Use Inbox, Use Bundles, Change Your Life

I love Google Inbox. At work, it has enabled me to banish pseudo-spam1, prioritize work, and be more productive.Ā At home, it has enabled me to quickly find details about upcoming trips including up-to-date flight information, remind myself of tasks that I need to do around the house, and generally be more organized. While Inbox doesn't replace Gmail for all situations, it does replace it as a day-to-day email client. Gmail is awesome; Inbox is awesomer.

The main feature of Inbox that has enabled me to buildĀ a healthier relationship with my email (and achieve virtual Inbox Zero without having to make email management my day job) is Bundling. Bundles in Inbox are a lot like filters that label emails in Gmail; they allow you to group emails based on rules. Not only can you define filters to determine what emails go in the bundle, but you can also decide if the bundled messages go to your inbox (and how often you see the bundle) or if they are just archived away.

Inbox Sidebar
Inbox Sidebar

Inbox comes with some standard bundles: Purchases, Finance, Social, Updates, Forums, Promos, Low Priority, and Trips. Trips is a magic bundle that you cannot configure; it gathers information about things like hotel stays, flight reservations, and car rentals, and combines them into trips like "Weekend in St. Louis" or "Trip to United Kingdom". The other bundles, equivalent to the tabs that Gmail added a year or two ago, automatically define the filters (and as such, those filters are uneditable), but do allow you to control the behavior of the bundle.

When bundled emails appear in your Inbox, they appearĀ as a single item that can be expanded to view the emails inside. You can also mark the entire bundle as done2, if you desire. These features mean you can bundle emails in multiple bundles and have those bundles appear in your Inbox as messages arrive, once a day (at a time of your choice), once a week (at a time and day of your choice), or never3Ā (bundling some of the pseudo-spam and only having it appear once a day or once a week has drastically improved the signal-to-noise ratio of my email).

Trips
Trips
Trip to NYC
Trip to NYC

While theĀ default bundles are useful, the real power is in defining your own. You can start from fresh or you can use an existing label. Each label is shown in Inbox as unbundled and has a settings gear that allows you to setupĀ bundling rules. In myĀ example, I added a rule to labelĀ emails relating to Ann Arbor .NET Developers group.

Label settings without any bundle rules
Label settings without any bundle rules
Adding a filter rule
Adding a filter rule
Label settings showing bundling rules
Label settings showing bundling rules

With the bundleĀ defined, every email that comes in matching the rule will be labelled and added to the bundle, which will appear in my inbox whenever a message arrives. Any messages I mark as done are archived4, removing them from the main inbox. However, they can be seen quickly by clicking the bundle name in the left-hand pane.Ā This is great, except for one thing. The bundle definition only works for new emails as they arrive. It does not include messages you have received before the bundle was setup.

This just felt untidy to me so I was determined to fix it. As it turns out, Gmail provides all the tools to complete this part of Inbox bundles. Since each bundle is a set of filter rules and a label, you can actually edit those filters in Gmail, and Gmail includes the additional ability of applying that rule to existing emails. Ā To do this, go to Gmail and click the Settings gear, then the Filters tab within settings.

Bundling filters in Gmail
Filters that define my bundle in Gmail

Find the filters that represent your new bundling rules, then edit each one in turn. On the first settings box for the filter, click continue in the lower right. On the following screen, check the "Apply to matching conversations" checkbox and click the "Update filter" button.

First filter edit screen
First filter edit screen
Last filter editing screen
Last filter editing screen
Apply to existing messages
Apply to existing messages

After performing this action for each of my bundles, I returned to Inbox and checked the corresponding bundles; all my emails were now organised as I wanted.

In summary, if you haven't tried Inbox (and you have an Android or iPhone; a strange limitation that I wish Google would lift), I highly recommend spending some time with it, getting the bundles set up how you want, and using it as your primary interface for your Google email. The combination of bundling with the ability to treatĀ emails as tasks (mark them as done, snooze them, pin them) and see them in a single timeline with your Google remindersĀ makes Inbox a powerful yet simple way to manage day-to-day email.Ā Before Inbox, I abandoned Inbox Zero long ago as a "fake work" task that held no value whatsoever, my Gmail inbox had hundreds of read and unread emails in it. Now that I have Inbox, I reached Inbox Zero in a day with minimalĀ effort that one might consider to be just "reading email". I'm not saying Inbox Zero is valuable, I'm just saying that it is realistically achievable with Inbox because Inbox gets daily email management right.

Use bundles, change your life.

  1. I use the term "pseudo-spam" to describe those emails that you don't want to necessarily totally banish as spam so that you can search them later, but that aren't important to you at all such as support emails for projects you don't work on, or wiki update notifications []
  2. One of the great features of Inbox is the ability to treat emails as tasks, adding reminders to deal with them later or mark them as done; this makes drop,delegate,defer,do a lot easier to manage []
  3. If a bundle is marked as never, it is considered "unbundled" and works just as a filter that applies a label []
  4. This can be changed to "Move to Trash" in the Inbox settings []

Analogue Trello using dry erase magnetic labels

My wife and I are terrible at chores. We are terrible at planning for them, balancing them (with other tasks and each other), and performing them. We have been terrible for a long time and we have finally accepted it. To mitigate our ineffectiveness, we tried Trello, but all that did was create a new chore, Check Trello, that we promptly forgot to do.

What we wanted was an analogue approach to Trello that would sit on our wall and scream "Do your chores!" at us in a way that we could not ignore. So Chrissy drew up a simple chart on a dry erase board in our kitchen using a list of chores we had created together. This was great. We were finally remembering to get things done, but it was not perfect. We often needed to rearrange chores to adjust for various scheduling conflicts, but erasing them just to rewrite them elsewhere on the board was tedious. Especially so if it meant reorganizing other chores to make things fit.

Our implementation of Trello was flawed.

As a fix for this organisational deficiency, the blank equivalent of poetry fridge magnets came to mind. Dry erase magnets that could be edited and rearranged with ease. I found some ready made solutions on the Internet, but I was not sure that they would fit exactly what we needed, so I went hunting around the local office supply stores. Eventually, thanks to the helpful manager of our local OfficeMax, I came up with a plan to make my own using business card sized magnets and some dry erase tape.

Equipment for creating analogue Trello
Equipment for creating analogue Trello

To make them, I carefully peeled the backing from the business card magnets a little to reveal the adhesive. I then peeled the backing off the dry erase tape a little and lined up the tape with the card, adhesive to adhesive. I thenĀ applied the tape to the cards, carefully avoiding any bubbles (usually) and trimming the tape to size.

A business card magnet with backing
A business card magnet with backing
The backing partly peeled back from the magnet
The magnet backing partly peeled back to reveal the adhesive
Applying the dry erase tape
Applying the dry erase tape
A magnet with dry erase tape applied
A magnet with dry erase tape applied

Once I had applied the tape to all of the magnets, Chrissy divided themĀ up into a range of sizes1.

The finished dry erase magnets
The finished dry erase magnets

Then, with all the magnets backed by dry erase tape and cut to the sizes we wanted, Chrissy set up our new chore board.

Our finished chore board
Our finished chore board
  1. We hadĀ tried to trim some of the magnets to useful sizes and to remove any exposed adhesive, but we never found a way to do this well []