4 Gmail productivity boosters you’re probably not using yet

Whether you’re a new Gmail user or you’ve been using the service since it turned out to not be an elaborate April Fools’ joke back in 2004, there’s a strong chance you’re still not getting enough out of it, productivity-wise. In that spirit, here’s a handful of my personal favorite hidden gems that most people haven’t turned on, haven’t discovered, or have just plain forgotten about. Get more stars to play with Starring important messages is a good way to separate the proverbial wheat from the chaff, but sometimes a single star doesn’t quite make it clear why a particular message is important. By default, you’ve got a single star to work with but head into Settings > General and make your way down to the Stars section. From there, you can drag additional icons into the “in use” row.

For instance, I use the regular star to denote something that’s generally important. I use the red exclamation point for something that needs following up on, the green check for emails I’ve successfully dealt with, the blue “I” for something I might need to reference later, and the purple question mark for something I’m waiting for an answer to. So, choose the icons you want to use, then click Save Changes at the bottom of the page. From then on, when you want to star an email, keep clicking the star to cycle through your available icons. Schedule emails to send later I believe the official term is called sandbagging, but maybe you’ve finished up that project a day early and you’re looking to take your foot off the gas for a moment.

You can schedule emails to be sent at various times—I prefer in the middle of the night so it looks like I’m really burning the midnight oil—by clicking the little down arrow attached to the send button. From there, you’ve got a few pre-selected times—or click the “Pick date & time” link to fire an email off at 3 a.m. while you’re actually fast asleep. Write emails in Google Docs There’s just something about hammering out an email in Google Docs that feels much more professional. Maybe it’s the wide-open white space, maybe it’s the myriad menu items, maybe it’s just the ability to have a bunch of pre-written emails cued up and ready to go. From inside Google Docs, click File, then Email, then choose Email draft. You’ll notice the document now has some familiar email elements inside it: recipients, subject line, and message body.

Get your message just how you like it and then you can save it for later or click the blue Gmail icon to transfer it into Gmail as a draft. This is a great tool if you find yourself sending out the same emails over and over again, but you want to keep them all uber-organized or share them with other people. Send confidential, self-destructing emails Look, we all know we’re not supposed to send sensitive information via email, but sensitivity is a sliding scale so use your best judgment here. At the bottom of a message you’re composing, there’s a little lock-clock icon on the right-hand side. Click that to toggle Confidential Mode.

Once you’ve done that, the message you sent can’t be forwarded, copied, printed, or downloaded. You can also set it to disappear after a certain period of time and require the recipient to use a Google-generated passcode to unlock it. It’s great for sending messages you don’t exactly want on the record or for temporarily passing along President Skroob’s luggage combination.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90757487/best-gmail-tips?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 3y | 6 juin 2022, 04:21:09


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

‘The White Lotus’ star Aimee Lou Wood’s smile is inspiring to fans—and a dangerous TikTok trend

The breakout star of this season of The White Lotus? Aimee Lou Wood—and her distinctive real-life smile. “I mean, I can’t believe the impact my teeth are having,” the English actress told

5 avr. 2025, 06:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Trump extends TikTok sale deadline again—this time by 75 days

President Donald Trump on Friday said is signing an executive order to

4 avr. 2025, 21:20:02 | Fast company - tech
Nintendo delays Switch 2 preorders because of Trump’s tariffs

Nintendo is pushing back preorders for its upcoming Nintendo Switch 2 while it figures out the implications of President Donald Trump’s

4 avr. 2025, 18:50:05 | Fast company - tech
$2,300 for an iPhone? Trump’s tariffs could make that a reality

Your favorite iPhone could soon become much pricier, thanks to tariffs.

4 avr. 2025, 16:30:07 | Fast company - tech
My dog recognizes the sounds a Waymo car makes

Most of us know the general (albeit simplified) story: Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov used a stimulus—like a metronome—around the dogs he was studying, and soon, the hounds would start to saliva

4 avr. 2025, 16:30:07 | Fast company - tech
How I wrote the notes app of my dreams (no coding required)

For years, I’ve had a secret ambition tucked away somewhere near the back of my brain. It was to write a simple note-taking app—one that wouldn’t be overwhelmed with features and that would reflec

4 avr. 2025, 14:20:04 | Fast company - tech
The AI tools we love right now—and what’s next

AI tools are everywhere, changing the way we work, communicate, and even create. But which tools are actually useful? And how can users integrate

4 avr. 2025, 14:20:04 | Fast company - tech