3 Steps to a Better Morning Routine (Start Your Day Right)
Are you looking for a better way to start your day? In today's video, I share with you three steps to building a better morning routine.
If you want to have your most productive day, you need to start off on the right foot, and that starts with having an effective morning routine. I want to share with you three different components that I encourage people to include in their morning routine.
You can mix and match these three different areas, but I strongly encourage that you incorporate them into your morning. It doesn't really matter what time of day you wake up, as long as you include these three factors, you're going to set yourself up for a very productive day.
Exercise
The first thing you should include in your morning routine is some form of exercise. I really don't care what it is. It could be running, going for a brisk walk, or working out with weights or a stationary bike.
The important thing is that you're breaking some kind of sweat first thing in the morning. This does so much more than just physically benefit your body. It helps you mentally as well.
By getting up and getting active sometime in the first hour of your day, you are setting yourself up for more productivity and more effectiveness in other components of your day. For example, I can tell immediately at around 10 a.m. if I have or have not exercised that day because I'm just not as energetic, clear with my work, or focused.
Try to find some time to fit in some exercise. It doesn't have to be a half hour. Even as little as ten or fifteen minutes will do. Be sure to include exercise sometime in your morning routine.
Reading
The second thing I want you to include in your morning routine is reading, but not just reading anything. I want you to read something uplifting. When we first wake up in the morning, it's so easy to grab our smartphones and start browsing our social media feeds and perhaps reading the latest news stories.
But I want you to start your day off on a positive note, so let's give news and social media a break. Perhaps there's a good book that you'd like to start reading in the morning, or maybe there's a particular blogger you like to subscribe to and you'd like to read his or her articles at that time of day.
No matter what it is, just make sure that it's positive and uplifting. A way that you can start your day with a smile. So, either before or after your exercise, be sure to include some positive and uplifting reading.
Do Something You Dislike
The third building block that I'd like you to include in your morning routine is doing something you dislike. You might be thinking, why would I throw this into your morning routine?
I think it's important to tackle something in that first hour that you can get done early so you don't have to come back to it later in the day, or at the very least, perhaps you can ignore it for several hours. Let me give you a perfect example.
I will often spend about half an hour with my email sometime in the first hour of my day. The reason I do it is, number one, I want to spend less time with email later in the morning. After I've spent that first half hour with email, I will often not look at my inbox again until around noon.
Is there something in your day, something in your work schedule, that you could do early on so you don't have to touch it again or at the very least don't have to think about it again for several hours? Maybe it's scheduling appointments or reviewing an income balance sheet.
Whatever it is that you're not wild about doing, see if you can include it in that very first hour. It may seem like a negative thing to throw into your morning routine, but it's going to pay off as a major positive later on in the day.
Outro
So there you have it. Three components to a better morning routine: get some exercise, read something uplifting, and do something you don't like. Now I'd love to hear from you. What is something that you always include in your morning routine?
Be sure to leave me a comment down below. Thank you so much for watching.
If you liked this video, be sure to give it a thumbs up, leave me a comment, and don't forget to subscribe. If you'd like to watch another Simpletivity video, you can click right here.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
Is SaneBox Right for You? (Easy Email Management)
Email insanity. Are you tired of having an inbox that is overflowing?
Hello everyone, Scott Friesen here at Simpletivity, helping you to get more done and enjoy less stress. In today's video, we are taking a look at SaneBox, an application to help you keep all of your emails in order and deal with fewer emails at any given time.
SaneBox has been around for quite some time and integrates with almost every single email application. Here you see we've got everything from Gmail to both Office 365 and Outlook.com.
Essentially, SaneBox helps you learn your email, identifying which emails, senders, and messages you actually engage with, while filtering out and organizing everything else. Let's jump into my Gmail account, and here you will notice on the left-hand side of my screen I have a number of Sane folders: Sane Later, Sane News, Sane No Replies, and Sane Tomorrow.
I'm going to get into the details of each and every one of these folders, but essentially, SaneBox is learning your email behavior and helping you out by keeping only the most relevant or important emails in your inbox, while filtering other messages into respective folders. You can also create many more customized Sane folders, depending on how you work and manage your email.
When you first install SaneBox, it will analyze thousands of your previous email messages. It wants to learn how you interact with your email and determine where to put things, such as in a newsletter folder, where you might find things that you don't need to see immediately but would still like to browse from time to time.
SaneBox Inbox
As you can see, it's doing a very good job. At this point, I only have about six emails in my inbox, so let's go through some of these folders.
The first one we see is called Sane Later, and as the title suggests, it puts messages here that it does not consider terribly important. These emails are addressed to me, and they are not spam, but SaneBox determines that I haven't clicked on these things recently and that I'm not really engaging with them, so I can check this folder once or twice a day rather than keeping these emails in my inbox.
The second folder has to do primarily with newsletters and marketing material. Here you see it is full of things from Best Buy, Maclean's, and a few others. This folder is mostly for marketing emails, which I might want to unsubscribe from if I no longer need them, but SaneBox correctly places them in the Sane News folder.
There is something interesting that just happened, and it really blew my mind in terms of how SaneBox is learning my behaviors on the fly. You'll notice that I have a bunch of Best Buy messages in my Sane News folder.
Just a few minutes ago, I had a bunch of those Best Buy messages in my inbox. As I was dragging them into the Sane News folder, I must have moved about 15 or 20 of them. Remember, as I'm dragging and moving messages, SaneBox is learning my behavior.
I had left one of the most recent Best Buy messages, and I hadn't dragged it over manually. You know what happened? In front of my very eyes, that message disappeared and reappeared in my Sane News folder.
SaneBox was saying, "Listen, you've moved the last 15 to 20 of these messages. There's a very good chance you don't want to see this in your inbox either, so we're going to move it to your Sane News folder." I think that's absolutely brilliant. It's learning as we go. I can change that behavior if I want to. It hasn't archived or deleted the message. I can always go back and find it, but it's learning my behavior as we go.
For example, if I don't want to see this particular email or sender here, I can just drag it to my Sane Later folder, and SaneBox is already learning about that sender. Perhaps the next message from that sender will already end up in the Sane Later folder.
SaneBox Digest
There is something else I want to show you called the SaneBox Digest. This feature provides a summary of some of my most recent new and unread emails that have gone to other folders.
If I open this digest, I'm given a new menu, showing me some of the recent trainings. By "trainings," it means emails that started in one folder but were moved somewhere else. For example, you can see that a message initially started in the inbox but is currently trained to go into the Sane News folder.
Here’s that Best Buy newsletter example I mentioned earlier. It started in my inbox but has now been trained to go to Sane News. I can change that if I want the messages to come back to my inbox. This digest provides a great summary, and if I scroll down further, I see the Sane News area, showing all the messages from Best Buy that I haven't opened recently. They are trained to go to the Sane News folder, but I can change that if I want. I can train these types of messages to go somewhere else.
Now let's look at the Sane No Replies and Sane Tomorrow folders. I'll start with the Sane Tomorrow folder. Often, as you're going through your emails and checking new messages, you come across something and think, "I don't need to deal with this right now. I'd like to handle this tomorrow." The Sane Tomorrow folder allows you to defer messages.
You can drag messages into Sane Tomorrow, and what's going to happen is that everything within this folder will be moved to your inbox tomorrow morning. This feature provides an easy way to defer emails, making it more convenient than Gmail's snooze feature or other add-ons.
No Replies
The last folder I want to go over quickly is the Sane No Replies feature. This is an interesting one. How many times have you sent a question or a request and are expecting a reply? SaneBox tracks every email you send out and have not received a reply to, and it places them in this folder.
For example, just a few moments ago, I sent an email asking someone if we could still meet and requested a reply by Friday. Since this person has not gotten back to me, the email is here in my Sane No Replies folder. I can check this folder to see which emails have not yet received a response.
However, as soon as this individual does reply, the email will no longer be in this folder because it has met the criteria. The person has replied to me, so I don't need to check if they have responded.
If you are looking for a better way to clean up your inbox and filter out the important emails from the less important ones, SaneBox might be the right solution for you.
I'd like to thank SaneBox for sponsoring today's video. In fact, if you would like to try SaneBox for free and get a special discount only for Simpletivity fans, I encourage you to click the link in the description and the comment below.
I'd love to hear your feedback. Have you already used SaneBox? What is your experience, or what are you most excited about using as you take SaneBox out for a test drive?
Thank you so much for watching today's video. If you liked this video, give it a thumbs up, leave me a comment, and don't forget to subscribe. Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
5 Must-Try Tips for Google Drive (Tutorial)
Vroom vroom. Let's get behind the wheel and get more out of Google Drive.
Hello everyone, Scott Friesen here at Simpletivity, helping you to get more done and enjoy less stress at the same time. In today's video, we are looking at Google Drive, one of my favorite applications. Why? Because I can store, work with, and collaborate on almost any type of file.
Today, I want to share with you five of my favorite ways to get the most out of Drive. But before we begin, I'd like to thank today's sponsor, PDF Element by Wondershare.
If you deal with PDFs in any way, shape, or form, you're going to want to check out PDF Element. You can edit all of your text and images within any PDF document, and you can get others to sign, annotate, or collaborate within your PDFs as well.
If you'd like to give PDF Element a try or get 40% off your purchase, look for the links in the description below.
Convert Text from an Image
The first tip I want to share with you today has to do with converting text from an image into a working document. How many times have you been given an image of something, or maybe you've taken a picture while you're out with your smartphone, and you thought, "I'd like to use that text. I'd like to be able to edit that text in my own Google document."
Here you see I have an image that is just a picture, although it contains mostly text. I can't actually grab this text at this point in time, but you can do something very easy in order to work with this text.
Simply right-click on the image and select "Open with Google Docs." Depending on the size of the image and how much text it contains, it may take a few seconds, but in just a few moments, you will see that I now have a new Google document.
At the top, I have that image again, but here is the real win—it's what's happening down below that image. It has converted all of the text within this image into editable text. It's even trying to recreate the color. I think it chose yellow because I had white text in the original image. Let's fix that by selecting the text and easily changing the color.
Now I can go ahead and edit this any way I want. It's done a very good job—no spelling errors, no punctuation errors as we see it here.
Let's try it one more time. This time, I have a picture from a section within a textbook. Again, I'll right-click and select "Open with Google Docs." It might take a few seconds if you're using multiple pages or a file with lots of text, but in less than 10 seconds, here I have the original image above and the text below, ready to be edited.
Make use of Google Drive's OCR technology.
Find Further Information
The next tip I want to share with you has to do with finding further information for a document that you may be working on. Of course, you could always open a new tab in your browser and do a Google search, but Google Drive makes it so much easier.
In the bottom right-hand corner of your screen, you will see a little star icon called the Explore icon. If I select this, it will do a quick scan of all the information in my document and suggest topics, images, and related searches.
This essentially works like a miniature version of Google search. At the top, I can select further search terms if I want, or I can dive deeper into the suggested topics. I can search the web, browse certain images, and even bring them directly into my document.
If you are looking for a quicker and easier way to bring in information or do research while working within Drive, make use of the Explore icon. You can also find this under Tools, where you can select the Explore option.
Save to Google Drive
Speaking of research, let's next take a look at how we can get images and other components of a website into Google Drive even when we're casually browsing the web. Often, as I'm browsing through articles and other websites, I may want to grab images or other components of that website and save them to my Drive account.
There is a Google Chrome extension that makes this so much easier, and it's called Save to Google Drive. Once you have this extension installed in your browser, all you need to do is right-click on an image and select "Save Image to Google Drive." You will get a new dialog telling you that it's been saved to your Drive account.
If I go back, you can see that the image is now saved in my Drive account.
There is another way you can use the Save to Google Drive extension. Let's say I'd like to take a snapshot of this entire web page—something that's not always easy to do. If I select the extension in the browser, it will take a few seconds to scan and capture images of the entire web page.
When it's complete, you'll get a dialog box in the top left corner of your screen, telling you that it's been saved to your Google Drive account. It may take a few moments, depending on the size of the web page you've scanned, but in just a few seconds, it's done.
I'm going to close that and go back to my Google Drive account. Here, you see I now have a full-page screenshot of this web page. I can zoom in if I want to read or take parts of the web page. This is handy when you want to see the layout of an entire web page or multiple pages on a particular website.
That extension is Save to Google Drive. I'll leave a link in the description below.
The next tip on this list might just be my favorite because I love automating processes. Within Google Drive, you can share virtually any file, whether it's a native Google file or something you've uploaded. One of the great things about sharing is that you can set certain limits on what others can see and do.
You're probably already familiar with the dropdown that allows people to edit, comment, or view, depending on the access you want to give. But if you select the Advanced link, you get additional options. Not only can you see everyone that the file is shared with, but if you hover over a name, you'll see a little set expiration icon.
If you click this icon, you can determine how long they have access to the file. For example, if I'm sharing a video file and I just want someone's approval or feedback, I might not want to give them full access indefinitely. I can choose to give them access for seven days or thirty days—those are the defaults, but you can also select a custom date range.
When those days are up, the individual will no longer have access to the file. You can always come back and cancel the expiration if needed. This feature is very powerful, especially if you're dealing with sensitive information that you only want others to see for a short period.
Once you click on the Advanced tab in the sharing dialog, you can hover over names and select the set expiration icon.
Keyboard Shortcuts
The last tip I have for you is all about saving time. You probably already know the benefits of knowing some shortcut keys in your favorite application, but sometimes it's hard to remember all those shortcuts.
No matter where you are in Google Drive, all you need to do is select Control + forward slash, and you'll get a full menu of all the keyboard shortcuts available. What I love about this menu is that not only can you browse through it on the left, where shortcuts are broken into sections, but you can also search for specific shortcuts at the top.
For example, if I'm editing something and want to insert a link, I can search "insert link" and find that Control + K is the shortcut I need. Depending on the application—Docs, Sheets, or Slides—these shortcuts may differ, so try Control + forward slash in the different apps you're using.
I'd love to hear from you next. What are some of your favorite tips for working with Google Drive, or which of these five tips do you find most useful?
Be sure to leave a comment for me down below. If you haven't yet subscribed to the Simpletivity YouTube channel, I hope you do so, and be sure to give this video a thumbs up.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
How to Automate Trello with Butler! (5 Workflow Examples)
If you use Trello, you may already know that power-ups are a fantastic way to add additional features to your Trello boards. Power-ups come in a number of different flavors and interact with a large number of third-party applications. Some are better than others, but one of my absolute favorites is Butler.
Butler allows you to automate so many different processes within your Trello boards. In today's video, I want to show you five of my favorite rules and schedule commands that will make your life so much easier. Now, this video is not for Trello experts, but I'll warn you—you’re going to look like a Trello expert after you watch this video.
So let's jump in.
The first Butler rule I want to show you has to do with setting card defaults. Here, I have an example board with a fairly simple to-do list. I have ideas on the far left, two different to-do columns for this week and next week, a pending column, and a complete column.
You probably have at least one step in your Trello process where, when you move a card from one list to another, you would like a few things to happen. For example, maybe when I move a card from this list into my pending list, I would like a particular checklist to be added and a due date as well. I don’t want it to exist in pending forever.
That seems like a lot of clicks, right? First, I'm going to have to drag it over, then open up the card, add that checklist, and then add that due date. But watch this. I’ve just created a Butler rule, and when I drag this card into my pending list, give it just a second—first, there's a checklist, and now there's a due date exactly two days from today.
What is going on? This is the power of Butler. When you create customized rules, you can have these behaviors in play. When I open up this card, there is the due date, which is exactly 48 hours from now, and down below, I have my follow-up checklist—certain things that I want to accomplish when any card is added to this list.
So let’s see how we can create this recipe within Butler. When the Butler power-up is enabled, you will have a little Butler link or icon in the top right-hand corner of your screen. By opening it up, we have a few different options—card buttons, board buttons, rules, and scheduled commands.
I’m going to go over to rules, and you will see this first rule that I just showed you: when a card is added to the list pending, add the follow-up checklist to the card and set the due date to 48 hours. I’m going to click on the edit button just so you can see how easy it is to set up one of these rules.
All I have are three components. First, you need to select a trigger. The trigger in this case is when a card is added to that particular list. I could add a trigger to any one of my lists, and they could all be unique if I wanted. Then I’ve got a couple of different actions. The first is to add that follow-up checklist to the card. I could add multiple checklists and other features to this card if I wanted, and I also want to set the due date to 48 hours.
I don’t have to stop here. If I scroll down, I can add even further actions to this trigger if I want, but that’s the rule and that’s how I can move things over and have this happen automatically. Let’s see it one more time in action.
I’m going to drag this card over to the pending list, and as soon as I let go, there’s the checklist and there is the due date. Automatic functionality with this default rule.
The next rule I want to show you is one of my favorites because not only is it going to automate something within this board, it’s actually going to affect an additional board. Let me set the scene for you.
If you use Trello, there’s probably a good chance that you are collaborating with others. For example, maybe this board is a team board where several members of your staff are managing different cards and tasks, and you are assigning different cards to different individuals. Sometimes you may assign it to yourself, and other times, others are assigning you to those particular cards.
One effective way of working in Trello is to create relationships between cards, but let’s see how we can have Butler automate that process for us.
Let’s take a look at this card that says "write year-end marketing report." Let’s say I would much rather spend more of my day in my own personal Trello to-do list rather than the team board. I’ve created a Butler rule that’s going to do something special.
Let’s say my manager comes in here and assigns me to this particular card. She selects me, and now something is going to appear on the front of the card.
Look at that. I’ve got a Trello attachment. It took just a few seconds, but let’s explore what this Trello attachment means. This is different from a file attachment such as a PDF or an image. What it’s done is actually created a link to my own personal tasks and project list. Now I’ve created a link between these two cards.
I’m going to click on this to go to that board, and look at this. At the top of my to-do list, I have the exact same card. Now I can come in here with my own personal projects and work on this task. I don’t have to be notified by anyone. Someone else may assign it to me, and now it automatically shows up in my own personal to-do list.
It’s not a sync of the same card. It is actually a copy or a link between two cards. When I’m finished working on this task, I can put it through my own process. When I’m done, I just need to come back and select this connection, which will take me back to the original board, where I can mark it as complete or add additional comments.
Butler even has the power to automate rules among more than one board. Let me just show you what this recipe looks like. Again, it’s under rules, and I’m going to select the edit button here.
The trigger in this case is when I am added to a card. The actions are as follows: copy the card to the top of this particular to-do list within this particular board, and link those cards together. Another very powerful rule from Butler.
Next, let’s take a look at how Butler can help us to keep our Trello boards neat and tidy. One of the complaints I hear from many Trello users is that they have a list like this one. It may be labeled complete or finished, and over time, they get a long list of all the cards that finish up here. As you’re working through your processes, they all tend to end up in that final list.
What do they do? Do they come in here and archive them one at a time? Do they have to remember to click and say archive all the cards in this list?
Butler allows you to automate this process. Not too long ago, this particular list was quite lengthy, but something happened that Butler did on my behalf. That was a scheduled task.
Here, I’m going to select scheduled and then calendar, and you can see I have an automated task: every month on the first, archive all the cards in this list. I’ve chosen the list complete.
I can get more granular if I want. I don’t have to do it monthly. I could do it at the end of every day or maybe every Sunday night, and I could have this apply to multiple or have different triggers for different lists. Using Butler to schedule certain tasks at regular intervals is a fantastic way to keep your Trello board neat and tidy.
Here’s a scheduled task that I use quite frequently with Butler, especially when I have a relationship between two or more lists. Here you see I have a to-do this week list, but I also have a to-do next week list. In my this week list, these are all of the tasks that I want to focus on right now. However, things that appear in my next week list will have to be moved over to this list, and that’s usually a manual process—or is it?
With the help of Butler, let’s open up Butler and I’ll show you what I have set up. This is a scheduled due date command because I’m basing it on a day of the week or month. The trigger in this case is on the Sunday before a card is due. The action I want to take place is to move the card to the top of my to-do this week list.
If we go back to my Trello board, you can see these three cards. This coming Sunday is going to be the last Sunday before their due date, so I know on Sunday all three of these cards are going to automatically move into my this week column, which is exactly what I want.
If I have other cards in this list that are due much further out, the same rule will apply, but it will only look if that due date is within the coming week. So if I have something due in July or a few weeks out, it’s going to remain in my next week list or maybe this is listed as my future to-do list. Only the things that are in that coming week are going to be moved over to this list.
Another powerful way of using automation within Butler.
The last Butler tip I want to share with you might just make you look like the hero of your team. Think of the number of processes that you’ve tried to agree upon when managing a Trello board with others.
For example, maybe when someone assigns themselves to a card, you
would like them to also assign a due date, add a specific comment, and move it to a particular list. What if you could do all of this with just a single click?
I’m going to start by showing you the Butler recipe. In this case, we are looking at a card button. You can add customizable buttons to your Trello cards. Let me open up the recipe to show you all the actions that are going to happen if I or someone else on my team selects the take task button.
Yes, you can even customize the name of all of your buttons. When someone selects this button, they will join the card. A comment will be posted with the text "task started," the due date will be set one week in advance, and the card will be moved to the top of this particular list—all of these actions with just a single click.
Let’s see how it works. Let’s say I’m browsing the ideas list, and I come across this "contact client about meeting" card. I decide to take this task on. Here is my Butler button. All I need to do is select this button, and I’m assigned a due date one week from now. The card has already been moved to the to-do this week list, and if I scroll down, it’s even added the comment "task started."
Remember that earlier rule we created, where if anything is assigned to me, I also want it to show up on my own personal task list? That rule is in play as well.
I’m going to close this card, and here you can see that with just one click, it’s moved to the correct list, assigned me, added the comment, and set the due date—all with a single button. Pretty powerful stuff, huh?
I’d love to hear from you. How are you going to use Butler to optimize your Trello boards? Be sure to leave a comment for me down below.
I also want to thank Butler for sponsoring today’s video. You can try Butler absolutely free by clicking on the power-ups option within your Trello menu. If you haven’t subscribed, be sure to do so right here on the Simpletivity YouTube channel.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it’s very simple.
How to Use Gmail Filters and Labels (Tutorial)
Why Gmail filters & labels are important
Are you sick and tired of having so many messages in your inbox? Are you suffering from inbox overload?
Well, today I wanna show you how to use filters within Gmail, so number one, you don't receive quite so many emails right here in your inbox, and number two, so that you can easily find special or emails that are important to you. In today's video, I wanna show you how to apply filters and some of my favorite filters that help me keep my inbox nice and clean.
Where to access Gmail filters
So let's get started with finding out how we can apply certain filters. Now there's a few different ways in which we can do so.
One way is to go to our settings. We start by selecting the gear icon and then coming down here and selecting Settings.
At the row at the top, we wanna select Filters and Blocked Addresses. Near the top, you'll see that there is a heading saying the following filters are applied to all incoming mail.
You can see in this example I actually haven't applied any filters at this point. Now the next step would be to select Create a New Filter, but hang on a minute.
That's an awful lot of steps, isn't it? First we had to click this, then we had to click Settings, then we had to click over here, and then we had to click this.
There must be an easier way to create a new filter. Well, there is, and all we need to do is use the search box at the top of the screen.
Even before you search for anything in particular, all you can do is select the little drop down arrow here, and we can search for particular mail. Near the bottom of this little drop down box, you will see that there is not only the search button but a Create Filter option.
When we hover over it at first, it's gonna say enter some search criteria first, and that's true. We need to give it a little bit of information first before we can create a filter.
But this is a very simple way, this is probably the fastest way, for you to create a filter within Gmail. I'm gonna show you one other way of doing so, but it's gonna be particular to a specific email address.
Gmail filter options & advanced search
Here you can see we can select different From addresses. We can select To addresses, things that are more than just yourself, maybe if other people are included, or maybe you manage multiple email addresses within a single Gmail account.
You can include things such as a subject line, if the message includes certain words, or excludes certain words. We can also filter by the size of that particular email message.
A few other options, including a date range, which inbox, which label has been applied, and if it has an attachment or if it includes chats such as Google Chat. But let's use a real world example.
So I'm gonna go back to my inbox here and in this example I've got a number of newsletters here. I wanted to make sure that I had a number of emails to show in today's tutorial.
But let's pretend that a number of these emails are from actual people. They could be from your boss.
They could be from coworkers. They could be from clients.
These are emails that are important to you, or perhaps some of these are notifications from other applications, other systems, that you may be using. Well, one of the easiest ways to clean up your inbox is to make sure that certain emails don't even start their lives here.
How to filter a specific email address
No, we want some of these emails to go directly to a separate folder or in Gmail a separate label. So I'm gonna use these Wired emails as an example and let's pretend that these Wired emails are something that are important to me.
They're something that I would like to read. They're something that I do want to review, but I never need to look at them immediately.
So I don't want them to hit my inbox. I want them to go somewhere else where I can choose when I want to read them, when I want to deal with them.
So in this case, I can just select any of these Wired emails. I'm gonna open up the email.
Here is our third way of applying a filter. In this step, I want you to select the little three dots.
This gives us some additional options, and near the bottom we have Filter messages like these. By selecting that it's automatically going to filter all of the emails that have this From address.
Here it's already pre-populated it because we selected it from within the message. If I click outside of the search bar for just a moment, you'll see it's already done the filtering for me.
Now, I haven't actually told it what I want it to do yet, but here I've, it's quickly searched for all of this criteria. If I go back and select the drop down arrow, I can add additional criteria if I want, but really, I just want anything from this address.
I want it to go somewhere else. I don't want it to start in the inbox.
So with at least one piece of criteria here, I can now select Create Filter.
Understanding Gmail filter choices.
Now I've got a number of different options that I can choose from. So when a message arrives that matches this search, in this case, that matches this email address, what do we want to do with it?
Well, in this case, I do want it to Skip the Inbox. I don't want it starting in the inbox.
I don't wanna see it there. I want to go and look at it when I want to.
So I'm gonna select this first criteria here. You can review the vast number of other options that are available to you including marking it as read, if you wanna add a star, delete it, always mark it important, a number of different criteria that you can choose.
The only other one I'm gonna select in this case is going to be Apply the label, because I wanna be able to go and find it and easily see it. So I'm gonna say choose and label, and in this case, I'm gonna say New Label and I'm gonna type in Wired, just so it's very easy for me to find all of those messages.
I'm gonna select Create which is actually just creating the label at this point. Just before I select Create Filter you will notice at the bottom of this list there is, the final check box says Also apply filter to seven matching conversations.
In this case, I do want to apply that. I want this filter to be applied immediately including the messages that it has found over here.
So I'm gonna select Create Filter. The filter is created.
I'm returned back to that message where I started this process, but I'm gonna start by clicking on Inbox to show the difference. So here, within my inbox, you will notice that I don't have, I have one Wired message in here, but I think that's because it's from a different email address.
See, that's interesting. This one is from a different email address.
So that's why this one wasn't filtered. So, the filter is working properly.
But you will notice that that's the only Wired message in this list. Everything else is not in my inbox.
Everything else is over here in this new label called Wired, and now I can come here and visit this when I like and review these particular emails. What this also means, because I've now created this filter, is that any new messages from that particular email address will never show up here within the inbox.
They will all automatically come here to this label and I can still be notified of it when there's new messages. It'll still be bolded like this.
So I can come down and take a look and review these emails as I like. So, think of some examples in your life.
Are you receiving automated notifications from certain systems or applications? Are there certain people that their messages never urgent?
You can maybe come and check on them once a day, or once every couple of hours. You can divert the inbox and go directly to that label.
How to add Gmail labels to emails
Now, the second example I wanna give to you today is how you can add labels to particular emails that may be very important to you.
So let's say in this example that this Best Buy newsletter, I'm gonna say for an example that this is maybe my boss. Maybe this is someone important and I do want to know when their emails arrive and I want them to stand out a little bit more.
In fact, I'd love it if there was a red label, something of that effect, so I can easily pinpoint those particular emails. So, in this case, what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna click on this message again, and what I could do is I could come up here and say Filter messages like these again if I wanted to.
But I'm gonna do something a little bit different, just so you can see how the search bar at the top works with the filter option here. So, I'm gonna open up one of these messages again and all I'm going to do is I'm gonna copy the domain.
I'm not gonna copy the entire thing. I'm just gonna copy the domain and I'm gonna put that into the search bar at the top of the screen.
So yes, once again it's gonna bring back all of those messages, and I'm now going to select the search options, or the search criteria. So instead of just having those words I'm actually gonna cut that and put that into the From field.
So anything that has this in the domain I wanna create a filter for that. In particular, I wanna add a label to it.
So my next step is I'm gonna select Create the filter, and we're not gonna Skip the Inbox, because I do want it to appear in the inbox. I'm not gonna select really anything else in this except for the label option.
So I'm gonna say Apply the label, and no, I don't want the Wired label that we just created, I want something different. So I'm gonna say New Label, and I'm gonna say Best Buy
, or maybe it could be the name of my boss.
It could be important. It could be urgent.
I could say read this now, whatever label you wish, and I'm gonna select Create. Again, that just created the label at this point.
The last thing I'm going to do just like in the previous example is I'm gonna say Also apply the filter to 13 matching conversations. So I want this to be applied immediately not just for the emails that I will be receiving in the future.
So I'm gonna select that box as well and I'm gonna say create the filter. Now, what you'll notice in just a second I've got a new label here, the label we created, Best Buy, on all of these messages.
Now, the only reason why we see the inbox label at this point is that we are still in the search mode or the filtering mode here. So we're seeing the search criteria up above, but if I select our inbox, we don't see that inbox label anymore, but you will see that new Best Buy label.
How to change the color of Gmail labels
Now, it's still not quite, it still doesn't stand out as much as I would like it to.
So what I'm going to do is I'm gonna come over here to the Best Buy label on the left hand side of my screen and I'm gonna say change the label color. Remember, I want it to stand out.
So I think I'm gonna select this red one with the white text, and now I think you would agree with me it certainly stands out. Every one of those Best Buy emails has this nice, big, bright red label beside it.
So if this was my boss, if this was a very important customer, or maybe it's something in the subject line, remember, there's an awful lot of criteria that you can use. Whatever it is, you can give it this type of label and when I get a bunch of new unread emails I might want to jump particularly to those emails that have these types of labels with it.
So, that's how you use filters within Gmail, and a couple of examples of how you can apply it in a real world situation. I hope you enjoyed watching today's video, and I'd love to learn how you may be using filters within Gmail, or if you have questions about using filter within Gmail.
I would encourage you to give this video a thumbs up, and be sure to leave me a comment down below, and if you haven't yet, subscribe right here to the Simpletivity YouTube channel. I upload new videos each and every week.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
5 Must-Have Chrome Extensions (Google Browser Add-Ons)
If you use Google Chrome as your primary web browser, I hope that you're familiar with Chrome extensions. What are Chrome extensions?
Well, they are additional add-ons which give your browser some superpower, some additional functionality which the browser can't perform on its own. Now if you already have a few extensions installed, you will most likely see their icon here in the top right-hand corner of your browser.
But here I'm in the Chrome Web Store, which I encourage you to visit, and you can browse the hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of Chrome extensions. Now some extensions may be related to tools or apps that you already use, and some you may have never heard of before.
But in today's video, I want to share with you five of my favorite Chrome extensions. We're gonna get things started with Panda.
Panda
Panda is a fantastic way to browse the websites or the blog websites that you frequent most often. There's an awful lot of new articles, a number of things that you may want to browse on a daily basis, but Panda makes it so much easier for you to do so in just a single page.
So let me give you a lay of the land. On the left-hand side, you will see a column where I have a number of websites including things like Medium, Fast Company, and I've got Seth Godin's blog here.
Then I've got some additional blogs that I've added down below. I've got Trello, I've got Lifehacker, things like that.
Now in the middle part of your screen, you can see I've got a bit of a summary of what's going on in one of those pages. So for example, if I click on Medium here, I can see some of the most popular articles on Medium right now.
I see the title and a little bit of additional information on the top six or so popular articles. Well, if I scroll down here, I see, "Oh, how to fall asleep quickly and wake up ready to be productive."
That sounds interesting. I'm going to click on it, and instead of just going to that site, on the right-hand side of my screen, I actually go directly to that article.
I can read it right here. I don't have to go anywhere else, and I can quickly jump back to something else here on the left-hand side of the screen.
Maybe I want to quickly browse what's going on on the Trello blog. Well, I can do so.
Here are the latest articles. I can see how many hours or days ago they were published, and I can select any one of them and go directly to that article.
So this can be a very efficient way for you to review all of those websites. These could be news websites; they could just be some of your favorite websites that you would like to browse all in one central place.
Mercury Reader
Now the next extension I want to share with you is called Mercury Reader, and it does something that's also gonna help you improve the way that you read and consume articles on the web. So here I've pulled up a recent article here, and you'll notice something that is very familiar in our online world.
There's a lot of stuff going on. I mean, here's the article, which is only taking up about 60% of my screen, but I've got advertisements and I've got invitations to sign up.
A lot of colorful things; it can be really, really distracting. Well, with the Mercury Reader Chrome extension installed, I'm going to go up here to the top right-hand corner, and I'm gonna select Mercury Reader.
In just a moment, what does it do? It streamlines everything.
In fact, it removes everything else on the page except for the article itself. So now I can focus on this article.
I can perhaps enjoy reading this article a little bit more as I scan, as I go through this item. Now if I want to go back to the original page, all I have to do is click anywhere outside here in the grey area, and then it will return me to the original view.
I'm back to the website. I can browse as I was before.
But Mercury Reader can be a great way for you to focus in on that article if you don't want additional popups, if you don't want all the additional noise which is thrown at you. You can try out Mercury Reader.
Full Page Screen Capture
Now the third one in our list has to do with capturing images and especially if you want to capture more than just what you see. I know for myself, once in a while, when I am trying to either redesign my website or try to get a bit of a bigger picture of what someone's homepage or a particular web page looks like, I'd like to get a snapshot of the entire thing.
So here I've come across a website that I'd like to get a snapshot of the entire page, not just bit by bit. So what I've installed is a Chrome extension called Full Page Screen Capture.
It's actually this little camera icon that you see here. Whenever you're on a website or a web page in which you would like to take a snapshot of the entire thing, simply click this icon.
In just a few seconds, it's gonna take a screen grab of everything. I want to note the little Pacman status icon there.
I really like that. That's very entertaining.
But in just a few seconds now, I have a PNG image here of the entire website. Now I can review the entire thing here.
This would basically look just like the normal website, but you can see it's actually captured the entire thing. At this stage, I can download it as a PDF, or I can download it as a PNG image.
I can reference it later; maybe I want to mock up some things. I want to add some text or add some things as I'm collaborating with others on my team.
So a very simple add-on, a very simple extension. It may not be applicable to everyone, but whenever you are wanting to capture an entire webpage, very easily put it in a PDF or create an image out of it, you can use the Full Page Screen Capture.
Grammarly
Now moving on, the next two extensions in my list have to do with writing. We've looked at reading; we've looked at capturing images; let's see how we can improve our writing.
Now in this example, I've opened up an email. I start to write or craft an email to someone else, but you will notice that there's a few underlined words in red.
Now we're probably used to seeing this in a number of word processing applications. It usually means that you have a spelling mistake.
Yes, indeed, I do have a spelling mistake in this particular example. What I am using right now is an extension called Grammarly.
Now Grammarly has been heavily marketed over the last two years or so. I'll admit, I was a little hesitant to install Grammarly and try it out.
But you know what? After I started using it after a couple of days, I really couldn't see myself going on without it because it's a very simple user interface.
It's helped me to write better whether it's an email, whether it's an article, or even if I'm just in social media. What Grammarly has done here, it's highlighted a few words that it thinks I may have spelt incorrectly or perhaps I am using poor or incorrect grammar.
So let's go through it one by one. The first one, "follow-up," it's suggesting that, you know what, there really should be a space.
There's no such thing as a word "follow-up" without the space. But what I really like about it is that I didn't even have to click on this.
I didn't have to right-click on it, which we were used to when it comes to spelling mistakes and other applications. I just need to hover over it; it gives me the suggestion, and I can say, "Oh yeah, yeah, 'follow-up,' please, that's what I meant."
So let's move on. What else happened over here?
It actually, for a second there, it seemed to have ignored my "together" there for a moment. So there, I meant to say "together," but in this case, I put an "i," and here I can select the correct format there.
Lastly, I have the incorrect form of "to." There should be "to" with two "o"s, so I'm going to hover over that.
Remember, this happens once in a while, probably doesn't happen too often to me, but whether it's "to" or whether it's "your" or "you're," you know, those things do creep up as we're trying to be efficient with our writing. So here I'm going to select the proper or the correct form of "to."
The other nice thing about Grammarly is that you can actually add your own words. So for example, I have added the word "Simpletivity" to my dictionary.
Most applications are gonna look at this word and say that it's incorrect because it's my business name; it's an original name. But you can add that, so as I'm adding this to my social media posts, as I'm adding it elsewhere, it's not going to flag this as incorrect.
Now the last one, the fifth and final extension I want to share with you today, is also gonna help you be a better or at least a much quicker writer or responder. That is Auto Text Expander.
Now I've mentioned Auto Text Expander before when it comes to email, but this actually applies to almost anywhere that you are adding text online. So how does it work?
Auto Text Expander allows you to save some preformatted responses. This could be just a couple of words; it could be an email address; it might even be a full paragraph.
What you do is that you create some shortcuts, usually a string of just a few letters, so that you can type these letters, and then the entire sentence or paragraph, whatever you have saved here, will be populated. So let me give you an example.
Here I've got one that is "hbd stories," standing for a happy birthday
, and I've got a very quick happy birthday message here. So if I go into my email and I'm gonna write "HBD," look what happens.
As soon as I finish typing the letter "D," that entire sentence expands. "Hey, just wanted to wish you a happy birthday, hope you had a good one."
Think about the common responses that you write in an email. Think about some of the things that you need to either sign off on or the way that you address certain people again and again.
How much additional time could this save you? I'll give you another example.
Here at the bottom, I've created one, and the shortcut is "TBNI," and that stands for "Thanks, but not interested." This is something that I'll often give to emails when people are reaching out to me, and it just doesn't look like the right fit, or I'm not wanting to hear further communication from them.
Instead of writing that out in two or three sentences, all I need to do is come back here. I'm gonna say "TBNI," and look at that.
The entire sentence is brought in for me. I can hit Send and get on with the rest of my day.
So whether it's just a couple of words, or a few sentences, or even a full paragraph, Auto Text Expander can be a great shortcut for you to add as a part of your Chrome browsing experience. So I'd love to hear from you.
Which of these five did you find either most impressive or most helpful? In addition, I would love to hear what is your favorite Chrome extension.
I'm sure a number of you are already using Chrome extensions which help you to be more productive. Thanks so much for watching.
I would encourage you to subscribe right here to the Simpletivity YouTube channel. Give this video a like and be sure to leave me a comment down below.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
Trello Home Screen - Everything You Need to Know
Hello everyone, Scott Friesen here at Simpletivity, and today I am very excited to share with you the brand new Trello home screen. Now just before I get into all of the features of this brand new area of Trello, I want to go back to the default home screen or the default board screen within Trello.
Default Trello Home Screen
You're probably familiar with this look: when you select the Trello logo at the top of your screen, you go back to a page something like this. You have your starred boards at the top of the screen, you have all of your personal boards down below, and then your team boards down below that.
This has been the default when you go to the Trello home screen for many, many years. You can get quick access to each of these boards, but one of the complaints is that it's been very difficult to get a high-level view of all of the cards and all of the projects that you're involved with.
Things like notifications, conversations, and things that are coming up. Well, Trello has given us the home screen, and I think you're going to be spending an awful lot of time here because they've given us a lot of goodies to play with.
A lot of ways that we can stay on top of our work. So let me give you a tour.
All of the action really happens here in the middle part of the screen. On the right-hand side, we still have our starred boards, we still have our recently viewed boards, and we can quickly and easily create a new board.
But it's this single column in the middle of the screen which is where you are going to want to put your attention. So first up, we have an "Up Next" section.
Up Next
This "Up Next" section is going to include a number of different things. It could include cards that have an upcoming due date or perhaps a due date which has recently passed.
Obviously, that's pieces of information that you want to stay on top of. It is also going to include cards where you have been mentioned recently in a conversation.
Again, something you want to keep your eye out for. Lastly, it's also gonna include cards where you have been added to recently, yet you have not had any activity on that card.
Think of how many times someone else on your team may have assigned you something, and you weren't even aware of it. You weren't even aware that you were assigned to that particular card.
Well, you'll be notified of that here in this "Up Next" section. So this first card in the "Up Next" area is a good example of that.
Here I was added to this card about an hour ago, so I'm being notified of it. There are a couple of other really nice features that they've included here.
One is, I can reply to this card directly from this screen. I don't have to click on the card, I don't have to go anywhere else.
I can say, "Hey, I've got this," or "I'll give you an update later on in the week," whatever the case may be. I also have the opportunity to dismiss this card.
So if I've already been notified that I was assigned to this card, or I don't want to be notified of this again, I can select the dismiss button. Now you'll notice there's actually another card that comes up.
Here's another card which I've been added to recently. So I can either go through these one by one, or I can select the "Show More" link, and this will add additional cards down below.
I've got a few other examples of things that I've been added to recently. Here's a couple of examples where a question has been posed to me, and someone has mentioned me in the comments area.
Now again, I've got this nice reply button, so I can reply immediately to this conversation, or I can select "Dismiss." Now it's important to note that "Dismiss" is only dismissing this notification of the card.
It does not archive the card, it does not delete the card, it doesn't remove me from the card. I'm just dismissing this notification.
But if I do want to go into the card itself, I can do that as well. I can just click on this mini preview here, and it's gonna take me directly to that board and open that card for me.
But at any time, I want to go back to the Trello home screen, I just need to select the logo, and that's gonna bring me back here. As you can see, by default, the "Up Next" section is only going to show me one card at a time unless I select "Show More" below.
Highlights
Now below "Up Next," we have a second section, and this is called "Highlights." This is a little bit different than what we saw up above in that "Highlights" is all about conversations.
The great thing is that it goes beyond just the conversations that I'm involved with. It goes beyond just the things that I have either commented on or someone has included me in the comment.
It's actually going to show me all of the comments of the boards that I'm a member of. So even if I'm not involved in that conversation, I can see that conversation here in the "Highlights" section below.
Again, another great way that you can get a bit of a pulse of what's going on within boards in which you are a member of. Or maybe you're the manager or the team lead, and there are lots of other conversations going on.
This is now your centralized home to see what is happening with those conversations. If you are involved directly, like you see here, I should maybe clarify the different things you see here from the first card to the second card.
Here I've asked the question, right? I've asked Jane the question, so it's letting me know that that's the last part of this conversation here.
Teams
Someone has asked a conversation of me, so I can hit reply and do that immediately from this part of the screen. Now when it comes to the home screen, there's a few other things you want to keep in mind.
Here we have a "Teams" section, which goes beyond just giving you the ability to edit those boards or edit the members of those teams. It will actually filter what you see here on the home screen.
So by default, when you select "Home" or if you select the Trello logo at the top of the screen, you're gonna see everything that you are a member of or you're engaged with. But let's say if I just want to see what's going on with the HR department.
I can select the HR department, and here's the single, in this case, single team highlight. So I can focus just in with this team.
If I only want to see things for the product development team, I can select that here, and it's going to filter out just the cards related to boards within the product development team. Now another thing to keep in mind with this "Teams" section is that by selecting it, I can now go to the bottom right-hand corner of the screen.
I know it might be a bit of a stretch, but here I can see all of the boards for that team. I can edit the members of that team or adjust the settings for that team.
So I know there might be a bit of a distance here. I know when I was first testing out the home screen, I thought I should be able to select this and it would go directly to my settings or my members screen.
But no, this actually filters the information. I'm going to select HR department again, and it's gonna filter the information here.
Which is great, right? If you're working with multiple teams, some of you may have 10 plus teams here on the left-hand side.
You can filter your highlights, you can filter the "Up Next" section, but it's also a way for you to edit your members and settings for those respective teams. So I hope you get an opportunity to test out the Trello home screen.
I think this is going to be a place where you are going to be spending an awful lot of time. It's a great way to make sure that you're not missing out on anything.
That you're staying on top of all those notifications and updates that are thrown your way. Or if you just want to follow the conversations that are going on here within the other boards that you are a member of.
In the comment section below, I would love to hear some of your favorite features of Trello home and how you may be using Trello home at the moment. If you're not a subscriber to the Simpletivity YouTube channel, I would encourage you to do so and to give this video a thumbs up.
Thank you so much for watching. Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult.
In fact, it's very simple.
4 Ways to Create Quiet Time in a Noisy Office
Today's workplace is more noisy and distracting than ever before, and that can make it very challenging for you to find the quiet time or the quiet space for you to work on your most important projects. Well, in today's video, I want to show you four different ways on how you can create that quiet time, even if you work in a very noisy office environment.
Now, today's de facto standard is an open office environment, meaning that you have very little barrier or perhaps no barrier at all between yourself and the other individuals that you work with. In fact, for some of us, we may be working in one very large room which holds up to 50 or even more individuals within that space.
This makes it so easy to be distracted, not only by all of the noise and other conversations that are going on around us but even all of the visual distractions that happen as people are getting up and moving about throughout the office. So let's take a look at my first tip on how to create quiet space within your environment.
My first suggestion may sound simple, but its outcome can be very, very powerful, and that is to wear headphones, earbuds, or perhaps even your telephone's headset. Now, there's two benefits of taking this approach.
Wear Headphones
Number one, by listening to music or other background sounds, you can drown out the noise and other conversations around you. But if you are wearing your earbuds or your telephone's headset, there's an additional benefit.
Many of your colleagues may assume that you are taking part in a conference call and therefore will be hesitant to distract or interrupt you. Even if your lips are not moving, even if you're not saying a single thing, just by wearing a headset, others may assume that you are taking part in an additional meeting and therefore may think twice about interrupting you as a part of your day.
Find a Private Room
My second suggestion is to find a private room for short periods of time. Most corporate offices have a variety of different meeting rooms available, everything from a large boardroom which may seat up to 30 individuals all the way down to much smaller meeting rooms designed for only two or three people.
This is your opportunity to make use of some of these underutilized meeting rooms so you can find private time and quiet space for your own work. In my experience, many of these rooms are underutilized, meaning that the majority of them are unattended or not being used for most of the day.
Now, I recommend that you follow your office or your company's guidelines when it comes to booking or making use of these rooms. So get to know which ones are close to your desk or which ones are perhaps not used as frequently as others.
Even if that meeting room has a large glass window or is entirely made out of glass, most of these rooms have phones hardwired into them. Again, like we saw with suggestion number one, many people may assume that you are taking part in a conference call or some other private phone conversation.
Back when I used to work in a corporate environment, I would always book out a small meeting room on Friday mornings. This was my opportunity to do my weekly review and other heads-down work.
Arrive at the Office Earlier
So take advantage of those smaller meeting rooms which may not be fully utilized. Tip number three is to arrive at the office earlier.
You may be surprised at how few of your colleagues start their day prior to 9:00 a.m. So if you can find a time where you start your day upwards of an hour before the average employee enters the office, you may have found your sweet spot for distraction-free time.
Now, of course, you may have to adjust your schedule and your commute schedule in order for this to work, but there can be additional benefits to adjusting when you start your day. For many of us, you may actually reduce your commute time by beating the early morning rush hour.
You may also have the advantage of leaving work a little earlier than you currently do now. That gives you other opportunities to spend time with your family or to spend time on your personal pursuits.
Now, of course, this option may not be available to everyone, but it's worth having the discussion with your manager. The additional benefit of starting your day a little extra earlier is not only will you not be distracted by physical colleagues in the same office, but the amount of emails that you receive at that time of the day are usually much less.
You can almost guarantee that no one will be phoning you at 7 or 8 a.m. in the morning. So explore looking at arriving at your office earlier so you can find that quiet and focused time just for you.
Work from Home One Day per Week
Now, my last suggestion may be challenging for some of you, but it is certainly worth exploring, and that is working from home one day per week. More and more companies are willing to look at having some of their staff work remotely, at least on a temporary basis.
There are many more benefits to the organization beyond just cost. So by working from home one day per week, you eliminate the commute, and you guarantee fewer distractions from your colleagues, especially if you work in a large office.
Now, by sitting down and having this conversation with your manager and explaining the real benefits of this request, and that is to be more productive, many managers are willing to let their employees work from home one day a week or at least to try it out on a trial basis. If you are able to gain this privilege, be sure to make the most of your time when you do work from home.
There is a chance that you may be able to increase the number of days or the amount of time that you do work from home in the future. So be sure to keep records and be sure to show how you are being more productive on those days when you work remotely.
So there are my four tips to creating quiet space regardless of the noisy work environment that you may find yourself in. Which of the four suggestions stood out to you, or which of the four do you plan to implement?
I would encourage you to leave your answer in the comments below. If you haven't subscribed to the Simpletivity channel, be sure to do so and to give this video a thumbs up.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
3 Gmail Add-Ons I Can’t Live Without (Email Essentials)
Gmail is one of my core productivity tools for getting things done. However, did you know that you can add some superpowers to your Gmail account to make it much easier to manage all of those emails?
In today's video, I'm going to show you three of my favorite add-ons for Gmail, three add-ons that I simply couldn't live without. Today we are going to get things started with Boomerang.
Boomerang
Boomerang is an add-on that is available for both Gmail users and Outlook users. Here I am, about to send a message, in particular, I'm about to send a question to someone.
This all looks pretty standard at this point. At the bottom of my dialog, I've got my send button, and I can discard it and that type of thing.
But you will notice down below, I have some additional features, some additional functionality. This is what Boomerang can provide to all of your emails.
First, I have a red Send Later button. So if I would like to send this message into the future, I can do so.
Think of how often you may have stayed up extra late, and you're crafting that email at, I don't know, let's say 2:00 in the morning. But perhaps you don't want the person who's receiving that email to know that you're crafting that message at 2:00 in the morning.
No problem. I can hit the Send Later button and schedule it to arrive at 7 or 10, or whenever I want it to be.
How about the scenario where you know the person who's receiving that email, and you know they don't usually read their email until 1:30 in the afternoon? I can schedule my email to arrive at that time as well.
But you know what my number one favorite feature of Boomerang is? It's the one next to it, this little checkbox here.
Let me explain how it works. Think of how many times you've asked a question of someone.
Here I'm asking, Can you please send me a copy of the team notes? I'd really like to receive these in the next two days.
But what do I do after I send this email? Do I give it a particular label? Do I set a reminder in my calendar so I follow up with this person?
I don't have to do any of those things with Boomerang. All I need to do is check this checkbox here, and then I can determine the length of time that I want to go by before I get an automatic reminder.
In this case, I'm going to wait a maximum of two days. I'm going to say two days.
What's going to happen is that after I send this email, if I don't get a reply from the person I'm sending it to within two days, Boomerang is going to automatically bring my original email back to the top of my inbox. That will be my reminder, my trigger, or my cue that they still haven't sent me those team meeting notes.
Then I can either send another email, make a phone call, or determine what happens next. But the great thing about Boomerang is that if this person does reply within the next two days, I do not get a duplicate email.
Nothing further happens. Boomerang knows that I've been sent a reply, and therefore I don't get anything extra in my inbox. This is the core feature of Boomerang that I use literally on a daily basis.
Now that's not all that Boomerang provides. In fact, one of Boomerang's most basic features is bringing a message back into your inbox if you just don't want to deal with it right away.
You could just hit Boomerang, and you can determine when you'd like that message to reappear. But this one right here, the Boomerang or bring back if someone does not reply, I absolutely love.
Alright, let's move on to add-on number two, and I've got another example set up here. In this case, I am wanting to meet up with someone.
I want to set up a phone call with someone else, and you sort of know how this goes, right? You're wondering if we can set up a time for a phone call later this week.
What happens? You send a message proposing a time, and they say, No, can't do that. How about this? And you say, Sorry, I'm busy, and there's back and forth, back and forth, trying to find the right time.
Assistant
Well, my next favorite add-on is called Assistant, and this is how it works. It allows you to propose several times where you are available, and then the person you're sending that email to can select which one works for them.
Here I've just supplied a simple question, I'm wondering if we can set up a time for a phone call this week. What I'm going to do next, you can see in my lower right-hand corner, I have the Assistant icon.
All I need to do is select this icon, and it is going to open up a new dialog box. It looks very similar to a meeting dialogue here, right?
I've got the title of the meeting here, which it has pre-populated with both of our names. Of course, I can edit this.
I can say Scott and Scott Chat. Location, I can say phone, and I can include my phone number if I want to here.
Let's make it a classic movie 555 number. Invitees, here's where I can paste in the email addresses of those who I'm inviting.
I'm just going to use my test account here, and then I can put in a description, anything else that you would find standard within a meeting invitation. But the real power comes down below.
Let's say I want to make the meeting length 30 minutes in length. I'm going to select 30 minutes, and here are the next three days available to me.
I can see that I'm actually fairly wide open, so I'm going to give this person a few different choices. I can click here, I'm going to say 3 p.m. or 4 p.m. later today, maybe 4:30, and let's say 1 o'clock on Thursday.
I'm going to give them one more time on Friday at 2:00 p.m. So here, you can see I get a snapshot of my calendar.
It actually shows me my other events here. You can see some of the other events that I've had today, so I don't have to open up my Google calendar.
In this case, I've selected five different times, and what I'm going to do is select Insert times into email. What Assistant does is that it pulls that directly into my email.
Now here's some standard text that Assistant includes. I'd like to set up a 30-minute meeting. Click on the meeting start time that works for you.
Down below, we have that information, and when they receive this email, all they have to do is glance at their calendar and say, You know what, I can do Thursday at 1:00. They're going to click this link, and immediately, that's going to create an invitation for them.
That's going to book it on my calendar because I've already said I'm available. It's going to book it on my calendar, and now we're set.
That meeting is set up in just a single email. This is a fantastic tool when you are dealing with individuals.
It's not necessarily meant for groups of people to determine one particular time, but it's fantastic when you're trying to set up a meeting with another individual. They just have to click once, and you don't have to do anything at all beyond this step after you send this email.
You just have to wait for their reply, and it's automatically going to be booked into your Google Calendar. Of course, if none of these times are available, they can just select None of these times work for me.
That will send you a notification, and you can propose some new times if you like. One thing I would point out is that it will show it in your default time zone.
So if you are sending this to someone outside of your time zone, you may want to mention that in your note up above or just point out that there is an opportunity for them to view it in their own time zone. By default, they're going to see it in your default time zone.
But this is another tool that I use almost daily when I'm setting up meetings with someone else. I know what my availability is. I really have no idea what their availability is, so I use Assistant to help us both out.
AutoTextExpander
Now, the third add-on I want to share with you today is called Auto Text Expander. It's not limited to just Gmail.
You can use Auto Text Expander anywhere that you put text in online. It could be a forum, it could be a document, it could be some other place.
But I wanted to include it here because I find it most useful when it comes to writing and replying to emails. What Auto Text Expander does is it allows you to create some shortcuts, shortcuts of perhaps some phrases or certain words that you use frequently.
You'd rather just type in a few keystrokes rather than type in a full paragraph or a full sentence. Let me give you an example here.
Here I'm asking someone a question, and when I ask a question, I often sign off with a very similar phrase, a very similar phrase followed by a Thanks in advance. Now it's only about a sentence and a half, but you know what? I would much rather just type in a few keystrokes.
So I'm going to type in the letters LFR, and as soon as I hit the letter R, it inputs this string of text which I've already set up in advance. I'm looking forward to hearing from you. Thanks in advance.
So this again is a common sign-off. I don't use it for all of my emails, but I use it often enough that I would rather just type in a few characters, and then I can have this
populate immediately within my email.
Let me show you how it works. When you install the Auto Text Expander Chrome extension, you will get a screen that allows you to create the shortcut.
Here you see my LFR example. Here's the shortcut, a string of letters or characters, and then on the right is the text that I want it to automatically input.
Let's try another example, and I'll show you here at the bottom of the screen. Here I have one where the shortcut keys are TBNI.
That makes a lot of sense to me. It might not make any sense to you, but those basically stand for Thanks but not interested.
Once in a while, I may receive an email from someone who's obviously put in a lot of thought, effort, or time into getting to know me, and they want to share something with me. So I will reply to those emails.
I don't reply to all emails that are offering me an opportunity, but in those cases, I might want to just send them something. Hey, thank you for sharing this with me, but I'm just not interested in learning more at this time.
Instead of writing out those two sentences, I would rather just hit these four keystrokes. I can even test this out at the top of the screen.
You will notice it gives you a little demo area. So I'm just going to type in the letters TBNI, and as soon as I finish hitting the I stroke, it inputs that text.
Let's go back to Gmail and use our example here just to make sure that you understand that it works in all areas. There it is, TBNI, and now that string of text is immediately within my email.
You can use this within Gmail, and you can use this in a variety of other places. I just find that I most frequently use it when I'm replying to an email or maybe I'm answering a standard question, something that I get quite frequently.
Hey, why don't I just set up my standard response over here, and then I can use those shortcut keys within Gmail. So there you have it, my three favorite add-ons for Gmail, Boomerang, Assistant, and Auto Text Expander.
If you would like to try out these add-ons, I've included links to them in the description below. As always, I would love to hear from you.
What are some of your favorite Gmail add-ons? Perhaps I can highlight them or review them in an upcoming video.
Thank you so much for watching today's video. I encourage you to give this video a like, share your comments below, and make sure to subscribe.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
Google Keep and Google Docs Together! (How to Connect Notes)
Google Keep is a fantastic tool for grabbing all those ideas, notes, and thoughts in one centralized location. Especially if you are using Keep on your mobile device, you probably quickly add a number of notes in a single day.
If you're already a user of Google Keep, there's a good chance that you also make use of Google Drive, and in particular, the Docs application for creating reports or writing articles. Maybe you take meeting notes within Google Docs.
Today, I want to show you the relationship between Google Docs and Google Keep, how they integrate with one another, and how you can access both from either application. Let's start by taking a look at Google Docs.
Here I've started a new article, and let's say I've captured a number of ideas within my Keep account. Maybe I've got some images, notes, or the rough draft, the puzzle pieces of a great article, and I want to access that information.
To do so, all we need to do is select Tools, and about halfway down, we have an option that says Keep Notepad. If we select that, what appears on the right-hand side of the screen is a mini version of all of our Keep notes.
We can search the notes, add new notes, and even edit these notes directly from this view. So now, when I've got some text, maybe the start of an article or just a few points, I can select the three dots and say Add to Document.
Now my text is immediately here within my Docs environment. Let's say I want this image and I want to bring it into the document.
I just showed you how to do so by selecting the menu option, the three dots. Well, Keep actually makes it easier; I can just click and drag that image, and now it's directly in my document.
Whether it's text or images, let me give you one other example, this one involving a checklist. What happens when you take a checklist into Docs? It will actually convert it into a bulleted list.
Of course, I can come in here and edit it any way I like. All that great information, all the pieces of my reports or an article or maybe notes that I've kept on a client, I can pull directly into my document.
But it gets even better because this relationship works both ways. Let's say I've got some information here that I would like to bring into Keep.
I'm just going to delete a couple of these notes so we can get a better view. Let's say I want to bring some of this information back into my Keep environment.
You will notice when I drag things out of Keep, it doesn't remove them from my Keep notepad; it's going to keep it there. But let's say this first sentence, I would like to create a new note around it, and it did not originate here.
All I need to do is highlight that piece of text or it could be an image, right-click, and I can say Save to Keep Notepad. Now you can see it's created a brand new note that I now have accessible here within my Keep notepad.
I'm going to switch back over to my Keep application or to the main Keep window. Here you can see that piece of text that I've brought in.
There's another advantage to doing this. You will see down below that there is a Keep integration link.
What happens is that it keeps that link between this note and the actual Google Doc where it came from or where it was created from. If I click on this link, it's going to bring me back right here to the original document.
This is where that note originally came from. Another way of doing this is by taking a note within this Keep viewer from within Docs.
Let's say this is a new note, a new note from Google Docs. As I'm creating this note, it again adds this automated Keep integration link.
It's going to keep that tie, that sync between this document and the note that I'm taking here. I'm going to select Done, and now when I go back to my Keep tab, there you see that same Keep integration link.
If I select it, it's going to bring me right back to this document. You don't have to have all of your notes synced to the actual document where you kept it.
Let's say I just want to add a new note, and it's unrelated to this document. All I need to do is select X, remove that source, and now the note that I take here will not link or be related to this area.
But I know that there are people who are starting to use their Keep notes as another way of keeping track of comments within a particular document. Remember, you can highlight that area, bring it in here, and make other revisions as well.
You can use labels, search by labels if you like, and see everything that is integrated or directly related to this document. Just a couple of ways that we can do so.
Let's go back to our Keep account and see how we can create a new document directly from our Keep environment. Let's say I've got the start of an article here, something titled New Blog Idea.
It's just a rough scratch. I've been writing a few things, or maybe I've grabbed a long piece of text from the internet, for example.
We can actually start a new Google document directly from this note. Here's how to do it.
If we go to the More option down below, you will see at the very bottom there's an option called Copy to Google Docs. When we select this option, it may take just a moment.
It says it has been copied to Google Docs. Let's open that document.
What has happened? Look at this.
It's brought in all that text, everything that I got started in my Keep environment. It's now got me set up within a new document in Google Drive.
It's brought over the title of that note and all of the information that was within that note. Maybe you're a writer, or maybe you have a long piece of information, lots of text or lots of information in a note, and you want to branch that out or apply some rich text editing.
You can flesh it out into an article or report by selecting Copy to Google Docs. Another way of bringing in information, this time from Keep, and bringing it directly into a brand-new document within Google Docs.
There's one other example that I want to show you today and how Google Docs and Google Keep can integrate with one another. Another advantage of using both of these tools together is the OCR technology that is built right into the Keep environment.
Let's start this one in Keep. I've taken a screenshot of a poster here.
You may already be aware that when you are grabbing an image with text on it, Google Keep has the ability to grab and convert any text on that image into real text. If you want to edit this text, let's say these bullet points that are listed here, and you'd like to include that in your Google document, all you need to do is come down to this menu again.
Above the Copy to Google Docs option, we have Grab Image Text. I'm going to select it this time, and what has happened is you can see just down below, it has taken the text up above and it has put it into this note.
I'm going to open it up so we can see it in a bit more detail. It's not always perfect, as you can see.
It's missing a couple of letters here and there. It's supposed to be "at the beach," right? I'm going to put in a capital B there.
This is supposed to have an L, long sleeved shirts and pants. But otherwise, it's done a pretty good job of grabbing the text that we see up above.
Now it's here down below. Now we're going to go back to Google Drive.
If I go and find this note, here it is. Now I have the text within here, right now I have the text available to me.
If I'd want to bring that into my document, I can select it, grab it, and bring it in here. Now it will bring in the entire note, so I've got the image up above, but now I've got all that great text as well.
That's really what I wanted. I can come up here, delete the image, but now I've got all that text that I wanted from that poster.
It only took me a couple of seconds, and now I can edit it, manipulate it here within Google Docs. Those are a number of different ways that you can use information in both Google Docs and Google Keep, and send it between them.
You can have the information that you've grabbed, click and drag, add images, text, even bullet points and checklists directly to Google Documents. I hope you enjoyed today's video, and I would love to hear from you.
What is your favorite tip about the integration between Google Keep and Google Docs? Be sure to include it in the comments below.
Thank you again for watching. I encourage you to give this video a like, and please subscribe to the Simpletivity YouTube channel.
Remember, being productive does not need to be difficult. In fact, it's very simple.
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