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kaggle-ho-013857House Oversight

Email Autoresponder Productivity Guide Attributed to Tim Ferriss

Email Autoresponder Productivity Guide Attributed to Tim Ferriss The document contains generic advice on email and call management, mentions Tim Ferriss (a public author, not a government or powerful official) and no substantive leads, financial flows, or misconduct. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Suggests checking email twice daily at set times.; Recommends using separate phone numbers for urgent vs. non‑urgent calls.; Provides a template autoresponder script.

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House Oversight
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kaggle-ho-013857
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1
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3
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Summary

Email Autoresponder Productivity Guide Attributed to Tim Ferriss The document contains generic advice on email and call management, mentions Tim Ferriss (a public author, not a government or powerful official) and no substantive leads, financial flows, or misconduct. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Suggests checking email twice daily at set times.; Recommends using separate phone numbers for urgent vs. non‑urgent calls.; Provides a template autoresponder script.

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kagglehouse-oversightproductivityemail-managementcommunicationtim-ferriss

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EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Here is a simple e-mail template that can be used: Greetings, Friends [or Esteemed Colleagues], Due to high workload, I am currently checking and responding to e-mail twice daily at 12:00 p.m. ET [or your time zone] and 4:00 p.m. ET. If you require urgent assistance (please ensure it is urgent) that cannot wait until either 12:00 p.m. or 4:00 p.m., please contact me via phone at 555-555-5555. Thank you for understanding this move to more efficiency and effectiveness. It helps me accomplish more to serve you better. Sincerely, Tim Ferriss MOVE TO ONCE-PER-DAY as quickly as possible. Emergencies are seldom that. People are poor judges of importance and inflate minutiae to fill time and feel important. This autoresponse is a tool that, far from decreasing collective effectiveness, forces people to re-evaluate their reason for interrupting you and helps them decrease meaningless and time-consuming contact. I was initially terrified of missing important requests and inviting disaster, just as you might be upon reading this recommendation. Nothing happened. Give it a shot and work out the small bumps as you progress. For an extreme example of a personal autoresponder that has never prompted a complaint and allowed me to check e-mail once per week, send an e-mail to template@fourhourworkweek.com. It has been revised over three years and works like a charm. The second step is to screen incoming and limit outgoing phone calls. 1. Use two telephone numbers if possible—one office line (non urgent) and one cellular (urgent). This could also be two cell phones, or the non-urgent line could be an Internet phone number that routes calls to online voicemail (www.skype.com, for example). Use the cell number in the e-mail autoresponse and answer it at all times unless it is an unknown caller or it is a call you don’t want to answer. If in doubt, allow the call to go to voicemail and listen to the voicemail immediately afterward to gauge importance. If it can wait, let it wait. The offending parties have to learn to wait. The office phone should be put on silent mode and allowed to go to voicemail at all times. The voicemail recording should sound familiar: You’ ve reached the desk of Tim Ferriss. I am currently checking and responding to voicemail twice daily at 12:00 p.m. ET [or your time zone] and 4:00 p.m. ET. If you require assistance with a truly urgent matter that cannot wait until either 12:00 p.m. or 4:00 p-m., please contact me on my cell at 555-555-5555. Otherwise, please leave a message and I will return it at the next of those two times. Be sure to leave your e-mail address, as I am often able to respond faster that way. Thank you for understanding this move to more efficiency and effectiveness. It helps me accomplish more to serve you better. Have a wonderful day. 2. If someone does call your cell phone, it is presumably urgent and should be treated as such. Do not

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