Creating User-friendly e-mail




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Summary: 10 tips to ensure your e-mail messages get read.



Creating User-Friendly Email

For some people email is a blessing. It is now easier than

ever to communicate with counterparts all over the world at

the speed of light. You can collaborate on projects,

review memos, and send updates all in the stroke of a few

keys. For other people email is a horrible curse. As if

the paper tiger on your desk wasn't bad enough, many people

are drowning in hundreds of emails a day, all urgent, all

needing your immediate action. Here are 10 tips to make

sure the emails you send don't add to your recipient’s list

of headaches

1. Greet the recipient in the beginning of your message

and thank them at the end. This will set the tone of your

message. If you were to walk over to someone's cube, the

first thing out of your mouth would not be "Is the report

ready?" More than likely, you would say something like "Hi

Bill. Do you have that report ready?" Show the same courtesy

when you're sending a message.

2. Make the subject line of your message meaningful. The

average manager receives dozens of emails everyday. Make

the subject of your email as meaningful as possible so the

recipient will know if they need to open right away or if it

can wait until after lunch.

3. Mark your message urgent only if it is urgent. We live

in such a fast paced society; it feels like everything is

urgent. But if every email in your box was marked as urgent

how would you know what was really urgent? The last thing

you want is to be labeled as a person who marks all of their

messages as urgent (ever heard of the little boy who cried

wolf:). There are 2 things you can do if you are concerned

about your message being read in a timely basis.

a. If your email service as this capability, place a

return receipt on your message. This way you will

be notified when you letter is open.

b. Write in the subject when you need a response by.

This will help set expectations with your recipient.

Example: West Lake Report: Please Review by 1/27

4. If you have an attachment included in your email,

mention it during the message. This will ensure that your

recipient knows there is an attachment and they should

contact you if they didn't get it.

5. State the purpose of your email in the first couple of

sentences. When people open email, there is only one

thought going through their minds "Do I have to read this

now?" Answer that question for your recipient as early in

the message as possible.

6. Use bullets or numbering in your messages to make them

easier to read. Reading from a computer screen can be

difficult on the eyes. Make this task easier for your

recipient by making ample use of white space. Avoid long,

dense paragraphs.

7. Be wary of the formatting features you use (like bolds,

colors, and underlines), especially if you are sending the

message to someone outside of your company. Many email systems strip messages down to

plain text. If you've sent

a message with a lot of fancy formatting in it, your

recipient may end up with gibberish.

8. Highlight the specific action you want the recipient

to take at the end of your message. Few things are more

frustrating than reading a long email message only to get

to the end and not be clear on what the sender wants from

you.

9. Read your message out loud before you hit the send

button. Keep the tone of your message professional while

at the same time adding bits and pieces of your personality.

Given that deleted emails are never really deleted, never

put something in an email message that you would not want to

see on the Local News. Also, never say anything in an email

message that you would not say to the recipient's face. You

should not hide behind an email to deliver a difficult

message. Pick up the phone.

10. When all else fails, pick up the phone. If you find

yourself exchanging email with a person 3 or 4 times in

order to clear up a single issue, the time had come to pick

up the phone. Email is supposed to make communicating

easier, not more frustrating. It is amazing how a 10-minute

call can clear up the confusion that a 3-page email created.

Bonus Tip

If you have a short message to send, put it in the subject

line, this will completely eliminate the need for the

recipient to open the email.

Example 1: Reminder: Status reports due by 5:00 pm (EOM)

Here EOM means End of Message. Be sure you communicate

that abbreviation to your team before you start using it.

This format is ideal for quick reminders.

Example 2:

MARY // Thanks for the report. It was perfect! // SUE

In this example, the subject line contains the greeting, the

message, and the closing. It is self-contained and its

obvious to the receiver that your total message is in the

subject. This format is great for sending people a quick

Thank You note.



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© Copyright 2002 All Rights Reserved. Myrtis Smith is a

personal coach. Her mission is to help people create their

preferred future and have fun doing it. Sign up for her

free newsletter Change Now! at www.premeditatedlife.com
.......because life doesn't just happen!

About the Author

Myrtis Smith is a

personal coach. Her mission is to help people create their

preferred future and have fun doing it. Sign up for her

free newsletter Change Now! at www.premeditatedlife.com
.......because life doesn't just happen!