Since Ray Tomlinson sent the first digital message over ARPANETâthe early internet of the 1970sâemail has been a vital communication layer. It has also become our biggest headache.
And no wonderâanything that came before smartphones, the cloud, or collaborative workspaces would be in need of an overhaul. So it should not come as a surprise that building Notion Mail required stripping email down to the studs. We rebuilt it to be fluid, contextual, connected, and organized by AI. In other words, to fit how we actually work now.
To understand why this matters, we sat down with Notion Mailâs Andrew Milich and Jason Ginsberg to hear more about how they rebooted one of our most essential (and anxiety-inducing) tools.
What made you two want to rethink email?
Andrew Milich: Email has stood the test of time as the internetâs most important communication layer. Itâs a notification center for our lives, a history of our connections, and a way to reach out to anyoneâfrom cold-emailing a dream employer to writing to your favorite aunt.
Jason Ginsberg: But it also has a connotation of dread. Weâre being crushed by the weight of our inboxes, because every inbound message takes up an equal amount of real estateâfrom spam all the way to critical emails about taxes and the response from your aunt! The thought of parsing, prioritizing, replyingâitâs a chore.
How has our relationship with email has changed over the years?
JG: Email started as a simple messaging toolâa way to connect people. Over the years, itâs become a hub of our lives. And if youâre a founder or entrepreneur, itâs where you manage recruiting, sales, supportâyou name it. Itâs become a central place where we do our work.
Younger generations seem to use email lessâdoes it just need to be revitalized? Or is it dying?
JG: Jason: People have predicted the death of email for as long as it has been aroundânearly half a century now. But itâs still here because itâs simple and universal. You might be surprised to learn that 94 percent of Gen Z uses emailâincluding myself and Andrewâbecause itâs foundational to the internet. Itâs not dying at all! The products built on top of email just need to evolve.
People are creatures of familiarity. How do you push change in email without freaking people out?
JG: Before we get into that, I want to say that traditional email forces your work into a one-size-fits-all mold: That freaks me out.
AM: I agree! Many people are freaked out by their current inboxâso much so that theyâve stopped checking it. So many toggles, labels, and buttons have accumulated over the decades of emailâs existence, and itâs overwhelming.
JG: Weâre approaching Notion Mail in a couple of ways: When people sign in, we want them to see an inbox that is familiar, but feels more like Notion. At the same time, we designed Notion to be slightly opinionatedâpreferring labels to folders and not having nested labels, for exampleâwhich we believe can help. Writing emails is another example: Weâve updated Notion Mailâs editor to feel more modernâshortcuts for bullet points, slash commands, mentions, and so on.
AM: Weâre balancing the familiar inbox experience with product opinions that we deeply believe will help people take back control of their inbox.
Look ahead one year, five years, even ten. What does email look like? How do you think weâll collaborate with one another, be it work or personal?
JG: Todayâs email primarily involves communicating actions and managing information. I believe the future of email will be completely invertedâitâll focus on taking action and gathering information. This might lead to surprising changes, like people subscribing to more emails rather than fewerâbecause it will provide them with a richer information landscape.
AM: With Notion Mail, I actually want more emails.
I believe the future of email will be completely invertedâitâll focus on taking action and gathering information.

Jason Ginsberg
Youâve seen others who have tried to reinvent email. Why didnât they hit the mark, and does that have any influence over what youâre doing?
JG: Many products havenât truly reinvented email. Instead, they simply make you faster at the old way. Sure, you can manually triage an endless list in half the time. But if the list is never-ending, speed doesnât really matter. What we truly need is a new wayâone that moves us forward instead of merely accelerating our struggle to stay afloat. We hope that Notion Mail accomplishes that.
What were the biggest surprises or learnings as you built out Notion Mail over the last year?
AM: One of the biggest learnings for us in the journey was how we think about integrating AI in email. We were initially excited around how AIâs power, combined with your Notion context, could give you the most advanced drafting capabilities or even a full auto-response.
However, both from past experience building email products and early user research, we found that these workflows were magical for power users but inaccessible for the majority, who need far more help with email organization than email drafting. On a given day, as many as 80-90 percent of email users may just want to read emails in a given account.
So, we built and rebuilt Auto Labeling. It adapts to your inbox by providing personalized suggestions (for example, âdoctors appointments,â âyour trip to Las Vegas,â or âcustomer support requests about email signaturesâ).
Auto Labeling inverts how labeling traditionally works in email. In the past, creating a label adds a taxâmore time and effort spent to apply it and organized for all future emails. Instead, weâll have AI apply the labels for you, based on a few emails you confirm are correct to label.
Notion Mail is a big moment for the company. Tell us what youâre most excited about for this launch and whatâs to come.
JG: Iâm most excited for people to experience it! Our users truly shape our products and the way we think. Ultimately they are the ones that will tell us whatâs to come.
Want to try Notion Mail out? Head to notion.com/mail
