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Inbox Heroes: 10 Startups Tackling Email Overload

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By Adrianne Jeffries 10/12/11 7:00am

Mayor Bloomberg Makes His First Trip to NY Tech Meetup, Announces New Tech Council

  • Gmail Priority Inbox (Mountain View)
    Start The Slideshow

    Around December 1964, researchers at the MIT Computation Center sent a memo to the programming staff. “A new command should be written to allow a user to send a private message to another user which may be delivered at the receiver’s convenience,” the note read. Flash forward 45 years, and our inboxes are flooded. Expedia has a 24-hour travel deal. The New Yorkerwould like you to renew your subscription. Your friend is writing with tears in her eyes that she’s in Paris and has been robbed and would you please send money. Facebook wants you to know that someone liked something you wrote a week ago. Your cousin sent the extended family a link to a video of an a cappella group rapping about Hanukkah.

    Email! There is now so much of it, and more is being created all the time. It’s always open in a tab; it’s on our phones. Fortunately, VCs are having the same problem–and they’re throwing money at it. Check out these 10 startups trying to fix email.

     

  • Back Forward Shortmail (Baltimore)

    Shortmail (Baltimore)

    Create an email address at Shortmail, and the startup will reject any incoming messages that are more than 500 characters with a friendly message asking the sender to edit it down. You can use Shortmail with Gmail, but the startup says most users prefer to keep a separate, short inbox in addition to their regular email practice. Outbound messages append a user-customizable signature, letting recipients know they should reply in 500 characters or fewer.

  • Back Forward Boomerang (Mountain View)

    Boomerang (Mountain View)

    New York techies love Boomerang, the Gmail and Outlook extension from Baydin, the startup that also makes the Email Game, an email client that uses game mechanics to assist with email workflow. Boomerang helps with email management by allowing users to schedule emails to send later, regulating when all the replies-to-replies come in, or disappear emails from the inbox and have them reappear a day later or at a specific time.

  • Back Forward AwayFind (San Francisco)

    AwayFind (San Francisco)

    "The typical knowledge worker loses 1/3 of their day to email interruptions," AwayFind says. The startup monitors the inbox for urgent messages based on user-created filters, and automatically forwards them to you via SMS or your iPhone/Android so you can safely walk away from the inbox. The startup also offers users an AwayFind contact form so a determined sender can guarantee that a message gets marked urgent.

  • Back Forward OtherInbox (Austin)

    OtherInbox (Austin)

    Another startup from the second-inbox camp: OtherInbox de-clutters your email by automatically organizing messages from online shopping and social networking sites, in theory creating two inboxes: one for people, one for robots. OtherInbox also organizes shipping information, payment reminders, and upcoming sales and places them on your calendar as painlessly as possible.

  • Back Forward Kwaga (Paris)

    Kwaga (Paris)

    Kwaga is rolling out a series of email tools based around its patented semantic technology that automatically detects and extracts key information like dates and contact information from inside email text. Kwaga also has an A.P.I. for its natural language processing technology. The startup's first application is called WriteThat.Name, an automagic updater for your address book that extracts contact information from emails.

  • Back Forward Producteev (New York City)

    Producteev (New York City)

    There is an entire category of email startups addressing the email problem by making it easy to convert emails into tasks (Y Combinator's TaskForce, Mark Hurst's Good Todo and Google Tasks are other examples of this strategy). But Producteev's email-to-task feature is just one part of a full productivity management suite, intended for students, startups, and single workers to manage a complicated to-do list. Even though the Producteev interface looks a little too much like another inbox, the integration with Gmail, Google Calendar and mobile and the optimization for different use cases makes for a promising effort.

  • Back Forward Micromobs (Mountain View)

    Micromobs (Mountain View)

    The agony of group conversations is one of the most consistent gripes about email. "Reply all" and "cc" or "bcc" can turn a conversation into an endless thread of comments that everybody probably doesn't need to read, y'know? Micromobs creates a Facebook-esque interface for group emails and other text-based asynchronous group conversations. Micromobs lets you forward a threaded email to mobthis@micromobs.com, which creates a microbmob for that conversation and invites all the parties for you. Ideally, your colleagues will join the Micromob and leave your inbox be. Of course, it has the unfortunate side effect of creating, basically, another inbox.

  • Back Forward SaneBox (Boston)

    SaneBox (Boston)

    From the Priority Inbox camp comes SaneBox, which integrates with all major mail clients. SaneBox has five levels of importance for emails and sends all the unimportant ones to the "SaneLater" folder to be checked at the user's leisure. But--and this part sounds awful to us--the startup sends users a daily SaneLater digest "so you never have to leave your inbox."

  • Back Forward ZeroMail (Sydney)

    ZeroMail (Sydney)

    ZeroMail is a minimalist email client that uses social media profiles to contextualize your inbox. An automagic virtual assistant builds personalized filters, checks the spam folder for real mail, and unsubscribes from newsletters. Like OtherInbox, ZeroMail hopes to separate the human emails from the robot emails, segregating automated messages, social networks and mailing lists from personalized email. It also emphasizes the need to translate emails into tasks, with a built-in to do list. ZeroMail also allows you to "snooze" emails or flag an email to expect a response within five days, features reminiscent of some of the popular email plug-ins like Boomerang.

  • Back Forward Unsubscribe.com (Santa Monica)

    Unsubscribe.com (Santa Monica)

    What it sounds like! The unsubscribe button is seamlessly integrated with major email client. If unwanted senders continue to pester you, Unsubscribe asks that you file a complaint so the startup can go after the offender. Unsubscribe is free--the startup rather cleverly makes its dough off things like its certification process, through which it bestows seals of approval for privacy protection and "responsible marketing."

  • Back Gmail Priority Inbox (Mountain View)

    Gmail Priority Inbox (Mountain View)

    It's not technically a startup, but Google rolled out its own solution to email overload in July 2010. Many emailers are still afraid to try Priority Inbox. Letting a robot decide which emails are important? Terrifying, especially when you realize Gmail inexplicably tossed an important email from a friend into spam three weeks ago. But Priority Inbox is imminently customizable depending on how much you want to trust it, and it gets better with time as it watches what you read, open and delete. It displays as many of the "unimportant" messages in your inbox as you want--it just places them below the "important" line and doesn't count them in the number of unread messages.

Comments

  1. Allen MacCannell says:
    October 11, 2011 at 6:07 pm

    I only see two products mentioned. Please keep in mind EmailTray, at http://www.emailtray.com, which produces a smart email client with 4 Inboxes where email is sorted by priority.

  2. Dr. Jacob says:
    October 17, 2011 at 12:23 am

    Some of these services are really useful.  One that is missing from this list though is Mermailer at http://www.mermailer.com.  It tackles the “clutter I sign up for” problem pretty effectively.  I’ve found it quite useful. 

  3. Dr. Jacob says:
    October 17, 2011 at 12:23 am

    Some of these services are really useful.  One that is missing from this list though is Mermailer at http://www.mermailer.com.  It tackles the “clutter I sign up for” problem pretty effectively.  I’ve found it quite useful. 

  4. Canadanelsons says:
    October 18, 2011 at 4:13 am

    Smart Labels (gmail labs)  is the most useful thing I have used.  It leaves “important” stuff in the inbox – but I check the “All Mail” labels because my inbox is so empty….

  5. Ruth says:
    October 19, 2011 at 2:12 am

    Also worth checking out unifiedinbox.com – bringing messages from different streams (email and social) together in one easily managed inbox.

    1. Toby Ruckert says:
      October 20, 2011 at 5:58 am

      Thanks Ruth for mentioning us – happy to provide you with an invite any time.

  6. Cooper Marcus says:
    December 2, 2011 at 7:26 pm

    Howsabout http://wishery.com/ ? We help you get through your email faster by letting you access frequently-needed info and actions from your other business apps from inside your email client.

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