5 Essential Email Etiquette Habits: Write Smart Email

I’ve been writing a lot about Time Management and The 7 Habits of Hight ly Effective People lately. But, based on a few email I’ve recently received I had the idea to share 5 Essential Email Etiquette Habits: How To Write Smart Email.Essential Email Etiquette Habits

1. Care About The Reputation You Are Building

Seriously – every time you hit send you are only seconds away from making a personal and professional impression. Every Single Time! So, what impression do you want?

        • Respectful, professional, on-point, knowledgeable… or
        • Bossy, wastes my time, long-winded, confusing?

You choose – but the next 4 Essential Email Etiquette Habits will help you write smart email and will help you stay in the respectful, professional, on-point and knowledgeable space.

2. Use The Email Subject Line Wisely

Two weeks ago someone sent me an email message about Time Management training. The subject line was ‘Today.’  I have no clue what the connection is for this subject line… but there it was. I’m sure it will only take you a few seconds to scan through your own Inbox to find other confusing subject line examples you’ve received.

Be smart with your subject line because people use the subject line AND your reputation to prioritize your email… and decide if they should read your email now – later – or not at all.

3. Be Brief But Write Clear Email. Get To The Point

You certainly want your email messages short – but you also want your email to be meaningful.

I recently received the following message ‘Hi – Please tell me more about your training and how much it will cost.’

I love to have prospect clients make inquiries, but I’m happy to offer numerous corporate training workshops that help clients with employee development and increase customer satisfaction. The challenge is that it is impossible to know if this person wants a lunch-in-learn, full day course or perhaps brainstorming facilitation.

If you are spending more than a few minutes writing the email message and you are having challenges getting to the point and being clear, it’s a good sign you should pick up the phone.

4. Don’t Send Email You Wrote In A Meeting or When Walking

Firstly, writing an email during a meeting is rude unless you have permission to send an email that’s relevant to the meeting. If you have a creative idea in a meeting, write it on a piece of paper – that way it looks like you are taking notes relevant to the meeting.

Walking and writing is dangerous – especially at intersections… or if you are also trying to enjoy a coffee.

You are distracted when you are in a meeting or walking, therefore, email you write during a meeting or when you’ve been walking are often full of spelling and grammar mistakes. They also likely have incomplete thoughts – not clearly describing what you need to tell – or what your question is.

Any way you look at it – writing an email when you’re in a meeting or walking and then sending the email is an easy way to damage your reputation.

5. Re-Read: Be Sure You’ve Used These Essential Email Etiquette Habits

Re-read your [brief] email for poor grammar, spelling mistakes and the use of the wrong word. Spell check doesn’t correct the wrong work… I mean word. See what I mean?

Re-read your email from the other persons point of view.  What do they know / not know? Have you given them all the information they need? Do they know all of the acronyms you’ve used?

6. BONUS:  Say Hello

Starting your email with hello or good morning reduces that chance that you’ll sound bossy or angry.  This clearly improves your personal and professional reputation. So, unless you are emailing the same person 20 or more times each day, go ahead – make someone’s day.  Say hello.

Happy communicating.

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Bruce Mayhew Consulting facilitates courses including Email Etiquette, Managing Difficult Conversations, Multigenerational Training, Time Management and Mindfulness.

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About Bruce Mayhew
Bruce Mayhew is a Leadership Coach, Keynote Speaker and Corporate Trainer who builds strong client and co-worker relationships that give clients a competitive advantage. Our training and development programs include: ■Generational Differences ■Effective Business Email Writing ■Email Etiquette ■Phone Etiquette ■Behaviour Event Interviewing (BEI) ■Mindfulness ■Using Linkedin to Build Client Relationships ■Objective Setting Made Easy