This document discusses email etiquette guidelines for business communication. It recommends determining the purpose and format of the email, using proper etiquette, and following guidelines like completeness, clarity, accuracy, conciseness and courtesy. It also discusses how to use the To, Cc, and Bcc fields appropriately and keeping emails concise without excessive punctuation or abbreviations. Finally, it notes that email should be treated like a formal business letter and netiquette helps show courtesy for the recipient.
2. Determine appropriate format Establish the basic purpose of the e-mail Conduct research (if necessary) Use appropriate ethics and etiquette Planning and Writing an Email
3. Email is such an important communication tool, you must adhere to certain guidelines. Completeness Clarity Accurateness Promptness Conciseness Courteousness Positivism
4. T0, Cc, and Bcc The addresses in the 'To' are for the people you are directly addressing. The addresses in the 'Cc' are for the people you are indirectly addressing. The addresses in the 'Bcc' are like 'Cc' except that the addresses in 'To' and 'Cc' do not know that the addresses in the 'Bcc' are included in the conversation.
5. E-Mail Length and Punctuation Don't Be A Novelist Messages should be concise and to the point. Avoid long lengthy messages. Too Much Punctuation Don't get caught up in grammar and punctuation, especially excessive punctuation. Use punctuation and grammar sparingly.
6. Do not use Abbreviations or Smilies. Abbreviations Smiles
7. E-mail a blessing and a curse. E-mail is a conversation that does not require an immediate response (like a telephone). You send a message and then wait for a response. Too many users assume that the minute someone receives an e-mail it, the person will read it.
8. Netiquette is the rules of etiquette that apply when communicating over computer networks, especially the internet. In order to write effective e-mails, business professionals should always look at e-mail in the same regard that they look at sending a typical business letter. An estimated 147 million people across the country use E-mail daily! E-mail Etiquette is showing courtesy for the person on the other side. Summary
9. References Works Cited Fulton-Calkins, P., & Stulz, K. M. (2009). Procedures & Theory for Administrative Professionals, 6E. Mason: South-Western Cengage Learning. www.iwillfollow.com. (1997). www.netmanners.com. (2011).
Editor's Notes
Answer all questions, and pre-empt further questions. An email reply must answer all questions, and pre-empt further questions – If you do not answer all the questions in the original email, you will receive further e-mails regarding the unanswered questions, which will not only waste your time and your customer’s time but also cause considerable frustration. Moreover, if you are able to pre-empt relevant questions, your customer will be grateful and impressed with your efficient and thoughtful customer service. Imagine for instance that a customer sends you an email asking which credit cards you accept. Instead of just listing the credit card types, you can guess that their next question will be about how they can order, so you also include some order information and a URL to your order page. Customers will definitely appreciate this.
A company needs to implement etiquette rules for the following three reasons:Professionalism: by using proper email language your company will convey a professional image.Efficiency: emails that get to the point are much more effective than poorly worded emails.Protection from liability: employee awareness of email risks will protect your company from costly law suits.
1. They are the FYI-ers or CYA-ers. Don't over do it here. Copy only those who need to be copied; not your entire universe of contacts.2. The 'To' and 'Cc' addresses are blind to the 'Bcc' addresses. As you can imagine, use of the 'Bcc' is somewhat unethical and therefore its use is discouraged.
Think of it as a telephone conversation, except you are typing instead of speaking. Nobody has ever won a Pulitzer Prize for a telephone conversation nor will they win one for an e-mail message.2. You'll see lots of e-mail messages where people put a dozen exclamation points at the end of a sentence for added emphasis. Big deal. Exclamation points (called "bangs" in computer circles) are just another form of ending a sentence.If something is important it should be reflected in your text, not in your punctuation.
Abbreviation usage is quite rampant with e-mail.In the quest to save keystrokes, users have traded clarity for confusion (unless you understand the abbreviations). I would recommend that you use abbreviations that are already common to the English language, such as 'FYI' and 'BTW'. Beyond that, you run the risk of confusing your recipient. Smilies are simple strings of characters that are interspersed in the e-mail text to convey the writer's emotions (cues).Part of the nature of a good one-on-one conversation is the use of visual cues. How important are facial expressions and body gestures to a conversation? A simple eye movement can mean the difference between "yes" and "YES". What about auditory cues? The results are the same. Since there are no visual or auditory cues with e-mail, users have come up with something called "smilies". They are typically found at the end of sentences and will usually refer back to the prior statement.
Blessing1. The response may come in five minutes or the response may come in five days. Either way it's not an interactive conversation.2. If a hundred people send you e-mail in one day, so what? You didn't have to talk with all one hundred. Just think of all the hellos, good-byes and other unnecessary chit-chat you avoided. With e-mail you only deal with their messages (which usually omit hellos, good-byes and such) and you deal with them on your own time. That's the blessing.For the curse.1.Notifications will notify you when a person has received your e-mail and may also notify you when the person has read it (really all it can do is assume you that the person has looked at the first screen of the message -- it has no way to know if the person has read the message word for word). Referring back to the example in the last paragraph, you could check to see who has checked their e-mail before the meeting and then telephone those who have not read it.If you schedule a meeting for an hour from now and send an e-mail to each attendee, the chance that all the attendee's will read that message within the hour will be pretty small. On the other hand, if you schedule the meeting for the next day, the chance that they will read the message will be pretty high. Remember, e-mail is not designed for immediacy (that's why you have a telephone), it's designed for convenience.
E-mail etiquetteThis means that before you e-mail them for information or with questions, that you’ve done your best to get your answers on your own.