Email has become a standard and acceptable method of business communications.
Recruiters like myself use email to forward job searchers resumes to employers and we sometimes get job offers for candidates through email as well.
Email etiquette is often an ignored and forgotten part of sending emails and its too bad because your emails give the recipient of the message clues about your writing skills and your professionalism.
It is especially true if you are emailing a potential employer and send them an email that breaks a number of common sense email rules that could turn them off considering you for a job.
Here are some tips to keep your emails professional and ensure they get read:
2. Keep work emails professional.
3. Always open your email with an appropriate salutation such as Dear Joe or Hi Mary or something similar.
4. Remember to close the email with some sort of signature such as your first name if you know the person youre sending the email to. Consider using a signature with your full name and contact details for correspondence going outside your company.
5. Remember to consider the tone of your email. Written comments can be misinterpreted and can be open to interpretation in ways other than what you meant.
6. Try to keep emails as brief as possible. Try to get your point across quickly.
7. Dont type emails IN ALL CAPS!
8. Ensure attachments you send to other people do not contain viruses. Use an email virus scanner to prevent you sending or receiving email viruses.
9. Be careful with what emails you forward to other people. If you receive a sensitive or confidential email from someone else, dont assume you can forward it to other people.
10. Dont send emails when you are angry especially if you might regret it after clicking the Send button. Remember that emails give your recipient a hard copy of what youve written.
11. Remember to check your spelling and grammar. Just like you dont want to have typos in your resume, your emails should show evidence that you actually proofread your work before sending.
12. Dont mark your emails as urgent unless they are.
13. Learn how and when to use the CC and BCC features especially when sending an email to a large group of people.
14. Respond to emails in a timely fashion and dont make people wait for your reply.
Carl Mueller is an Internet entrepreneur and professional recruiter who wants to help you find your dream career.
Visit Carls website to separate yourself from other job searchers:
Sign up for The Effective Career Planner, Carls free 5-day course:
Please feel free to reprint this article in its entirety in your ezine or on your website but please dont change any of the content and ensure that you include the above bio that shows my website URLs.
The buzz word standards may cause an eyeball-rolling response, but without standards, we would have to buy specific media to work with our DVD, VCR and music player. Remember the software buying days, when you had to look for compatibility in terms of Mac versus Windows Imagine having to do that with Web pages. This Web page is for Macs only this one is for Windows. Thanks to W3.org, a body that sets recommendations for HyperText Markup Language (HTML) and other markup languages, we dont have that issue.
Some sites, however, do look better in Internet Explorer than in Mozilla or Firefox. Thats because such sites use an Internet Explorer-specific markup language that is not standard. Let me explain. Lets say the dreaded blink element is proprietary to Internet Explorer only (its not, but this is just an example). If an HTML page has it, and you try to view it in a browser other than Internet Explorer, nothing blinks on the page (not that we would want it to). This is a very simple example of what happens when a browser maker creates proprietary elements that works only with its browser.
Playing well with others
Creating proprietary markup code is much like DVD makers producing hardware that works only with a specific brand of DVDs. On one hand, it may encourage people to buy their DVD products. On the other hand, customers refuse to buy something that has such limits. Which would you rather have A customer buying your product because it works with everything, not just item A, or a customer not buying your product at all because it works only with item A, which is also your product
Thats the kind of thing were seeing with those popular single-cup brewers. I have a Home Caf, which I received so I could review the product. The instructions explicitly say to use only Folgers or Millstone pods with the machine because using other brands will damage it. Yet, if you look at pods from Coolbeans.com or Starbucks, companies that dont produce a machine, they are compatible with Home Caf and other brewers such as the Senseo and Melitta.
I dont like Folgers, period. So would Black and Decker rather me not buy its product because I dislike its partners pod brands, or buy it because I can use it with other standard pods Thats why standards play an important role. They benefit all companies.
Does this mean a company cant get creative Not at all. Home Caf, Melitta and Senseo look different. Two only brew one cup at a time while one can do two cups. The set up and usage are also different. The look and feel are distinctive. Ive heard comments from people who prefer one brewer over another. If all single pod brewers work with any pod brand, then we have a choice based on which best meets our needs, just like with the standard coffee machines. Some love their Bunn. Some love their Braun. Some love their Krups.
Cars are the same way. The distinctive features, look and style separate one car from the others. But most of them run on unleaded gasoline. Imagine if we still produced cars using leaded fuel.
Standards for newsletters
So what about newsletters Before sending this newsletter to you, we test it. Not in terms of beating it up and throwing it around like in the gorilla and suitcase commercials. Or running it into the wall with crash test dummies to test its safety.
Instead, we check for spammability as well as readability. How clean (or not) is the newsletter Will it pass through the filters Such a check looks at the fonts used, words and the markup code you dont see unless you do a view source.
Once while doing a test on a newsletter, we received a warning that it had shouting markup. Wow. Not only do we have people who shout by capitalizing their text in email messages or instant messages, but we also have markup that yells. And apparently, its a bad thing in terms of filters.
When I write about Web design, I encourage using XHTML markup standards with CSS for layout. XHTML requires all markup uses lower case, as in But were talking about a newsletters ability to make it pass the filter, not about clean markup code. A newsletter checker shouldnt care about the markup language. It should focus on the content. Yet, we get a warning that shouting markup, the use of upper case in the tags, is a bad thing and sends the email to the junk bin. Words that do not pass go Who decides the standards for declaring content as junk or legit The bad guys keep changing their content to make it pass through the filters while the good guys fail. This article could send the newsletter to the junk folder because I use the word spam. Guess what The real spammers wouldnt use that word because they arent going to admit their content is spam. Another bad word is free. Its understandable. But its also legit. For instance, in the blog, we give a complimentary report to those who buy the report. Many businesses do this. Buy this and get this for free. Yet, I use the word complimentary or the phrase no cost to avoid using fr33 (thats another one) and ending up in your garbage bin. I get tired of seeing legitimate newsletters that Ive requested using free or spaham to duck the filters. I want such newsletters to feel they can use normal words without getting creative. Yet I know spammers have gotten smart and now use periods and spaces in a word to sneak pass the filters, forcing the good guys to do the same. Whats the solution If I had the solution to this problem, Id be a millionaire. Phishers (bad guys who send you email leading you to believe its from a Web site with which you have an account) are getting smarter in tricking recipients into believing their email comes from a respected company, like eBay or PayPal, to get your personal information. My email address has been blacklisted at Spamcop, a popular email filter, several times. Spammers find ways to use email addresses of people like you and me. Furthermore, they change their email and Web URLs as frequently as we change our clothes. My email server host provider offers the option of using a spam service like Spamcop, but I dont use it. Too often, the newsletters I want have ended up in Never, Never Land. Plus, on occasion, we forget we subscribed to so-n-sos newsletter when we entered a contest or requested a free white paper. Some recipients report such newsletters to Spamcop, and a good guy gets jailed over a readers mistake. Helpful applications, useless response systems By using software on my computer, I put email management under my control. Ive trained the program to recognize senders on my list. This product has done a good job and rarely sends a legitimate email to the junk folder. I always scan the junk folder before I empty it this takes less than a minute. Some people use the response system. Youve seen these. You send an email to a friend and immediately get an email saying to click on this link and enter the code to prove youre a real person. Theres a flaw with the system. Newsletters are managed electronically and will not catch these responses. When I managed a list of over 100,000 readers, I watched for those response requests. However, it was easy to miss a request in the middle of all the bad address or email box is full messages. Some idiotic response systems require you to confirm youre a human EVERY time you send a message to the individual. I gave up on several readers who had this in place. I think the solution is to manage our emails at the host provider and local computer level. At least you have some control here. A good host provider gives you an option of using filtering services. If you do, it should store email messages in a junk folder you can access and review before theyre gone forever. If you dont want to review them, simply empty the junk folder. RSS enters the picture Some online marketing experts are proclaiming the newsletter dead and all content should come through RSS feed readers (see RSS article for explanation on what it is). Ive been using an RSS feed to make my content available for such readers before it hits the mainstream. I like this alternative, but I still like email newsletters coming to me. Are you thinking I am promoting newsletters because I am in the newsletter biz I wouldnt do that. I believe in offering as many options as possible. My blogs and newsletters are available in RSS. Some people wont read newsletters unless there is an RSS feed for them. Others dont want to use RSS as they prefer content to come to them rather than having to open an RSS reader like FeedDemon or go to an online RSS reader like Bloglines. I use both. The email newsletters I want to read regularly come to my email box. For those that arent as important, or that I want to access when I need information, I rely on their feeds and open my reader when I want to read them. What about RSS readers that send content to your email box NewsGator is one such application, and its excellent. I have so many feeds that when I run NewsGator, I get a ton of content in my email box in a folder set aside for feeds. The only way to get rid of the content is to delete the entries myself. That is the only pain. RSS is not a replacement for email newsletters. It complements them. It provides readers with another option. Essentially, youre getting the same coffee from the content, just using a different machine to get it. Some readers prefer one brand while others choose a different brand. Applications that check your newsletters content for spam are useful. However, they should focus only on the content and make recommendations for changes to decrease a newsletters chances of being filtered. Reviewing markup should not fall to such applications. There are other validators that do that job. So what ARE the rules There are no set rules with email newsletters. However, we have published our rules in this newsletter and in the book. Every newsletter we produce follows this book. The rules are subjective, but theyre available to everyone who wishes to read them. Everyone has a strong opinion on spam, but few experts explain what it is or how it is measured. Were just as confused. Our experience has taught us that a publisher with a solid opt-in list is at risk from an overzealous spam fighting industry. The lack of instructions and support from companies who offer tools, especially the free ones as many use them, cause more problems for the good guys who dont spam their lists. The shouting markup. We obtained a lower score by changing the upper case HTML mark up to lower case. However, trying to find this rule and an explanation is fruitless. All the guidelines indicate are the message and the evaluation. The evaluation is meaningless as the one we received stated, BODY: HTML has very strong shouting markup. Nothing more. Someone pointed me to the source code of the spam checker, which hints that shouting markup refers to refers to B, I, U, STRONG, EM, BIG, CENTER and H1-H6 tags. How is the typical newsletter publisher going to know this Most of them are not HTML experts and would not be able to read spam checkers source code. Where are the standards Where is there a manual that accompanies this popular spam checker and the implemented rules Its not a standard found in any RFC (request for comments), but an organizations arbitrary ruling. We need guidelines and basic standards. is the Content Maven behind , eNewsletter Journal, and The Remediator Security Digest. She is also a PC Today columnist and a tour guide at InformIT. She is geared to tackle your editing, writing, content, and process needs. The native Texan resides in Plano, Texas, a heartbeat north of Dallas, and doesnt wear a 10-gallon hat or cowboy boots.