Top Ten Rules of E-Mail Etiquette
What happened to the professionally written business letter? For that matter, what happened to grammar and proper usage?
With the advent of hand held electronic devices and text messaging, we have somehow allowed ourselves to fall into the trap of “everything for the sake of speed and convenience.” So what happens now? Do we shorten our speech so that we speak in abbreviated words and abbreviated sentences?
I thought this might be a good time to reaffirm some of the basic rules with the focus on writing and responding to e-mails.
To begin with a summary … Treat e-mails the same as a business letter. Include a short greeting [hi], even if the message has been going back and forth for several rounds. Remind employees that, while it is fine to use emotional icons in their personal e-mails, these are far too cute to be included in business e-mails.
I am starting with my own pet-peeve:
Read before sending and fix your mistakes.
Ignore the mistakes of others.
Do not e-mail when angry or upset.
Take ten and breathe. Remember, perception is subjective. What you perceive may not be what the sender intended. Calm down before responding to a message that offends you.
What you send cannot be taken pack, so wait and then be polite. Avoid accusations and using abusive language. Words such as: please, sorry, and thank you project a positive and productive image.
Expect your message to go public.
Send request in time.
Respond immediately or make a note to respond soon.
Be Brief.
If the message must be long, start with requests and guide lines.
Write a good subject line.
Type like you would a letter.
E-mails can be difficult to read. Use short paragraphs and always put blank lines between paragraphs. Avoid all capital letters [SHOUT], emotional icons [♥️], unique abbreviations [lol], and excessive punctuation [!!!!]. Yes, I am guilty here too.
When should we not use e-mail?
Either make a phone call or visit in person to talk when:
- Emotions are high
- The message is delicate
- Too many misunderstanding are occurring.