Using Gmail to be more Productive — Part 1

I belong to a couple of listservs and one of them had a conversation recently concerning tools such as email and calendars. After the conversation had gone on for part of an afternoon, I offered my take on things. And one of the tools I talked about using was Gmail.

I also briefly mentioned Gcal, Jott, Remember the Milk (RTM) and sync’ing all of the data with each other. Because each of these and others are such an important part of my every day functioning and being productive, I have decided to break them out into a series of post. And the first one we will discuss is Gmail.

First of all, some of what I am going to discuss and the ideas I use are not original to me. There are some huge gurus of Gmail out there. And Steve Rubel is one of them. Some of what I am going to discuss are some of the ideas Steve has posted about.

Gmail to organize your emails:

I get a ton of emails on a daily basis to multiple email addresses. There is no way I could manage this without Gmail and the built in tools it contains. One of the built in features I use the most with Gmail are labels and filters. First, I set up labels for the different type of emails I get. Labels are actually like folders in other email programs or services. For example, I have labels for staff emails, client emails, listserv emails and even one for social media emails. And those are not even all of the ones I use.

To get my emails directed to these labels (folders) I have set filters inside Gmail. Another very important built feature of Gmail. Setting up filters is easy to accomplish with Gmail. You first need to choose a search criteria. You start the process by deciding what email addresses you want to be sent to a label (folder). Than you decide on the action you want it to take. I usually have mine skip the inbox and send it right to the label (folder).

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The only emails which go to my inbox are those who don’t get filtered to a label. One key to this is to make sure you keep the emails filtered “marked as unread” so you know how many unread emails are in each label. I also use the process to manage the number of comments I get from my blogs and any “quick contact forms” I get from my blogs. In other words, I have one label marked as “blog management”. And another marked as “contact us form”. You should get the point by now. You can make any label and filter you want which will help you to be more productive and keep track of the emails you get. Oh, and lets not forget about the label I have called “listserv”. All of the listserv emails I get go there so they don’t plug up my main inbox.

Have I mentioned lately that I love Gmail? However, I don’t use Gmail in my browser window. I use a great third party program called Mailplane. Mailplane is for Mac OSX and it is wonderful. You get all of the features and benefits of Gmail in a desktop application. It does cost $24.95 and in my opinion is worth every single penny.

Gmail to organize your data:

Besides using Gmail to organize your emails, you can use it to organize the amount of data and information you deal with on a daily basis. One of the tips I use almost on an hourly basis is “turn Gmail into your personal nerve center from Steve Rubel. Steve provided such a great idea when he suggested you can use Gmail as a massive database. And he is right. If you use Firefox and the Google Toolbar, you can use the send to Gmail function to send items right to Gmail. To do this, you should first set up a secret email address. What I mean by this for example may look like this: grant.griffiths+[secretword]@gmail.com. Keep in mind [secretword] can be anything you want. For example you can call it notebook, data, archive, or whatever you want. The main thing to remember is the +[secretword] acts like a filter. You than set up a label (folder) in Gmail and set up a filter to send all the emails you get with the +[secretword] to that label. I also set the filter to mark these as read since I know what I just sent myself and will view them later.

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Because Gmail has the same great search abilities as Google itself, you can search and find anything you have stored in these labels you have set up as database storage.

I also have one of these special +[secretword] Gmail addresses to be a location where I send blog post ideas too. If I am reading items in my browser, I can send a link and an idea to myself as a blog idea for later use. How many times have you been looking for something to blog about. If you use this system, you can search the blog idea database in Gmail and come up with ideas.

Just remember to change the subject line in these emails so they aid in your searching of these labels (folders).

iPhone and Gmail:

What I love about this system is that I can use it with my iPhone too. Gmail works great with the iPhone’s built in mail application. And lets not forget that Google has optimized Gmail for the iPhone with its own iPhone interface Gmail web based service.

Tomorrow, I will discuss how I use Gcal and a couple other select web based applications to manage my events and to-do’s. In the meantime, leave your comments on how you use Gmail to organize your own daily life.

Home Office Highway Taps Verizon Wireless as Premier Sponsor

verizon.jpgWireless Provider Joins Summer RV Promotion to Showcase Mobile Digital Lifestyle

Home Office Highway, the digital road show that this summer will showcase how personal electronics and small business technology can empower the digital lifestyle from within the comforts of a recreational vehicle, has
signed Verizon Wireless as a presenting sponsor.

“Verizon Wireless is an ideal sponsor because its communications products are vital to any road warrior or digital consumer,” said Jeff Zbar, the tour’s creator and host Home Office Highway. “People who work from the seat of a car or a tech-laden RV must be able to reliably log on to the Internet or communicate with their wireless phone. It’s essential to working and living in the Digital Age.”

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“Home Office Highway is a great new concept that relates to such a large part of today’s mobile society,” said Chuck Hamby, public relations manager for Verizon Wireless in Florida. “We’re glad to have the opportunity to show off a variety of our wireless technologies that meet the dynamic lifestyle wishes to work and play while on the move.”

Setting off in a recreational vehicle packed with the latest office technology from partner Office Depot, Zbar and his family will reveal just how productive the modern family can be when traveling the nation’s highways. A widely published technology columnist and author, Zbar will write from the road; his wife, Robbie, will manage the family’s home finances; and their kids will stay connected with friends as the RV travels from Florida up the Eastern Seaboard.

Home Office Highway’s target audience is large and growing – with spending power in the billions. It includes home-business owners (14 million), teleworkers and corporate employees who work from home or the road (25 million), and heads of households who manage family finances via the Internet, electronic banking and bill-pay services.

The 25-foot RV will visit small towns, popular tourist destinations and Office Depot locations. The family will live digitally, networking multiple laptops on latest wireless broadband service, while Zbar files dispatches, blogs and Webcam videologues to reveal how productive a “road warrior” – and his family – can be from the road. Visitors will receive a booklet on setting up an ideal workplace from the road – courtesy Design Print Ship Depot.

ABOUT THE HOST: Jeff Zbar’s work has appeared internationally in Entrepreneur.com, Costco Connection, JuggleZine, the South Florida Business Journal, the South Florida Sun- Sentinel, among other outlets. Learn more at Home Office Highway and Chief Home Officer.

Zbar will be available for media interviews before and throughout the tour, which is scheduled to depart South Florida in early July, and remain on the road for three weeks. For media availability, contact Alan T. Brown with Fish Consulting (954-893-9151) / alan@fish-consulting.com.

What is a Lifestyle Entrepreneur (Part 1)

Beach.jpgHave you ever felt the urge to simply take the afternoon off and have a round of golf?

Or maybe you love the idea of having a latte down by the beach and going for a long, lazy walk planning your next holiday.

Well, you are a lifestyle entrepreneur.

Basically, a lifestyle entrepreneur is somebody who runs a business to support their desired lifestyle.

Business, to a lifestyle entrepreneur, is a means to attaining their lifestyle goals - it’s not a means to an end.

A lifestyle entrepreneur does not thrive - or want - massive growth. They’re not interested in venture capital or hiring staff. They don’t want to be the next Google, YouTube or any of the next multi-million dollar IPO’s or takeover targets.

No. They have left the “rat race” behind for the simple reason that they value having the choice to do and be what they want.

The lifestyle entrepreneur values their freedom more than anything else.

And the beauty of today’s amazing technology is that becoming a lifestyle entrepreneur, earning a six-figure income and having the freedom to enjoy it is right there in front of us. It’s never been more obtainable.

Let me throw you up some examples: broadband, wifi, skype, twitter, google docs, PayPal, virtual Assistants … and I could go on and on.

Such tools allow anybody, anywhere the chance to transform their lives from stressed-out employee or business owner to one who’s more than happy to have a nice little business that’s there to support their lifestyle.

There’s a part two to this post but I put it on my to-do list … I’m off to have a hit of golf followed by a nice hot latte.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Martin Neumann runs HomeOfficeVoice, a business and blog helping lifestyle entrepreneurs succeed. As a special offer for Home Office Warrior readers, Martin is offering exclusve access to his new 5-day email course “21 Steps to a Lifestyle Business to Die for” a full month before he releases it publicly. Click here to enroll. It’s free!

Firefox — Display Search Results in New Tab

images.jpegI don’t know about you, but I get really annoyed when I do a search in the Firefox search bar and the results display in the current tab. Well quite frankly, I don’t want that open tab to change. I want it to open an new tab. Now there is a way and thanks to Tech-Recipes.com for this great tip.

To make your search results appear in a new tab, follow these steps:

1. Launch Firefox.

2. In the address bar, type about:config and hit Enter on your keyboard.

3. Scroll down to browser.search.openintab and double-click it to change the value to True.

Now when you use Firefox’s search bar, your results will always appear in a new tab.

Making Sure Your Data is Safe

images.jpegEmoms at Home had a post today called, Recovering from Data Loss in Your Home Business.

From Wendy’s post:

I’m kind of freaking out right now because I believe that my laptop has died. As in, I can’t even turn it on. I’m using my daughter’s computer for now, which is a short-term solution for the bigger problem of losing the one thing that is critical to my doing business. All the woulda-coulda-shoulda’s are echoing through my brain right now, with the most ironic one of all being that a company offered me a computer backup system for review purposes just last week and I hadn’t gotten back to them yet.

While I can relate to Wendy’s problems and I can certainly appreciate it too. I have to say, I have not had such problems since I moved to the Mac OS almost 4 years ago.

However, knowing that even the BEST operating system and hardware can crap out on you, I use a lot of safe guards to protect my data. Here is how I have equipped my office to deal with all the possibilities.

First of all, and I will keep mentioning this until such time as everyone of you use the Apple computer. It is really what I consider my first stage of defense against problems experienced by my windoze using friends.

But, as I mentioned, I know there can be problems. So, I use both hardware and software to protect, maintain and backup my “stuff”. Wendy mentioned that she did not have all of her emails archived on another device. I use a great program to archive my emails called. Mailsteward. It is wonderful. I set it to do a complete archive of my email on a daily basis. I also set it to do this at 10:00 p.m. each and every night and it does it without any further effort on my part. It places the emails in archive folders I have placed on my “desktop” and I than do a backup of those to my external HD. I always have a daily backup of all of my emails. I and others like me live and die by email. We do most of our communications with clients/customers, vendors, and others via email. I have to have archives of all my emails and this was the best solution I found. And with Mailsteward ,I can search through the entire archive for any email I might need.

Next is one of the new features in OS 10.5.0 and that is Time Machine. Leopard’s built in backup feature. Also a wonderful piece of software. It simple does a backup of my computer during the day. And if I need something from my computer that might be gone for whatever reason, I go to Time Machine and it is there. Effortless security for all my “stuff”.

I also use a program that manages all of my passwords I might need. 1Password is the program I am using. And best of all, it syncs all those passwords to my iPhone. And, I backup all those passwords to my external hard drive. The main thing 1Password does is give me a one stop shop way of managing all my passwords. It also will generate passwords for you. I use this feature and have it generate at a minimum 15 letters and/or number passwords. Just a little added security.

For all my documents, I not only backup to my external HD, burn to DVD’s and use an old 2nd generation iPod, I also use an online service called, Box.net. And for an added benefit of Box.net, I can access all my client files, including all their documents from my iPhone. And with that, I can email documents to clients or others from Box.net and my iPhone if I need to and don’t have my Macbook with me.

Finally, I use an old Mac Mini as a file backup tool. I backup all my client files and documents to my older Mac Mini. I can also access this from anywhere with either my Macbook or my iPhone. I use a service called, SoonR.

What is great about all of the programs I use is they allow me to access most of the stuff I need from anywhere. And if something, god forbid does happen, I have all my “stuff”. It also works right into my paperless office setup.

Drop me your comments here and let us know what you use to make sure your data is safe.