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About Greg
As a web developer for more than 15 years, I find my attention increasingly drawn to the intersection of computers, the Internet and communications, especially social media. On this blog, I indulge my interest in these and several other topics. I hope you find them interesting too. Read on...-
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Twitter Stream- New blog post: Google consolidates privacy policies and tools (are you listening, Facebook?). http://bit.ly/9njT3A 06:22:35 PM September 03, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Can visitors can see your entire web page? Load it up in "Browser Size", from Google Labs, to find out. http://bit.ly/53Wel3 06:22:32 PM September 01, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Check out the "The Wilderness Downtown", built in HTML 5 (Chrome or Safari required). Pretty amazing. http://bit.ly/cRV3WQ 10:33:31 PM August 30, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Made my head hurt trying to figure out what the Facebook Like button really does. I now have them on http://webdancers.com. 10:43:02 PM August 29, 2010 from TweetDeck
- First hand account of how an acquisition fell apart. Not something that gets published every day. http://bit.ly/bgdKaC 08:50:03 PM August 27, 2010 from TweetDeck
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7 Tips for Effective Email
Email is a peculiar form of communication. We get so much of it that it’s easy to treat it all as junk to be gotten rid of. Of course, the email that we send to others is valuable and should be read and acted upon. Here are seven suggestions for effective email communication, whether you are the sender or the recipient. [Note that these suggestions are for business correspondence. Feel free to ignore them for email to your friends and family, who will love you no matter what.]
1. Use a credible email address.
Like it or not, some people will make judgments about your credibility based on your email address, particularly when you are corresponding as a business. Consider these examples from Modern Nerd:
2. Write short emails
Like most things online, people don’t read emails closely, they skim them. I know that when I open up a long email (anything that I have to scroll through), I immediately ask myself, “can I put this aside and read it later?” I place a high value on concise and direct writing and am much more likely to respond to emails that use it.
If you can’t shorten the text of your email, break it into multiple paragraphs. Large blocks of text are hard to read on a computer monitor and it’s easy to lose the thread of the conversation. Remember your high school english: each new thought or idea should start a new paragraph.
3. Limit your email to a single subject
Closely related to #2, give your recipient a chance to digest and respond to the subject of your message before moving along to a new one. Since many people also use their inbox as a todo list, separating your subjects helps them to organize their work flow and anything we can do to help them with that makes good communication more likely.
4. Make clear requests
Almost all business emails contain something that we’d like the recipient to do. It might be answering a question, taking a specific action or forwarding information to someone else. If the request is buried in the middle of the text or, even worse, thrown in as an aside (“if you get a chance, you might send this on to Bill”), it’s much less likely to be acted on. A good technique is to summarize at the end of the email, using a numbered or bulleted list, the actions you would like the recipient to take. If you want them to let you know when they have taken those actions, list that too.
5. Honor requests from others
Here, I have to rant a little. When you ignore a direct request in an email, it affects your trustworthiness and reputation. At least for me it does. Ignoring a request says to me that either a) you didn’t hear me or b) that you didn’t value my request enough to respond to it. Either way, it’s a huge roadblock to effective communication.
I know everyone’s busy and has lots of requests that they have to attend to and I’m not suggesting that every request must be handled immediately. I am suggesting that every one has to be acknowledged, if only to say “I’ll get back to you on that” (provided that you do).
6. Acknowledge receipt of emails
Sometimes spam filters get a little carried away and emails fall into a big black hole in the ether. In almost all cases, the only way for the sender to know that an email has been received is by getting an email back from the recipient. Let your sender know that you’ve gotten their email (maybe even thank them for it), even if you aren’t able to respond to it right away. People expect a business to respond within 24 hours and will start to feel ignored beyond that.
7. Don’t write for yourself, write for your reader
This is another way of saying, consider your audience. Make sure that you include the things they need to know to make sense of your correspondence.
Finally, be nice and remember that everything you send over the Internet might someday be made public.
Photo by Rupert Ganzer.
Cross posted on webdancers.com.