Question
How do I practice batch processing?
Quick Answer
For one full workday, restrict your inbox processing to three fixed windows: morning, midday, and late afternoon. Set a phone timer for each window. Between windows, close your email client entirely — not minimized, closed. At the end of the day, note two things: (1) how many items actually.
The most direct way to practice batch processing is through a focused exercise: For one full workday, restrict your inbox processing to three fixed windows: morning, midday, and late afternoon. Set a phone timer for each window. Between windows, close your email client entirely — not minimized, closed. At the end of the day, note two things: (1) how many items actually required a faster response than your batch schedule allowed, and (2) how your focus felt during the gaps between windows.
Common pitfall: Treating batch processing as a rigid ideology instead of a default mode. Some roles genuinely require real-time responsiveness — emergency medicine, live operations, customer-facing support during incidents. The failure is not adapting batch processing to your context; it is never questioning whether continuous processing is actually required or simply habitual.
This practice connects to Phase 3 (Capture Systems) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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