Summary: This document offers 10 tips to help you
write effective professional e-mails. E-mail etiquette
asks you to put your reader's needs first, especially when
you want the other person to do something (review a
submission, extend a deadline, waive a fee) for you.
Some
professionals get scores of e-mails a day. Follow these tips
in order to give your recipients the information they need
in order to act on your message sooner rather than later.
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Write
a meaningful subject line.
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Keep the message focused and readable.
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Avoid attachments.
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Identify
yourself clearly.
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Be kind -- don't
flame.
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Proofread.
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Don't assume
privacy.
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Distinguish between formal and informal situations.
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Respond Promptly.
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Show Respect and Restraint.
Recipients scan the subject line in order to decide
whether to open, forward, file, or trash a message. Remember
-- your message is not the only one in your recipient's
mailbox. Before you hit "send," take a moment to write a
subject line that accurately describes the content.
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Subject: [Blank] |
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If
you don't put a subject line on your e-mail, you are
sending the message that your name in the "From" line is
all your recipient should need in order to make it a top
priority. That could come across as arrogant, or at the
very least, thoughtless. Take advantage of the
opportunity to get your recipient thinking about your
message even before opening it. |
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Subject: "Important! Read Immediately!!" |
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What is important to you may not be important to your
reader. Rather than brashly announcing that the secret
contents of your message are important, write an
informative headline that actually communicates at least
the core of what you feel is so important: "Emergency:
All Cars in the Lower Lot Will Be Towed in 1 Hour." |
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Subject: "Quick question." |
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If
the question is quick, why not just ask it in the
subject line? This subject line is hardly useful. |
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Subject: "Follow-up about Friday" |
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Fractionally better -- provided that the recipient
remembers why a follow-up was necessary. |
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Subject: "That file you requested." |
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If
you're confident your recipient will recognize your
e-mail address, and really is expecting a file from you,
then this would be fine. But keep in mind that many
e-mail providers get scads of virus-laden spam with
vague titles like this. The more specific you are, the
more likely your recipient's spam-blocker will let your
message through. |
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Subject: "10 confirmed for Friday... will we need a
larger room?" |
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Upon reading this revised, informative subject line, the
recipient immediately starts thinking about the size of
the room, not about whether it will be worth it to open
the e-mail. |
Often recipients only read partway through a long message,
hit "reply" as soon as they have something to contribute,
and forget to keep reading. This is part of human nature.
If
your e-mail contains multiple messages that are only
loosely related, in order to avoid the risk that your
reader will reply only to the first item that grabs his or
her fancy, you could number your points to ensure
they are all read (adding an introductory line that states
how many parts there are to the message). If the points are
substantial enough, split them up into separate messages
so your recipient can delete, respond, file, or forward
each item individually.
Keep
your message readable.
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Use standard capitalization and spelling,
especially when your message asks your recipient to do
work for you.
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If
you are a teenager, writing a quick gushing "thx 4 ur
help 2day ur gr8" may make a busy professional smile at
your gratitude.
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But
there comes a time when the sweetness of the gesture
isn't enough. u want ur prof r ur boss 2 think u cant
spl? LOL ;-)
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Skip lines between paragraphs.
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Avoid fancy typefaces. Don't depend upon bold font
or large size to add nuances. Many people's e-mail readers
only display plain text. In a pinch, use asterisks to show
*emphasis*.
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Use standard capitalization. All-caps comes across
as shouting, and no caps invokes the image of a lazy
teenager. Regardless of your intention, people will
respond accordingly.
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To:
All 1000 Employees
From: Eager Edgar
Subject: A helpful book everyone should read
--------
Hello, everyone. I've attached a PDF that I think you'll
all find very useful. This is the third time I sent it
the file -- the version I sent yesterday had a typo on
page 207, so I've sent the whole thing again. Since some
of you noted that the large file size makes it a bit
awkward, I've also attached each chapter as a separate
document. Let me know what you think!
Attachments:
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Big Honking File.pdf (356MB)
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BHF Cover.pdf (25MB)
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BHF Chapter 1.pdf (35MB)
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BHF Chapter 2.pdf (27MB)
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[... ]
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Okay, raise your hands... how many of us would delete
the above message immediately, without looking at *any*
of those attachments?
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To:
Bessie Professional
From: Morris Ponsybil
Subject: E-mail tips -- a subject for an office
workshop?
--------
Bessie, I came across a book that has lots of tips on
streamlining professional communications. Has anyone
volunteered to present at the office workshop next
month? Let me know if you'd like me to run a little
seminar (2o minutes?) on using e-mail effectively.
Below, I'll paste the table of contents from the book.
Let me know if you want me send you the whole thing as a
PDF.
Table of Contents
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Write a meaningful subject line.
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Keep the message focused and readable.
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Avoid attachments.
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[...]
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E-mail works best when you just copy and paste
the most relevant text into the body of the
e-mail. Try to reduce the number of steps your recipient
will need to take in order to act on your message.
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If
your recipient actually needs to view the full file in order
to edit or archive it, then of course sending an attachment
is appropriate.
In
general, attachments
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take time to download (and check for viruses)
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take up needless space on your recipient's computer, and
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don't always translate correctly for people who read their
e-mail on portable devices.
When
contacting someone cold, always include your name,
occupation, and any other important identification
information in the first few sentences.
If
you are following up on a face-to-face contact, you might
appear too timid if you assume your recipient doesn't
remember you; but you can drop casual hints to jog their
memory: "I enjoyed talking with you about PDAs in the
elevator the other day."
Every fall, I get e-mails from "bad_boy2315@yahoo.com" or
"FuZzYkItTy2000@hotmail.com" who ask a question about
"class" and don't sign their real names.
While formal phrases such as "Dear Professor Sneedlewood"
and "Sincerely Yours," are unnecessary in e-mail, when
contacting someone outside your own organization, you should
write a signature line that includes your full name and at
least a link to a blog or online profile page (something
that does not require your recipient to log in first).
Think before you click "Send."
If
you find yourself writing in anger, save a draft, go get a
cup of coffee, and imagine that tomorrow morning someone has
taped your e-mail outside your door. Would your associates
and friends be shocked by your language or attitude?
Or
would they be impressed by how you kept your cool, how you
ignored the bait when your correspondent stooped to personal
attacks, and how you carefully explained your position (or
admitted your error, or asked for a reconsideration, etc.).
Don't pour gasoline on a fire without carefully weighing the
consequences. Will you have to work with this person for the
rest of the semester? Do you want a copy of your bitter
screed to surface years from now, when you want a letter of
recommendation or you're up for promotion?
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@!$% &*@!! &(*! |
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Go
ahead... write it, revise it, liven it up with
traditional Lebanese curses, print it out, throw darts
on it, and scribble on it with crayon. Do whatever you
need in order to get it out of your system. Just
don't hit "Send" while you're still angry.
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From: Clair Haddad
To: Ann O. Ying
Subject: Re: Ongoing Problems with Project
I'm
not sure how to respond, since at the meeting last week
you told Sue that you didn't need any extra training, so
I cancelled Wednesday's workshop. I can CC Sue in on
this thread if you like, since she's the one who will
have to approve the budget if we reschedule it.
Meanwhile, I can loan you my copies of the manual, or we
can look into shifting the work to someone else. Let me
know what you'd like me to do next.
---Original Message --
From: Ann O. Ying
I tried all morning to get in touch with you. Couldn't
you find a few minutes in between meetings to check your
messages? I'm having a rough time on this project, and
I'm sorry if this is last-minute, but I've never done
this before and I think the least you could do is take
some time to explain it again.
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If
your recipient has just lambasted you with an angry
message, rather than reply with a point-by-point
rebuttal, you can always respond with a brief note like
this, which
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casually invokes the name of someone the angry
correspondent is likely to respect (in order to
diffuse any personal antagonism that may otherwise
have developed) and
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refocuses the conversation on solutions (in this
conversation, Ann has already dug herself into a hole,
and Clair has nothing to gain by joining her there)
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If
you are asking someone else to do work for you, take the
time to make your message look professional.
While your spell checker won't catch every mistake, at the
very least it will catch a few typos. If you are sending a
message that will be read by someone higher up on the chain
of command (a superior or professor, for instance), or if
you're about to mass-mail dozens or thousands of people,
take an extra minute or two before you hit "send". Show a
draft to a close associate, in order to see whether it
actually makes sense.
Unless you are Donald Trump, praise in public, and
criticize in private. Don't send anything over e-mail
that you wouldn't want posted -- with your name attached --
in the break room.
E-mail is not secure. Just as random pedestrians could
easily reach into your mailbox and intercept the envelopes
that you send and receive through the post office, a curious
hacker, a malicious criminal, or the FBI can easily
intercept your e-mail. In some companies, the e-mail
administrator has the ability to read any and all e-mail
messages (and may fire you if you write anything
inappropriate).
When
you are writing to a friend or a close colleague, it is OK
to use "smilies" :-) , abbreviations (IIRC for "if I recall
correctly", LOL for "laughing out loud," etc.) and
nonstandard punctuation and spelling (like that found in
instant messaging or chat rooms). These linguistic shortcuts
are generally signs of friendly intimacy, like sharing cold
pizza with a family friend. If you tried to share that same
cold pizza with a first date, or a visiting dignitary, you
would give off the impression that you did not really care
about the meeting. By the same token, don't use informal
language when your reader expects a more formal approach.
Always know the situation, and write accordingly.
If
you want to appear professional and courteous, make yourself
available to your online correspondents. Even if your reply
is, "Sorry, I'm too busy to help you now," at least your
correspondent won't be waiting in vain for your reply.
Many
a flame war has been started by someone who hit "reply all"
instead of "reply."
While most people know that e-mail is not private, it is
good form to ask the sender before forwarding a personal
message. If someone e-mails you a request, it is perfectly
acceptable to forward the request to a person who can help
-- but forwarding a message in order to ridicule the sender
is tacky.
Use
BCC instead of CC when sending sensitive information to
large groups. (For example, a professor sending a bulk
message to students who are in danger of failing, or an
employer telling unsuccessful applicants that a position is
no longer open.) The name of everyone in the CC list goes
out with the message, but the names of people on the BCC
list ("blind carbon copy") are hidden. Put your own name in
the "To" box if your mail editor doesn't like the blank
space.
Be
tolerant of other people's etiquette blunders. If you think
you've been insulted, quote the line back to your sender and
add a neutral comment such as, "I'm not sure how to
interpret this... could you elaborate?"