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One-Touch to Inbox Zero

An email management workflow that combines the GTD (Getting Things Done) methodology with Inbox Zero principles. Emphasizes making decisive decisions about emails upon first opening them, touching each message only once to immediately delete, delegate, do, defer, or archive.

Last updated: 2026-03-18 07:42

Overview

The One-Touch to Inbox Zero approach is an email productivity method that combines David Allen's Getting Things Done (GTD) principles with Merlin Mann's Inbox Zero philosophy. The core principle is to make a decisive decision about each email the first time you open it, without re-reading or re-processing messages multiple times.

The Touch-It-Once Principle

The Touch-It-Once productivity hack means that once you open a conversation you decide right away what to do with it, don't postpone and come back to it, touching it once and moving on to the next thing. The key is to set up a workflow that allows for One-Touch—making a decisive decision about what needs to be done about each email, WITHOUT ACTUALLY DOING IT, and then immediately sending each email to an appropriate place where it will be dealt with at the right time.

The Five Actions

  1. Delete - Remove irrelevant or junk mail immediately
  2. Delegate - Forward to the appropriate person who can handle it
  3. Do - If it takes less than 2 minutes, complete it now (GTD two-minute rule)
  4. Defer - Schedule time to handle it later by adding to task list or calendar
  5. Archive - Move handled emails out of inbox for reference

Connection to Getting Things Done

David Allen's Getting Things Done (GTD) method emphasizes capturing, clarifying, and organizing tasks and commitments. Inbox Zero serves as a natural complement to GTD, functioning as a tool for processing and clarifying email-related tasks and actions. Getting to inbox zero for email means applying the two-minute rule as processing the inbox, with everything else sent to an action list.

Benefits

Implementation Tips

Schedule dedicated email processing sessions rather than constantly checking email. During processing, move through messages rapidly making one-touch decisions. Use folders, labels, or task management systems to route deferred actions. The goal is not to immediately complete all work, but to make all processing decisions once.

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