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Okay, you are super
busy or you are down to your last email before heading home. Maybe it’s
first thing in the morning, you have a full in box to read and handle, all
before your meeting starts in 10 minutes. It’s easy to be in a rush and
dismiss the little things, however…
…have you ever thought
how your email looked from a receiver’s viewpoint? Of course you have,
every day, haven’t you? It is so easy in our fast-paced lives to let the
little things go.
When you receive a
poorly formatted email and you don’t know where each paragraph starts or
finishes -- the thoughts are scattered and jumbled -- here’s the reader’s
self chatter in action: “What the heck, it’ll take me hours to decipher
this. I don’t have time for this. Can’t X be respectful? I’ll just
pretend I didn’t get it and maybe their follow-up email will be clearer.”
Click and delete. Of course, you have never done this – chuckle.
By chance, your next
email receiver is nicer and doesn’t delete and pretend. They just move
onto the next email and leave yours for the “someday in the future”
stack. And maybe it will or will not ever be answered. Their response
may even miss your point entirely or only provide feedback to half of the
items that need addressing.
If you have difficulty
getting quick responses or any response at all, the receiver could be
sending you a silent message. They could feel that you are wasting their
time or do want to educate you on common email courtesies.
Recently, after
receiving ten emails in one day from separate independent professionals,
with their personal pronouns “i’s” in lower case besides other items. I
asked them to enlighten me about their lax protocols. I received a wave
of negative responses. In order to keep this a family-available article,
here are a few responses cleaned up: “i don’t have time, too many
emails.” A few others added, “i do it to everyone.” I particularly loved
the “to” in the last two emails – I do it “to” everyone.
A human resource
director client shared with me that every day she deletes ten or twelve
applications, about 12% of the total number she receives daily, that omit
common email courtesies. A majority come from individuals with higher
degrees. I chuckled at the irony. She didn’t and just heavily sighed.
She found it even more serious on the number of emails she received from
recruiters that also lacked these simple courtesies.
“Don’t Sweat The Small
Stuff” is a book I read a few years ago if I recall correctly. Normally I
wouldn’t care much about the small stuff either. However, coherent
communication, whether verbal or written, still represents who we are and
shows respect. Using history as an indicator, communication started and
stopped wars.
Recently, I attended a
speaking engagement with Michelle Singletary, author, “7 Money Mantras,”
and columnist, The Color of Money, for the Washington Post. In the
presentation, she mentioned several times, “You had better sweat the small
stuff.” Of course, her reference was to money. Yet, it was an important
point. It takes pennies to develop into dollars, dollars to add up to
ten, and so on up the monetary ladder. Doesn’t it hold true that if we
leave out the small common courtesies and respect in emails, will it not
block the dollars – directly or indirectly?
When thinking over the
given benefits for taking care of the “small stuff” in emails, here are
three powerful mantras:
* A professional
email attracts a professional response.
* When you respect other people’s time, they usually will respect
yours.
* When communication is thought through and clear, the chances increase
significantly that the response will be returned in the same manner.
Stinkin’ thinking attracts the same.
10 Simple Courtesies,
gathered from reading 2,000 emails, and feedback from the human resource
director:
- Focus on one topic
per email. Keep the email simple so the receiver can focus in fast and
easy. This improves the chance of a faster response, maybe any
response. If you write to someone regularly, ask what he or she
prefers.
- An appropriate
subject line will help reduce accidental deletion. It will also help
locate that specific email faster if needed. When forwarding or
responding, change the subject line to reflect your response. You can
also add your first name in the subject line as an added identifier. I
like to start mine with: “Personal note from Catherine” or follow after
the subject with: “From Catherine.” If you are dealing with deadlines
add: “Please respond by.”
- Keep each paragraph
to one thought even if the paragraph turns out to be one fragmented
sentence. You will want to limit email paragraphs to six sentences. A
natural way of reading from a computer screen is with a scan-read
process. Screen reading dries out the eyes and reduces blinking causing
eyestrain.
- Add subheader titles
into the email when more than three paragraphs are in the email or more
than three paragraphs follow the subheader. You can add subheaders as
you type or while rereading. This keeps the eyes moving fast and easy.
It also allows the mind to shift from topic to topic without developing
cobwebs.
- Re-read your email
no matter how long or short. We always think faster than our fingers
can type. Thus, what is typed isn’t always what was swarming around in
our mind.
- Does the subject
flow or was it choppy? Flow in an email isn’t the same as flow from one
chapter in a book to another. Flow allows the reader to easily
transition and comprehend the material. If choppy, the reader might
daydream or take a break and formulate a different answer that might not
fit the material, creating additional emails on your part to clarify.
Frequent places to check for flow in your material are where you start
or stop a message or submessage.
- Is there any type of
priority or order needed to follow so that the receiver follows along
with the material? Are there steps or information that build on the
previous message? Before you can pour a glass of milk you might want
buy the milk – chuckle. When we are extremely familiar with how to do
something, it’s easy to write past something, a common mishap by IT
experts. Do you know the receiver and their level of knowledge or
experience on the topic? My favorite saying is, “When in doubt, write
it out.”
- For goodness sake,
turn on the spell check feature on. If you want to write pronouns in
small letters, at least let spell check catch them for you.
- Who are you? You
would think that this one was common sense, at least I did. Yet, every
week I receive 10-15 emails asking me a general question without telling
me who they are or giving me some background. They are huge, open-ended
questions that would take me years to answer. This falls into the lack
of respect category.
- What do you need or
want? Forwarding an email that doesn’t ask for what you need makes the
receiver try to guess. Not cool. Speak up, don’t be shy. If you take
rejection personally, hire a life coach to work on this with you.
Statements don’t automatically ask anything. Questions do. My dad had
a saying, “Squeaky wheel gets the grease. If you can’t ask, squeak
somewhere else. I can’t guess what type of oil you need.” A little
harsh yet it makes its point. Go ahead and ask, and no this isn’t a
reflection on you.
We all believe we have good
communication skills. There could be some real surprises when you start
practicing these 10 Simple Courtesies. Take your time, slow down in order
to speed up. Tackle it slowly so that the lessons stick. You will be
glad you did. The next email you send might be to your next boss, client,
or forwarded to the President. You never know. It happened to me and it
could happen to you.(c) Copyright, Catherine
Franz. All rights reserved.
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