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email:archive:planning

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Planning to archive e-mail

Planning the procedure to archive your e-mail is important. In some cases, it will be very difficult to change the organization after the fact.

Information we will need

In order to begin this process, we will need the following information. In the case of usernames and passwords, please do not send that via e-mail. Call our technicians and give the information to them verbally.

  • Information on your active e-mail account.
    • username
    • password
    • server which processes your e-mail
  • Information on your archive e-mail account (existing, or one we create for you)
    • username
    • password
    • server which processes your e-mail
  • Definition of “Old”, ie how old is an e-mail to be archived. See “Define “Old” below
  • Structure for your archives. This can be any combination of year, month and original location of mail. See “Determine Structure” below.
  • Any folders not to be processed. See “What to Archive” below.
  • Whether to clean up empty folders after processing. See “Empty Folders” below for a description and warning if you decide to request this. It is not done by default.

Define "Old"

Archiving is for messages that are old, and require an extra step to locate. However, “Old” is a very personal definition.

If you are someone who receives few messages each year, “Old” may be defined as one or more years. If you are someone who works a lot of intensive projects that are completed within a couple of months, you may decide that six months, or even three, is old enough to move messages into archives.

Note: the archiving procedure does not modify your original (active) e-mail account by default. However, if you choose to, it can be set to automatically delete any folders which are empty. It is recommended that you do not do this under normal circumstances, especially if you have rules in place to automatically sort messages into folders, but it is an option if you need it. For example, if you normally create special sub-folders which are unique to projects, and you never use those folders for anything else, we can configure your account to delete empty sub-folders.

Determine Structure

While you can simply mimic the structure you currently have, in a few years your folders in the archives may be large enough to make it difficult to search for a particular message you need to retrieve. As stated in the Archiving E-mail Overview document, limiting any folder to 1000 messages will greatly enhance the speed of finding a message. Remembering that archives will be adding new messages to folders for years, it is likely best to use sub-folders based on the year they were sent/received. The archival process can even go so far as to create subfolders under the year to further categorize by month, if you need.

Store by year and month

The simplest structure stores the messages based on the year and month they were received. This has the advantages that all messages from all folders, including the Sent folder, are stored together.

If you have a lot of mail, and you can remember what year, or even the year and range of months, this is often the best way to store your archives. You are guaranteed that the original message and its replies are stored fairly close together.

Finding an old message in January 2024, for example, you would simply open the 2024 folder, then the 01, and all messages sent or received during that period would be listed. Searching for a particular set of messages would be very fast.

If, however, you were not sure when it was, but you do know it was in 2024, you could simply search on the 2024 folder and tell your client to also look into any sub-folders.

Adding the original folder

If you organize your mail, it may be better to use a combination of your structure and the year (or year/month) for storing your archives. This can allow you to keep your logical structure, but still have the advantage of smaller folders based on year or year/month.

Original, sorted by year and month

In this case, your basic structure remains unchanged. You have the folder structure you are used to, but in your “normal” folders, there are new folders based on the year and month they were sent or received. See the sample on the left.

This can be handy if you already have a definite structure you are used to. Note that the Year (and Month, if chosen) sub-folders are only created when there is something to put in them, so, for example, if ClientA did not have any correspondence in March of 2024, no 03 folder would be created. Also note that the Sent folder will be on its own, so messages sent to ClientA will be in the Sent folder, not the ClientA folder unless you do this on your active account.

Year/Month, then Original

Another way to do it is to keep the primary folders based on year (and possibly month), then have your original structure under that. See the sample on the right.

While we have had few requests for this, it may be useful in some circumstances. Again, the folder is only created when there is something to put in there. If there were no messages from friends in 2024/01, that folder would not be created.

What to Process

We need to know what to process. By default, the Trash, Draft and Junk folders on your active account are ignored. If there are other folders that should not be processed, let us know.

Empty Folders

We normally do not perform any actions on your active e-mail account other than removing messages after they have been successfully moved to your archive e-mail account. We do have the ability to also see which folders on your active account are emptied by the archival process, and clean up by removing them.

This is dangerous. If you have active rules in your e-mail client, we can remove an “unused” folder that a rule points to, and new messages will not be moved into that folder

If you decide to do this, determine if any folders should never be removed. By default, INBOX, Trash, Junk, Drafts and Sent are never removed, but you can define additional folders which you must manually remove if needed.

email/archive/planning.1756856003.txt.gz · Last modified: by rodolico