Why email is killing your company

  • Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

Author:  Colin Iles

Short Description

Is email is killing your company your primary method for communicating with your colleagues? Then you have picked up a dangerous habit that is killing your company. Here’s why. 1. Email exacerbates knowledge hoarding What is your companies most important asset? Knowledge! It might not be booked to the balance sheet but your value is […]

Is email is killing your company your primary method for communicating with your colleagues?

Then you have picked up a dangerous habit that is killing your company.

Here’s why.

1. Email exacerbates knowledge hoarding
What is your companies most important asset?

Knowledge!

It might not be booked to the balance sheet but your value is inextricably tied to the ‘accessible knowledge’ you and your colleagues hold now and create in the future.

So it must stand to reason that the more knowledge you share, the more valuable your company becomes?

And just as companies power-up from knowledge sharing, individuals will power-up at your companies expense, from knowledge hoarding.

Interestingly, whether personal hoarding is driven wilfully or incidentally doesn’t matter.

Sharing information via Email guarantees that it will only be accessible for short periods of time to a limited number of people.

2. Email cultivates machiavellian environments
A Machiavellian culture would be one where individuals attempt to ‘win’ through deception, scheming, and other unscrupulous behaviours.

It’s not the case that email usage always leads to unwanted cultures. But email is the perfect tool for those with machiavellian intent.

There are many senior executives who have climbed to positions of power because they skilfully used email to manipulate others.

Why email is killing your company

3. Email proliferates opacity
The more opaque an organisation is, the less likely it is to succeed.

Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater Associates, has clearly demonstrated the benefits of radical transparency in everything from removing unconscious bias in decision-making to building confidence across individuals and teams.

Email’s capacity to reduce transparency is boundless.

4. Email etiquette is too antiquated for an exponential world
Email was revolutionary when it was introduced, but sadly many of the rituals from the days of letting writing were needlessly carried over.

So emails must be written in a certain style to conform.  Pleasantries must be extended. Paragraphs must be formed.  Sentences must be conjugated correctly.  To’s and Cc’s need to be considered.  The list of expected do’s and don’ts is endless.

Put together this simply wastes significant time for all.

Worse still, you cannot easily bypass these customs as it would be deemed rude and likely bring scrutiny from the ‘values’ police.

5. Email conversations delays decision-making
Send email.

Wait.

Wait some more.

Follow up email.

Wait.

Receive a response.

Now you have no time to respond.

Write a response

Wait…..

Email is a perfect system to prolongate conversations from minutes to weeks.

6. Emails exacerbate the levels of hyperbolic discounting
Hyperbolic discounting occurs when you choose smaller, immediate rewards rather than larger, later ones.

Email platforms provide the perfect environment for this cognitive bias to manifest and proliferate.

For example, the desire to clear your inbox can be overwhelming.  Hours are wasted deleting, archiving, tagging and filing.  In the worst cases, you reply to emails, which didn’t even deserve to be read.

These lost hours, become years of wasted labour efforts when multiplied across the workforce.

7. Emails increase stress levels
Managing emails in a corporate environment is stressful at every level.

Why didn’t my boss respond?

Did the “CAPS” response mean my colleague is angry?

I’m worried I might have offended someone with my last email.

Perhaps I shouldn’t have included Bob in my last response?

I didn’t understand the last email. Everyone else probably did and I now feel stupid.

I don’t know whether email is the number one stress inducer within a corporate environment, but I’d hypothesised it’s got to be there or thereabout

8. Email normalises and magnifies dysfunctional behaviours
Email has created a communication system as powerful and complex as any social, political, legal, religious, criminal, educational or monetary equivalent.

And like all such systems, it works because of viral network effects that induce individuals to conform with the many.

The downside is that individuals start to wilfully ignore the dysfunctional aspects and become naturally resistive to embracing change.

The ubiquitous and habitual nature of email elevates these negative aspects exponentially.

So while email remains the prevalent workhorse within your company, the opportunities provided from using more productive systems are foregone.

How do you break the email habit?
Well, it’s not easy but it is doable.

I’ll be sharing a few ideas in the coming weeks, so make sure you sign up to my mailer so as not to miss it.

p.s. Remember: The only thing necessary for the triumph of ’email’ is that good people do nothing!

Contact Us at WeSpeak Global and follow us on Twitter

The articles, video and images embedded on these pages are from various speakers and talent.

These remain the property of its owner and are not affiliated with or endorsed by WeSpeak Global.

Similar to Why email is killing your company

WS Logo 512

This has been a year like no other in Defying the odds. It has no doubt tested every ounce of our faith, our resilience and our belief in the future in owning your life. Some of us have already reached our tipping point whilst others are hanging on by a sheer tread. I acknowledge all […]

  • Author: Nimee Dhuloo
WS Logo 512

Not all exercises are created equal. My grandfather, or gramps as we affectionately called him was a disciplined exercise man. It wasn’t so much the amount of exercise he did but rather the 100% commitment with which he did it. He never missed a day unless he was ill and flat on his back. Every […]

  • Author: Niki Seberini
Juli Shulem

We are all spending a lot of time inside our homes. How much do you REALLY need? For those whose homes are a disorganized clutter zone, this could be stressful and result in more anxiety than isolating already brings to the table. If you are constantly tripping over stuff on the floor, and having to […]

  • Author: Juli Shulem

As businesses around the world adjust to the realities of Your Guide to Remote Selling in an Online World, sales and marketing, however, still need to bring in the leads, nurture the client’s relationships and close the deals. The workplace will never look the same again, and as businesses establish Remote Selling working practices, we […]

  • Author: Shelley Walters

No doubting Lock-down has been a challenging time for almost all South Africans as We can travel again… Perhaps less so for government officials, seen attending funerals puffing cigarettes, and others who have been on full salary, but for most of us a very difficult time. The President’s announcement of easing restrictions to Level 2 from […]

  • Author: Rob Caskie
Nancy Rademaker

Before the pandemic, we saw a clear Qubit mindset trend in evolving away from binary thinking and extending our thinking to the endless possibilities between 1 and 0. Gender identity no longer has to correspond with the one ‘given’ at birth. Business profit could go hand in hand with improved human and societal justice. Embracing […]

  • Author: Nancy Rademaker
WS Logo 512

On this day that has been set aside to honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., it’s important to note that Dr. King’s words still ring true today, It Really Boils Down to This. The power of truth does not decay with the passing of time. Dr. King’s message is proof that you […]

  • Author: Ron Garan
Gerd Leonhard

“Technology is exponential but humans are not and can do great things, but it does not WANT to do great things – it does not want anything” says Apple’s CEO Tim Cook (a quote I have often used in my talks). Technology is a tool not a purpose – see my ‘carpenter and the hammer example’ (video).   “Both […]

  • Author: Gerd Leonhard

© All rights reserved 2024. Created using VOXEL THEME

1902 Wright Place, Carlsbad, CA, 92008