Google Priority Inbox
I just tried the Priority Inbox and I love it. I tell all my clients to abandon Outlook and to get Gmail. But you know old habits are hard to get rid off, anyway it will happen sooner or later.
Welcome to Priority Inbox! By automatically separating out your most important messages, Priority Inbox makes it easy for you to read and respond to the messages that matter.
Get through your email faster
![]() |
Try reading and replying to the messages in the “Important and Unread” section first. Mark anything that requires follow-up with a star, then go through the “Everything Else” section. If you leave Priority Inbox, you can return to it by clicking the link next to Inbox on the side navigation of Gmail.
How it worksGmail’s servers look at several types of information to identify the email that’s important to you, including who you email and chat with most, how often you email with these people, and which keywords appear frequently in the emails you read. |
Train Priority Inbox
If Priority Inbox makes a mistake, you can use the
buttons to correctly mark a conversation as important or not important, and Priority Inbox will quickly learn what you care about most.

And more…
- Customize Priority Inbox: You can change what type of email you see in each section (like switching the “Important and Unread” section to just “Important”). Just click on the section headers or visit the Priority Inbox tab under Settings to customize.
- Use filters to guarantee importance: If you want to be absolutely sure that some messages are always marked as important (like email from your boss), you can set up a filter and choose “Always mark it as important.”
- Search by importance: If you want to see all the messages that have been marked as important, both read and unread, do a Gmail search for “is:important.”
- Switching back to your old inbox: If Priority Inbox isn’t for you, you can easily switch back to your normal inbox by clicking “Inbox” on the left or hide Priority Inbox altogether from Gmail Settings.
Keyword Research Tool: Google Wonder Wheel
By GWW | June 16, 2009
The wheel shaped like tool, with the simple aim of simplifying and arranging search results, is gaining popularity among users worldwide (where available) and reached 1 million google wonder wheels.
The wheel was first introduced publicly in May and became a favorable feature to many due to the layout and result display which basically get the work done for the user as far as relevant and related search results go. The fact that it’s a pre defined mind mapper which helps the user get all the related search results in a wheel shaped like display (similar to mind mapping softwares which are commonly used by many), gave users another reason to use it in addition to the features already provided by search engine giant Google.
There’s no doubt that the Google Wonder Wheel is here to stay.
Thanks to everyone who used it.
GWW



Youtube
Facebook
Twitter
GooglePlus