| Email etiquette tips
As a Webmaster, online business owner or even as a part of your
normal job, email is a vital line of communication with your
visitors, clients and associates.
Your approach to email communications can mean the difference
between your web sites' success or failure. Every email you send
should be considered as an exercising in marketing.
As your site grows, be prepared for the influx of email. It will
take up hours of your time, but the benefits of dealing with
enquiries courteously and efficiently are great.
As the pace of email flow picks up, you'll probably also notice
that the level of spam will also increase. How many legitimate
emails have you accidentally deleted by confusing them with spam?
Now think of the other end of the equation - are people perhaps
deleting your emails thinking that they are the same?
How do you like to be addressed when people write to you? Do you
address the people you write to with the same level of respect and
courtesy?
The following tips can help you in honing your email
communications skills:
- Remember that whatever you send can be forwarded to others,
so anything you do send can easily become public knowledge. An
email disclaimer can give you low level protection against this
occurring, but it won't stop it.
- The forging of email addresses by spammers and viruses is
becoming increasingly prevalent. You should not necessarily
assume that a message is valid.
- Be careful with viewing attachments, as this is a popular
means of transmitting computer viruses. If you have a virus
scanner installed, right clicking on the attachment should
present a menu option to scan the item. If this option does not
exist, save the attachment to the hard drive and scan it from
within the anti-virus program before opening it. Switch off the
preview window in your mail application as many viruses can
execute if this function is left on.
- Respect the copyright on material that you reproduce. Cite
all references, quotes and sources used. Plagiarism applies to
e-mail messages as much as other documents.
- Do not give another person access to your e-mail account as
you will be held responsible for anything they may transmit.
- If you are forwarding a message you've received, do not
change the wording. If you are replying to a message, only quote
the relevant parts of the original message (i.e. enough to put
your reply in context). Do not include the whole message.
- E-mail lacks the advantages of body language and intonation,
which are present in face-to-face communications. Take care with
sarcasm and humor. You may inadvertently put the wrong message
across.
- If you know the persons' name - use it. Launching straight
into the subject of the email can be perceived as being
arrogant. The common practice of not using some sort of opening
salutation is also quite rude e.g. just "Fred" instead of "Hello
Fred" or "Dear Fred". Your mother was right; good manners cost
nothing, so use them ;).
- Remember that once a message is sent, it cannot be recalled,
so take care with responding in the "heat of the moment". If you
are angry when typing an email, it can be placed in the drafts
folder for later review.
- Use mixed case. UPPER CASE LETTERS ALONE ARE CONSIDERED
"SHOUTING". Use upper case only for emphasis.
- Email messages should have a subject line which is to the
point regarding the message contents. The practice of leaving
the subject line blank is especially annoying to those people
who receive large quantities of email as they often prioritize
according to subject.
- Tagging an email message using the "High Importance"
features available in some email programs should never be done
unless the message is really urgent. Some people mark all their
messages with this tag thinking that it will get attention. It
does the first couple of times, but then their messages are
generally ignored or deleted.
- If you include a signature keep it short - no longer than
4-5 lines. Always ensure that your name is included in your
subject line - people want to know who is communicating with
them, not just sigs like "Customer Support Team" or equivalent.
If you are that worried about your privacy, then you shouldn't
be online. At least include your first name, it's just basic
courtesy.
- When sending attached files such as spreadsheets or word
processed documents, use a version which is likely to be
supported by the recipient. Save Word files in the Word 6.0/95
format and Excel files in the Excel 5.0 format, unless you know
the software application the recipient is using supports your
file formats. Many people still use dialup Internet access and
may have bandwidth caps, so it's considered good manners to ask
for permission before sending large attachments. Your 5 megabyte
funny picture may clog the persons' mailbox and prevent other
more important messages from being retrieved before it is
downloaded.
- When sending emails to multiple names, ensure that
distribution lists are used responsibly in that the message is
sent only to the necessary people. Sending a large attachment to
100 addresses unnecessarily could cause problems with your mail
server.
- When sending email to multiple addresses, and the people on
the list do not know each other, respect their privacy by
putting the list of names in the Bcc (Blind carbon copy) field.
This ensures that each person receiving the email will only see
their name and not the whole list.
- Read and respond to your e-mail regularly. The immediacy of
e-mail is lost if it sits unnoticed in your mailbox for long
periods.
- Delete unwanted messages on a daily basis from your mailbox
. This will also help prevent important emails being deleted
accidentally.
- Save your important messages to a special folder to keep a
record - emails are legal documents.
- Using specialized stationary may look great to you, but it
can be a real pain in the neck to others with increased download
times and compatibility issues. The safest bet for general email
communications is still to use plain text messages.
- Just because someone appears arrogant in a communication to
you, it doesn't mean that you should reflect the tone. Always
maintain a professional approach - it may be that the person
writing to you is not overly familiar with the English language,
has general literacy problems or is just having a *really* bad
day. A friendly note back can often change their entire
attitude. Even if the person continues to be unreasonable, you
can terminate ongoing communications in a professional way.
Human communications are such a fragile thing; one word can
make the difference between getting your message across or
destroying a relationship.
I feel that the anonymity of email has led to a general gradual
degradation of the quality of content and tone of communication in
recent years. We may be communicating more, but what is it that we
are communicating?
Further learning resources
Email marketing ethics and spam reporting:
Web site and email disclaimers:
Spam complaints - web masters; be cautious!:
Michael Bloch
Taming the Beast
http://www.tamingthebeast.net
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