SaneBox

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
SaneBox
Type of business
Private
Founded2010 (beta)
HeadquartersBoston, Massachusetts, and Venice, California, U.S.
Key peopleStuart Roseman, Founder & CEO
ServicesEmail management software
URLwww.sanebox.com
Content license
Subscription

SaneBox is an email management

IMAP
and Exchange Web Services (EWS) email accounts. Its primary function is to filter email messages that it deems unimportant into a folder for later processing.

History

SaneBox is a self-funded company with locations in Boston, Massachusetts, and Venice, California. It was founded by Stuart Roseman in 2010 in response to articles written by Bijan Sabet, Fred Wilson (financier) and Michael Arrington.[1] As an entrepreneur, Roseman previously founded and sold other companies, including Gamesville and Gamelogic.[2] In 2012, SaneBox announced SaneBox for Business in a shift toward becoming more business-to-business focused.[3]

Operation

SaneBox integrates with a user’s email server and analyzes past email usage in order to infer what emails are important. Messages deemed important remain in the inbox, while those deemed unimportant are filtered into a different folder for later reference.

EverNote, Google Drive
and IBM SmartCloud.

References

  1. ^ Orlin, Jon. "Taming Email Overload With SaneBox". TechCrunch.
  2. ^ Hand, Randall. "New Boston company offers to visualize your data". VizWorld.
  3. ^ "SaneBox Now Has A Solution For The Enterprise Email Overload Crisis". TechCrunch.
  4. ^ Smith, Kevin. "This Is By Far The Easiest Way To Fix Email Overload". Business Insider.
  5. ^ Duffy, Jill. "Get Organized: SaneBox's Dmitri Leonov on Email Management". PC Magazine.
  6. ^ Rosenbaum, Steven. "A Marketer's Worst Nightmare: The Black Hole". Forbes.
  7. ^ Carney, Michael. "SaneBox Offers Solution to Email Overload". Pando.
  8. ^ Brian, Matt. "Filter-based email tool SaneBox adds Dropbox support to host your attachments in the cloud". The Next Web.

[1]

  1. ^ James (2023-02-02). "Top 5 SaneBox alternatives - Tried and tested". Mailbutler. Retrieved 2024-02-06.