Join more than 30,000 students globally who have successfully rebooted their inbox to zero using Email Ninja.
FOR TEAMS
YELLOW BELT
$87 AUD PP
WHEN PURCHASING 20-50 LICENCES
PURPLE BELT
$77 AUD PP
WHEN PURCHASING 51 - 150 LICENCES
BLACK BELT
$67 AUD PP
WHEN PURCHASING 151 - 500 LICENCES
To purchase 1-19 licences, see our Individual Pricing.
CONTACT US TO GET STARTED
BENEFITS TO ORGANISATIONS
FASTER REPLIES
Without an email management strategy people lose actions, miss deadlines and ignore email messages.
Inbox zero training can improve responsiveness and efficiency for employees.
â â â â â
Email Ninja saved my sanity. I went from stressing about missed emails and feeling out of control to having an empty inbox and clear actions. Itâs simple, itâs effective and itâs a game changer.
MARYANNE YOUNG
Legal Executive & General Counsel
TasNetworks
â â â â â
Our Senior Executive team called in the Email Ninja program which changed our world. This inbox zero program is well worth the investment and the before and after service was excellent. Try it!
SOME OF OUR CLIENTS
References
-
Taylor, H., Fieldman, G. and Altman, Y. (2008), E-mail at work: a cause for concern? The implications of the new communication technologies for health, wellbeing and productivity at work, Organisational Transformation and Social Change, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 159-73. Taylor et al (2008) find that 98% of business-to-business communication employs e-mail.
-
Shipley, D. and Schwalbe, W. (2008). SEND: Why people email so badly and how to do it better. Random House, New York, p.9.âBetween 2005 and 2010 the average quantity of email received per person doubled.â
-
Cain, M. (2006)Â âWho needs training on e-mail?â, Gartner Research, July, ID no. G00141290. âGartner estimate that knowledge workers spend one to two hours a day managing email.â Cited by Vidgen et al, 2011.
-
Davenport, T. (2005)Â Thinking for a Living, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA. â20 percent of an employeeâs eight hour day is spent working with e-mail.â Cited by Vidgen et al, 2011.
-
Gupta, A., Sharda, R., and Greve, R. (2010), âYouâve got mail! Does it really matter to process emails now or later?, Information System Frontiers, Vol 13, pp. 637-653. âEmail consumes as much as a quarter of knowledge workersâ time in organisations todayâ
-
Jackson, T., Burgess, A. and Edwards, J. (2006)Â âSimple approach to improving e-mail communicationâ, Communications of the ACM, Vol 49 No. 6, pp. 107-9. âJackson et al (2006) calculated the daily cost of e-mail use for the 2850 e-mail users of 3M (a large multinational) as 49k Euro per day and over 12.25m Euro per year. They estimate that e-mail training could save 3840 Euro per day / 921K Euro per annum, based on a minimum saving of 8 per cent on total cost of reading e-mail.â Cited by Vigden et al, 2011.
-
Gupta, A., Sharda, R., and Greve, R. (2010), âYouâve got mail! Does it really matter to process emails now or later?, Information System Frontiers, Vol 13, pp. 637-653. âDeveloping organisational wide policies to encourage users to check their emails on a scheduled basis rather than continuously could save an organisation thousands of hours each year.â
-
Gill, B (2013)Â E-Mail: Not Dead, Evolving, Harvard Business Review, June, p. 32. HBR 2014 (June) âIn a year workers spend, on average, the equivalent of 111 workdays dealing with e-mailâ (based on a 2012 survey of 2600 workers from across the U.S, UK and South Africa who use e-mail every day). âA 10% increase in efficiency would buy back more than two workweeks per year per employee.â
-
Hair, M., Renaud, K., and Ramsay, J (2007)Â The influence of self-esteem and locus of control of perceived email-related stress, Computers in Human Behaviour, Vol 23, Issue 6, pp. 2791-2803.âMore than one-third of workers suffer from âemail stressâ (Daily Telegraph, 2007), citing research that 34% of workers felt âstressedâ by the sheer number of emails and obligation to respond quickly and a further 28 % were âdrivenâ because they saw them as a source of pressure.â
-
Vidgen, R., Sims, J., Powell, P (2011)Â Understanding e-mail Overload, Journal of Communication Management, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 84-98. Citing research by Devonport (2005), Vidgen et al repo