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Productivity501

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    You are here: Home / Productivity / Don’t try to Catch a Pizza Thief using Email

    Don’t try to Catch a Pizza Thief using Email

    By Mark Shead 4 Comments

    Pizza
    Like most technological advances, email can help productivity, but it
    can also hurt it.  It takes intentional effort to reap the benefits of
    advances without suffering from their negative side effects. Easy communication is good when you have something that needs to be communicated.  Easy communication is bad when it means you are saying things that just waste everyone’s time.

    I ran across an article titled “Efficiency Experts” that talked about how Joe Phelps (CEO of the Phelps Group Inc.) explained proper use of email to his staff using a recent example of an employee who had used email to try to track down who stole his piece of pizza.

    With technology revolutionizing office
    communications, Phelps stresses the need to tap the right tool for the
    right task. “There are three ways to communicate now within our
    organization: E-mail, voice mail, and face mail,” he explains. “Each
    one has a different bandwidth. When you walk into my workstation,
    interrupt me, and give me a little schedule change, you’ve used the
    wrong medium. E-mail me with that. You don’t need a lot of bandwidth.
    On the other hand, if you try to handle an emotionally charged subject
    with E-mail, you’re using the wrong medium, too.”

    But that’s not to say that just because a
    matter is small, it is necessarily fodder for E-mail. Phelps recently
    explained this to his staff, using a case of purloined pizza to
    illustrate the point.

    The Phelps Group is small enough that anyone
    can push a button and send an E-mail to everyone. One employee recently
    did just that, asking, “Who took my slice of pizza?” from the group
    refrigerator. Armed with a perfect teaching tool, Phelps ran through a
    bit of math at a company wide meeting. Assume–for mathematical
    simplicity–a billing rate of $60 an hour, or a buck a minute. Roughly
    50 employees. Say it took each a half minute to open the “pizza
    message,” read it, and put it in the trash. Twenty-five minutes at a
    dollar a minute–$25 to try to finger the pizza thief. Says Phelps:
    “Since we all share 40 percent of the profits, everyone quickly grasped
    what general E-mail distribution means.”

    (Inc Magazine 1997 Vol. 19 Issue 13, p38,)

    Originally published on November 13, 2005.

    Filed Under: Productivity Tagged With: email, Misc

    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. charles anderson says

      August 25, 2008 at 2:17 pm

      They grasped it, but they still do it.

      Reply
    2. aaron says

      August 26, 2008 at 11:50 am

      yea…but did the guy get his pizza back? I mean that’s a serious crime… Depending on the topping your taking bad stuff man.

      seriously, good illustration.

      Reply
    3. Mark Shead says

      August 27, 2008 at 7:41 pm

      @Aaron – Good question. I don’t think the pizza was recovered as it had already been eaten. :)

      Reply
    4. Patrick says

      October 9, 2008 at 3:02 pm

      Great post! I’ve often thought that there should be an “email budget” and once you’ve expended your budget, your email gets cut off. That would reduce the “reply-to-all” or all company blasts…

      Reply

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