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Friday, June 29, 2012

How to Use Gmail Search to Clean up Your Email Archive

Clean up GmailI am not a fan of deleting emails from my Gmail.

The reason is simple: I love Gmail search and I often use it to find past conversations and bring up old contacts. I receive and read my email using Thunderbird, but I use the Gmail web interface to find all the past correspondence (which can be accessed from any computer — provided I remember my login details).

However, in some cases there’s absolutely no point in saving some of your emails — you’ll never get back to them. So why clutter your email archive?

In case you don’t know how to delete all emails filtered by your search, here’s a quick how-to:

Select “All”Then click “Select all XXXX conversations in Search results“Delete

Delete all emails

Search: [from:noreply* OR from:do-not-reply* OR from:donotreply* OR from:notification*]

This way you’ll filter out all the automated updates that come from bots (such as social media friend requests (noreply-xxx@plus.google.com), calendar reminders (noreply@zohocalendar.com), etc.). Chances are, you’ll need those updates only once in a lifetime.

Automated emails

Bonus Tip: Don’t create a filter to delete those emails, as this will delete all the future updates as well. Instead, create a calendar reminder to do the regular clean up at least quarterly.

Search: [from:wordpress* OR from:disqus]

If you are a blogger who hasn’t disabled comments, you’re probably getting email notifications each time a comment is pending approval or waiting for your reply. While these are probably useful for a “one-time notification”, there’s no reason to keep them in your inbox/archive.

Delete All Blog Comment Notifications

Search option one: [unsubscribe]

Search option two: [from:news* OR from:digest* OR from:auto* OR from:reports* OR from:*mailer*]

Not all emails here are likely to be worth deleting (I usually refer back to my most important email subscriptions if I forget a link or need a citation for a blog post, for example). But this search is a great starting point. Now you can go through search results and check any email you don’t think you need to keep. Simply click on “Filter messages like this” and create a filter to delete all of them.

Filter messages like this

You can also unsubscribe while you are there to prevent future emails. I mean, it’s a good thing to clean up your email subscriptions as well while you are there…right?

Bonus Tip: And there’s an app for that! Unroll.me is a great online tool that lets you sign in (using Gmail authentication) and then scans your email inbox for possible subscriptions. You can unsubscribe from any of the emails right from within the tool interface:

unroll.me

Like I said, I love my Gmail inbox for archiving all of my correspondence for me and keeping it in “the cloud”. No matter how often I move from computer to computer or change email clients, I can always rest assured that my email archive is intact.

As a result, I don’t like deleting too much of my email — especially the following types:

Personal correspondence with my contacts (obviously);Invoices and payment confirmations;Brand-name tracking updates (from Google Alerts, for example). These could be turned into the great source of brand-growth analysis. Besides, they can be used to later bring up your brand promoters.

To make sure I never accidentally delete important emails when doing regular clean up, I create a “Always mark it as important” filter.

Filter important emails

Do you have any tips for cleaning up your email inbox? Please let me know in the comments!

Ann Smarty is the productivity freak and self-funded entrepreneur running MyBlogGuest.com, the free community of guest bloggers who preach high-quality approach to guest blogging.


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