Forwarding a nice one received
From: O P Khanna, Bangaluru


Email Mistakes That Irritate Smart
People<http://brooksreview.net/2010/07/email-mistakes-that-irratate-smart-people/>

There are a lot of ways to send an email and given that it is a tool that
many of us spend a large chunk of our day using

I thought I would share some of the annoying things I come across when
reading email.
 1. Reply All

This is one of those buttons that we like to hit so that everyone is kept in
the ‘loop’, the problem is not everyone needs

to be kept in the loop, nor do they want to be. It is fine to hit reply all,
but be sure to edit the list of people that you are replying

to so only those needed in the conversation stay in the email chain. If you
are even in doubt about when to use reply all, don’t use it.

Better to forward an email to someone later on then to waste 50 peoples time
reading email that they don’t care about.
 2. The “I CC’d You” Emails

Let me tell you about the CC field, it is used to keep people in the loop
that need to be kept in the loop. What it is not for

is to be used as a way to show me that you are doing your job, or to ask me
to do something. When I get an email that

I have been CC’d in and somewhere in that message there is a task you want
me to do – 90% of the time I miss that task.

The reason is simple:I don’t read emails I am CC’d in past the subject line.
If you want me to respond or act on an email you send me,

make sure I am in the ‘TO’ field.
 3. Look at a JPG of My Company Logo

It is really awesome that you figured out how to embed your company logo in
your email signature, but I know who you are

and what your company logo looks like. I still hate it. Don’t waste
bandwidth sending me email attachments of your logo.

Further it really screws me over when I go to look for emails that you sent
me a file in – every email you send me has a damned

attachment. Don’t even get me started about downloading that crap over
AT&T’s sucktastic data service when I read your emails

on my iPhone.
 4. Yes I Have Your Contact Info, Thanks

Raise your hand if you just have one email signature that you use on all
your emails – now drop your hand really fast on your head.

We all have those fancy email signatures that include our contact info and
maybe even a vCard
1<http://brooksreview.net/2010/07/email-mistakes-that-irratate-smart-people/#footnote_0_1616>,
they definitely say our name and title.

These are great for people who don’t know you, but when you are
corresponding with other people in your office and regular contacts –

your first name will suffice.

Think of it like a phone call, if it is someone, who when you call, you need
to introduce your full name and company to, then use

the big fancy email signature. However if just saying your first name on
that call will do the trick, use that same etiquette for email.

I have my email set to default to the signature: “-Ben”. If I need the other
longer signature I can switch to it, otherwise the short and

sweet one works best.
 5. Stop With the Cryptic Subject

Think of your subject line like a title of a book – would you buy a book
called “RE: Report”. Nope. We need to tell people what

the email is about in the subject line, so that they know if they need to
open it now or not. For instance instead of saying “Report”

as your subject how about put the actual subject in – “Please Review My TPS
Report” – oh snap now I know whether to read that

now or later.
 6. Sending Large Files

Most people I suspect never look at the file size that they are sending to
people, they just know that if it bounces back

they can’t send it as is. I would ask that if your email is over 3mb please
send me a file link so that I can download it faster.

There are a ton of services out there that do this, many that are so fast
and easy you will be amazed. Sending and downloading

large files over email is not what the protocols were designed for, and they
are agonizingly slow – help yourself out and use a

service like Droplr, file sharing, etc.
 7. Capitalization

If you send me an email in all caps I will assume you are yelling at me and
take my damn sweet time responding. Likewise if you

send me an email in all lowercase I will assume that you couldn’t care less
about the email you sent; resulting in me taking my

damn sweet time responding. Typos and grammar problems abound, but we all
know how to properly capitalize an email, so don’t

be lazy.
 8. Keep It Short

It is really great that you like details, but I don’t have time for them.
Tell me what I need to know and what you need from me.

Don’t waste my time asking about the weather or how business is going. Being
concise in emails can often lead to people thinking

that you don’t have the time for them – I am not talking about one line
email responses (ala Steve Jobs), just say what you need to

say in a clear and concise manner. This helps people better understand you
and makes you look smart.
 9. Legal Notices and Printing Notices

Drop the legal notice, it is just dumb amd makes you look paranoid. Drop the
“be kind to the environment and don’t print this email”

notices because it is just rude. You wouldn’t walk up to someone at Kinkos
and ask them if they are sure they need those copies.

If I need to print the email I will, otherwise assume it is filed away on my
computer never to be revisited.
 10. Spamming people with dumb jokes that they might not appreciate

This is the biggest email irritation. I hate it when people I don't send
email jokes to, keep sending me email jokes that they think

are 'relevant' to me. If I send you regular emails including jokes, I have
that kind of relationship with you and it is fine to respond

accordingly. If not, it would be smart to take a hint and stop bothering me
- smart people don't care for the hidden messages

and crude jokes under business-like headings. Understand your audience and
mark them in accordingly.





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http://www.cheenu-goodmorning.blogspot.com/

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