We’re inundated with email daily — making it hard to keep track of tasks and manage your workflow. However, organizing your emails doesn’t have to be a pain. In fact, it’s possible to get your Gmail inbox to zero in as little as 15 minutes.
While we can’t stop new emails from coming in, we can help you organize it better.
I stumbled upon Andreas Klinger’s inbox zero method for Gmail years ago and his method still works for me to this day. In this post, I’ll show you how to organize your Gmail inbox according to Klinger’s method so it’s clean, systematized, and easy to navigate — making you a more efficient, productive, and overall happier human being. I’ll also show you how I adapted his labeling system for content marketers.
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How to Get to Inbox Zero in Gmail
Before we get into the nitty-gritty, let’s go over the basic methodology:
- You set up multiple inboxes in Gmail and give each of them a name, like “Needs Action/Reply” and “Awaiting Response.”
- Your general inbox will then appear on the left, and your labeled inboxes (which Gmail calls “panes”) will appear on the right, like so:
- You know that yellow star icon you can press to mark an email as important? Turns out you can turn on other colored stars and icons in Gmail, too, like bangs (i.e. exclamation points)and question marks. Gmail calls these icons “special stars.” In this methodology, each pane is represented by a different special star.
- Every time you get a new email in your inbox, you’ll want to:
- Reply to the ones you can right away. For those you want to keep track of as “Awaiting Reply” or “Delegated,” mark with the appropriate special star.
- Label the emails you need to deal with later by marking them with the appropriate special star.
- For the ones that you don’t need to deal with or aren’t current, either archive them without special stars or delete them entirely.
- In the end, archive everything. This way, your inbox stays at zero and everything else is either in its designated pane, archived, or deleted.
The result? A clean inbox that’s easy to navigate and lets you triage new emails with little effort.
Here’s how to set this up in Gmail.
The Step-by-Step Guide to Getting to Inbox Zero in Gmail
Step 1: Prepare for your new inbox layout.
To make this whole process work, you’ll need to get rid of the Social and Promotions tabs. (Pro Tip: If you’re worried about getting an onslaught of social notifications and promotional emails in your inbox each day, then take this opportunity to set up filters so your social notifications are automatically archived or deleted, and mass unsubscribe to the promotional emails you don’t read using a tool like Unroll.Me.)
In “Settings,” go to the “Inbox” tab and do the following:
- Change the Inbox Type to “Default.”
- Deselect all the tabs (except “Primary”).
- Choose “No Markers.”
- Choose either “Use my past actions…” or “Don’t use my actions…” — it won’t directly affect your new system.
- Choose “Don’t Override Filters.”
Click “Save Changes,” and Gmail will automatically reload.
Step 2: Make the display density of your inbox compact.
Click the gear icon and choose “Compact” from the dropdown menu.
Step 3: Enable multiple inboxes.
Scroll to the bottom and click”SaveChanges.”
Step 4: Turn on the right special stars.
As a content marketer, I chose:
- Yellow bang: for “Needs Action/Reply”
- Red bang: for “Needs Action/Reply” items that are urgent
- Purple question mark: for “Awaiting Reply” (so I can follow up if needed)
- Greenstar: for “To Write”
- Bluestar: for “To Edit”
- Orange guillemet (double arrow): for “Delegate,” meaning emails I delegated to someone else (so I can follow up if needed)
Scroll to the bottom and click “Save Changes.”
Step 5: Set up filters to pull emails with your special stars into the right panes.
Here’s a list of all the possible search queries:
Click “Save Changes,” and you’ll be taken back to your inbox.
The Road to Inbox Zero
Go through the first two or three pages of your inbox.
Do one of three things with each email:
- Mark it with a special star, and then archive it. This will send it to the appropriate pane while removing it from your general inbox.
- Archive it without using a special star. This will keep the email saved, but it’ll clear it from the home page.
- Delete it.