Sentences with phrase «up email checking»

Not exact matches

Studies show that checking texts and emails for even a minute or two at a time can add up to huge chunks of time every day.
Ursula Burns, chairwoman and CEO of Xerox and the first black woman to lead a Fortune 500 company, wakes up at 5:15 a.m. and immediately checks her email.
Let's be honest, if you're doing any of the things I have already mentioned — constantly checking email, attending meetings, and peeking over the shoulders of your people — that adds up to a ton of work.
All those spectators bunched up and using their phones at once would have a hard time simply getting online to check their email, let alone connecting to one another for a massive multi-player game.
You wake up late, work from Starbucks or the beach checking emails, then pack it up and call it a day.
I observe digital Sabbaths in which I stop checking email, keeping up with the news online, and checking into Foursquare.
In fact, she wakes up at 4.30 every morning and without checking her email or opening the Internet, she takes the next book from her bedside table, and starts reading.
Cole, the group president of FOCUS Brands, the parent company of brands like Auntie Anne's, Carvel, and Cinnabon, wakes up every morning at 5 a.m. and checks her calendar, all of her major social media platforms, news sites, blogs, emails, and any other messages that may have come in overnight.
If you would've told me seven years ago that today I'd be waking up each morning at 4:45 a.m. to check emails as the CEO of a dessert company, I would've said, «Are you crazy?
You show up to work and the first thing you do as you settle in is check your email to get the workday started.
When I simply silence my phone I still see the notification icons and I'm apt to pick it up and check emails and messages.
This will encourage people to revisit your site, check out your other material and sign up for your email list.
«There's time to check your email or catch up on the news when someone else is driving.
Without fail, I start every morning off with a cup of «proper English tea,» even when traveling in San Francisco, and leisurely check the daily newspaper headlines on my tablet, before diving into email and catching up on the company Chatter feed.
Use your communication outlets effectively and often, and message or email your employees regularly for a «mutual update,» where you're not only checking in on what they're up to, but you're initiating an opportunity for them to get your attention and bring you up to speed on their own thoughts and concerns.
More to the ROI benefits, almost two - thirds of internet users check their email everyday, which means that if you come up with a great email, your (target) audience is likely to check out your information.
They use their phones to check social media and email, to look up restaurants in their vicinity, and to look up product reviews and price comparisons while out shopping.
The average time spent on private activities, such as online shopping, checking social media and emails, personal phone calls, and chatting with colleagues sucks up an estimated 1.5 to 3 hours per day, according to studies cited by The Atlantic.
For example, most people wake up and immediately check their phone or email.
By informing the recipient that you are following up, you make them aware of an initial email that they may check out in case the short follow up is not sufficient.
And Recart automatically sends follow up emails with discount codes to customers who added items to their cart but failed to check out.
Waking up to a techie breakfast of checking your email, Facebook or Instagram likes that you scored since midnight isn't that nourishing.
For those who want to get a productivity boost this year, check out Tim's top recommendations below and sign up to get email updates with more tips.
The founder of her eponymous fashion label wakes up at 5:45 a.m., checks emails, gets her three sons out of bed, and exercises for 45 minutes.
For example, I couldn't figure out why the Toronto Blue Jays hadn't sent me my CASL email yet, but I think when I signed up for it two years ago I actually checked the box.
While I may not wear the same thing every day, I do wake up at the same time each morning, check my email, go for a run, read while eating breakfast, and then get to work.
«Author Julie Morgenstern wrote an entire book on the subject, called Never Check Email in the Morning,» The Huffington Post reminds readers in an article that rounds up several voices all agreeing with Morgenstern and Bradberry.
NOTE: If you'd like to get an extra leg up and learn exactly how I connect with «impossible to reach» people — including the exact email scripts I use, check out my Advanced Network Hacking Guide here.
No manager is ever going to forget to check in on someone's progress, and no employee is ever going to be inaccessible to draft up an email explaining what they've accomplished.
Checking email, news and other small tasks can quickly eat up hours of your day.
(Check out my post, How to Heat Up Cold Emails with Personalization.)
If you use Gmail, please check the Promotions tab to see if our email wound up there (and to prevent future emails from us from going into your Promotions box, move an email from us into the Primary box — and Gmail should learn your preference after that.)
Just back it up and check it over — don't forget your email address.
To read the rest, check out his first post, welcome him to the team, and make sure you sign up for the RSS Feed or to receive the posts by email so you don't miss a single one.
We take on second jobs to earn extra bucks, check emails throughout the weekend and use Sunday afternoon to run errands or catch up on work.
Too keyed up to take your Sunday afternoon nap, you made the mistake of checking your email, only to find a note from one of the saints who told you that they're going to be transferring their membership elsewhere because — although they love you dearly — they feel they're not getting fed.
There is always another email or text, another person whose status we can check, another subject we can look up.
Run to the gym, go home and take care of the dogs, make dinner, do a load of laundry, sweep up the (never ending) dog hair, clean the kitchen, pack lunch for the next day, check emails, and before you know it.
It can even be set up to automatically email alarms and system checks.
Don't leave the room, don't check your work emails, don't strike up a conversation with your roommate.
Check the mail, emails, pour yourself a glass of wine, catch up on that show sitting in your Netflix Queue... the hour will be up in no time.
If you're okay with it, I'll email you once the post is up on Spoonful so you can check it out and share it with your friends!
So I'm having a weird problem — I come to your site every day after checking my email and some days the new post is not up yet.
Going through my emails and check out what my friends have been up to.
Be sure to check out some of the other recipes on my website and if you like them, sign up to receive new recipes by email.
I typically work out in the mornings and have to hurry myself getting ready and end up eating breakfast at work while checking my emails.
Check back at the beginning of every season for an updated article, or sign up to receive articles by email.
Check back at the beginning of every season, or sign up to receive articles by email.
A couple of simple steps that usually involve just adding your account to the phone and checking the sync box and your smartphone contacts, calendar, email, and more can be backed up in whatever cloud you choose so that even if your phone is run over by a bus you will never lose your data.
When I'm on the go I'm constantly using my smartphone and tablet to check my email, post to social media, participate in conference calls, and keep up with my schedule.
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