


For folks who tend to get a lot of emails on Mondays or Fridays and would prefer to deal with them throughout the week, snooze is ideal. Yes, that means an email you snooze will simply pop back up in your inbox when you want it to, as though it's a fresh email.

"When you try to snooze an email, Gmail gives you the option to resurface it later in the day, tomorrow, later this week, on the weekend or next week," TechCrunch explained.
GMAIL SNOOZE UPDATE
But when the update arrives in your account, you'll also see a snooze option. According to TechCrunch, now when you hover over an email (without clicking into it!), you'll see the usual bevy of options, including archive, delete, and mark as read. Either that, or you let emails you mean to reply to pile up in your inbox, and then inbox zero becomes but a distant memory. If you have a high-traffic email account, you probably already make use of Gmail's labeling and sorting features, and you probably have a "get to it later" folder for all the emails you mean to reply to. Snooze is, to put it completely non-dramatically, a freaking godsend for people who have busy inboxes. So, here's the lowdown on the Gmail snooze feature and what exactly you'll be able to do with it once the rollout hits your account. Google is officially rolling out its Gmail overhaul today, bringing users a dramatic revamp of the email client's look, along with new features, including confidential mode, which will allow users to send "self-destructing" emails, and a snooze feature, which didn't get quite as much press back when details about the overhaul began to emerge.
