Is your assistant snooping in your inbox? I’ve definitely wondered about that before.
During the course of a typical week, I often need an assistant from my team to find information in my email account.
Until now, I’ve had two options:
For example, I’ll ask the assistant to make a purchase from Amazon for me. To do that, the assistant needs to log in to my Amazon account, but they don’t have the username and password. So the assistant has a “password reset” request sent.
How do I get that password reset link back to the assistant?
I have to send it to the assistant myself (again, takes up time) or share my password and give the assistant access to my inbox. I’m just not comfortable with that option. I use one main email address for work as well as for personal matters. Giving someone unfettered access to my inbox just makes me nervous.
I came up with the general idea last spring and started working up a solution.
I have become an expert in the Gmail API from building my other product, GMass, so I built a prototype using .NET and the Gmail API on the backend, and HTML and JavaScript on the front-end.
I built this as a standard web app, a departure from my recent app type of choice, Chrome extensions.
After a couple of months, SearchMyEmail.com was born!
The basic idea: it lets anyone (with permission) search your Gmail account so that you’ll know exactly what they search.
Here’s me explaining SearchMyEmail.com
Here’s how it works:
The goal is to provide a way for your assistant to work more efficiently, and you won’t be left wondering whether anyone is snooping in your inbox.