the request was important, the sender will send again. Emails this old will likely never be addressed, and if they are, it will be so latent it’s no longer relevant. If emails are more than 3 months old, delete (or archive) them. If you are sifting through thousands of emails, it is likely that many of them are months, even years old. To tackle this chore, start with a clean sweep to get rid of the noise and find the real work. Don’t be afraid we have tips to help you cruise through the clean up and keep it that way!Ĭleaning out a full inbox, especially one that is not yours, can be a challenge. It's incredible what you'll uncover.Who’s been there-the dreaded inbox with thousands of emails? It can be intimidating. You might be surprised to find some brands have you on multiple email lists, blasts for deals, updates and more. Tap this and you'll be able to remove yourself from the mailing list. You can almost always find a tiny "unsubscribe" button at the bottom of each email. You'll also want to be active in unsubscribing from specific emails you don't want. While Email does a good job cleaning out unnecessary messages, it's not perfect. The trick is to check this frequently, since it doesn't seem to gather everything in one shot. A simple tap on each "X" removes you from the mailing list entirely. Some I like, such as Best Buy, while others I don't need. Look at all of these I'm still subscribed to, and this is after I've been actively clearing it out for a week. ![]() Tap menu and then the "subscriptions button." Sign in with your email credentials - it supports Gmail, iCloud, Exchange, Yahoo, AOL and others. ![]() It's a simple name but it's a near-perfect email application and it has a built-in feature to help you cut down on email subscriptions you might not even know you're receiving. Download an app called "Email" for your iPhone or Android device I'm talking about the junk about deals on shoes you bought a year ago, discounts at that fast-food restaurant you once visited on a road trip through Kentucky and the like. Keep in mind that I'm not talking about spam, the sort that have ads for adult content or prescription medicines. Instead, it was my personal Gmail account that had, over the years, accumulated newsletters and junky messages from brands I've used, stores I visited once, eCard alerts, LinkedIn notifications and more.ĭozens and dozens of pointless emails hit my inbox every day, so I set out to stop it once and for all. It wasn't work emails, I leave those on a dedicated smartphone and they're typically useful. A week or so ago, I'd had enough of the constant buzzing of my phone alerting me of new emails. ![]()
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