Sending emails have rules of etiquette to guide the action.
These rules of etiquette are more or less guidelines that help avoid mistakes
and misunderstandings when sending emails (especially business emails). Here are 4 email etiquette rules most
people ignore.
Taking Another Look
Before Sending a Message
The rule basically goes along
the line of 'send once, look twice'. This is to avoid accidentally sending
embarrassing emails that you won't be able to take back, once it's been sent
out. Avoid sending emails the minute you are done drafting them; allow some
minutes of rest for every of your email messages after you're done drafting
them, then look over them once more just before you click send.
Additionally, if your email software has an unsend feature (for example, Gmail
has an unsend feature), you can enable the unsend feature to give you a couple
of minutes to undo your sending of a message, in the event of an error or
omission.
Cleaning Up Emails
Before Forwarding Them
Nobody likes to read
cumbersome emails, we all like it neat, brief and straight to the point. To
ensure that your emails are clean before forwarding them, make sure you remove
all addresses from the email before forwarding it (except the addresses are
essential to the email you are forwarding); clean up the unnecessary characters
and messed up lines from the email body (email cleanup utilities can help with
this); and clean up the subject of the email to suit what you desire or you can
leave it as is, if that is what is prefered.
Letting People Know
Their Emails Have Been Received
Email softwares are not
Whatsapp, where you can easily know when a message that you have sent has been
read by the recipient. It is, therefore, courteous for the recipient of a
message to send a reply back to the sender indicating that the message has been
received. This email can be referred to as an 'acknowledgment email'. Even if
you don't intend to reply the email yet, it is best to send an acknowledgment
email in the interim, pending when you will reply the email. In addition, to
avoid forgetting about replying the email once an acknowledgment email has been
sent, you can mark the email as unread and star it, so it will act as a kind of
reminder for you to attend to the email.
Keeping Emails Short
When drafting and sending
emails, some people forget that it's an email and proceed to draft and send
epistles. This should not be so. Long emails can be intimidating, and long
sequence of paragraphs with long run-on sentences can be cumbersome and
discouraging for many to read. Keep your emails as short as possible, and this
can be done by being brief and straight to the point with your messages. If you
think something longer will be appropriate, it is best to call the person and
have a phone discussion instead. You can later highlight the key points of your
discussion in an email and send to the person for confirmation.
Personal emails can be more
superfluous but business emails should typically be succinct. You can keep your
emails short by breaking your message into bullet points and ensuring each
point captures the essence or summary of any action you want taken. Also, be
sure to avoid treating many subjects within one mail, treat one subject per
mail and avoid lumping it all together.
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