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7 Tips for Effective Email

June 23, 2010 By Greg Falken Leave a Comment

no_junk_mailI’m going to do my best not to make this post into a rant but I have to admit that it was inspired by some especially bad email communications that I’ve received.

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:

 

[email protected]
What’s that, my good man? You’re a marketing director with a passion for helping iPhone developers breach new and exciting markets, build strong corporate images, and explore and project consistent brand values? And you’ve got a Hotmail address?

[email protected]
Look, John, I know that picking usernames has been a lifelong drag, but don’t just tag a number on the end. Especially not your birth year. You’re better than that.

[email protected]
I’ve spent 10 years trying to ditch my asinine prejudice against AOL users, but I still struggle to take aol.com addresses seriously. If you’re an AOL user and you feel hurt by this, I can only apologise and say that I’m trying to grow out of it.

[email protected]
I have a glowing red button on my desk for cutesy addresses like these. Nothing dramatic. It just deletes them.

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.

  • Make use of text links to provide them with background information (these also help keep your email short).
  • Stay away from jargon, unless you’re writing to someone who knows the jargon, in which case it can be a useful shorthand.
  • Use inline or attached images sparingly and only where they can help illustrate your points.
  • Use emoticons (sparingly) if you’re worried that your tone might be misinterpreted.
  • Put yourself in the reader’s place as ask yourself, “what would I need to know in order to understand this?”

Finally, be nice and remember that everything you send over the Internet might someday be made public.

Photo by Rupert Ganzer.

Technology Tagged: communication, email, writing

New blog at webdancers

June 20, 2010 By Greg Falken Leave a Comment

webdancers logo

After recently redesigning the website for my company, webdancers, I’ve now added a blog and newsletter. The focus of this blog will be on information of interest to my clients and potential clients: Management of online presence, social media and online tools. There will be some overlap with posts published here but I will try and keep the identities of the two blogs somewhat separate.

Please go check out the new blog at http://www.webdancers.com/blog and while you’re there, sign up for the newsletter. It looks like I’m going to spending more time writing…

Technology Tagged: newsletter

Readability will change the way you read online

June 16, 2010 By Greg Falken 1 Comment

ReadabilityTechnology consultancy Arc90 has released a simple tool that will work in any modern web browser and makes reading online a whole new experience. The tool is called Readability and it performs a simple task, removing the clutter from almost any web page, leaving only the featured content. The resulting page is cleanly formatted and easy to read. You even get to choose the fonts, margin spacing and general layout. For example:

Page before Readability

Readability

Page after Readability

Readability is extremely easy to install and use. Follow the steps on their installation page (watch the video first, if you like) to place their bookmarklet on your browser’s toolbar. Then, whenever you’re on a page that you want to really read – not just skim – click the bookmarklet and Readability de-clutters the page. It can even remove the distraction of inline text links, by moving them all to footnotes at the bottom of the content. When you’re done, click the “Reload Original Page” button and the page is restored to its original state.

The developer of Readability, Richard Ziade, was interviewed recently on Rebooting the News, where he explained that developing the technology to correctly identify the featured content on a page and remove everything else was much more difficult than it looks. He started the project in his spare time to meet his own need to reduce the level of distraction that he knew was interfering with his online reading comprehension. The whole program is well worth listening to.

http://mp3.morningcoffeenotes.com/reboot10Jun14.mp3

Our special guest is the developer of the Readability plug-in, Richard Ziade. He’s a partner in arc90, a strategic consulting and software development firm. Recently, his product was in the news because Apple’s Safari browser incorporated it, as Dave explained in a post at scripting.com. (It would be a good idea to read that post before listening.)

It’s a great tool and I’ve been using it a lot but here’s a question that needs to be asked of readers: If you get to control the viewing experience and choose to ignore the ads and other bumpf (and who wouldn’t?), what responsibility do you have to replace the revenue that those ads bring in for the publisher? And conversely, if the readers are voting with their feet and turning off the ads, how can publishers change their content and revenue models, in order to attract readers who are willing to support them? These are questions that all media companies have been grappling with and programs like Readability (and the new Safari 5 browser, which has similar functionality built in) simply shines a brighter light on how our online consumption has changed the media landscape.

Technology Tagged: mp3, Rebooting the News, Richard Ziade

Google Places Step-by-Step

May 20, 2010 By Greg Falken 8 Comments

Back in January, I wrote a post called Put Your Business On the Map, in which I described the free service from Google that gives any business with a physical location a customizable listing on Google Maps. Google continues to improve this service and has recently renamed it Google Places. Because I think this is such a great marketing tool for small business, I have put together this step-by-step for setting up your own page on Google Places.

Sign in with a Google Account

Google Signin

Google Sign-In

Step 1 is to head on over to http://google.com/places and sign in with your Google account. If you don’t have an account, you can create one by clicking on the blue Sign Up Now button above the sign-in box. Remember that signing up for a Google account is not the same as signing up for Gmail. It’s simply an account that you can use to connect to Google services.

Assuming that this is your first visit to Google Places, click the large “Add a New Business” button, after signing in.

Locate your business

Business Location

Your Business Location

Next step is to locate your business listing in Google Maps. Complete all of the required information about your business’ location and add as much optional information (email, web address, description) as you can. As you enter information, a map with a business location marker will be created on the right side or the page. When everything is correct, click the Next button. All of the information that you add on this page can also be edited later.

If a listing for your business already exists (which is very likely), you will be able to claim it. Otherwise, you can add a new listing.

On the following page, you can add photos, videos, hours of operation, payment types accepted and additional details.

Validate your listing

Validate Your Listing

Validate Your Listing

Before your listing can be shown as owner verified, Google will validate the information submitted, either by calling the phone number in the listing or sending a postcard to the business address. Either way, you will receive a validation code to enter on the following page. It’s best to get this validation code by phone right now, while you’re looking at the page, although you can come back and enter it later. Once validated, your listing will appear on Google Maps within one day.

Now what?

Now that your business is listed and verified, information from your Places page will be shown whenever your business is displayed on Google Maps and in general Google search results. You can also take advantage of some additional custom features on your Places page.

Places QR Code

QR Code Poster

QR code and print-out poster

QR codes are square bar codes that can be read by the digital cameras in most smart phones. By scanning the code, a mobile version of your business’ Places page is automatically displayed on the phone’s browser.

Print out a QR code poster and make it available at your place of business for customers to scan and get more information about your business.

Coupons

Enter a few lines of text and special offer print-out coupons will appear alongside your business listing in Google Maps. You can set an expiration date and specify which of your locations will accept the coupon. Coupons appear on your listing within a few hours of being added.

Post to your place page

For time-sensitive notices, you can add a text message of up to 160 characters to your page. The message will automatically disappear after 30 days.

Y’know what I’d like to see?

I’d like to see the main street of our nearest city (Sonora, CA) sporting QR posters in every shop window. The sidewalks are full of tourists who could be scanning them to find out more about each business and taking that information home with them. In a rural community like ours that is largely dependent on tourism, taking advantage of a no-cost outreach opportunity like shouldn’t take a second thought.

I am willing to help any Tuolumne County business owner, at no charge, with setting up a Google Places page. Please contact me.

Technology Tagged: Google Places, location, mobile, QR code

The Disappearing Protocol

May 13, 2010 By Greg Falken Leave a Comment

Omnibar

No "http://" required

My web browser of choice these days is Google Chrome, from the “Developer channel”. There are two other channels for Chrome: Beta and Stable. The browser versions delivered through the latter channels are more “ready for prime time” and less prone to changing their behavior on a regular basis.  On April 8th, the Google Chrome Releases blog reported this innocuous change on the Dev channel:

Changes to the Omnibox (e.g. the bookmark star has moved, icon changes, etc.)

The Omnibox is Chrome’s name for the address bar, where the URL (address) of the current page is displayed and where you can type in a new one. The Omnibox however, has much greater ambitions than simply being a box where you can enter a URL. Here’s what the developers at The Chromium Projects have to say about it:

The purpose of Chromium’s omnibox is to merge both location and search fields while offering the user some highly relevant suggestions and / or early results.

The omnibox should focus on augmenting the user’s commands – all of the tools it provides should be oriented around making the user’s input ‘better’, and sending them to a destination.

The change made to the Omnibox was simple, yet controversial: Hide the “http://” (known technically as the protocol scheme) from the beginning of the URL. It has not been necessary to type this part of the URL for some time (though most people don’t know this), so, reasoned Chrome’s developers, why show it at all?

The reaction from the rest of the developer community was swift and nearly unanimous: this is a Really Bad Idea. The Chromium Issue Tracker contains such comments as:

– This is a bad change and should be reverted. This is Google using market share to force a change that doesn’t comply with relevant standards.

– We probably all agree that “http://” is an unfortunately nasty part of URLs, right up there with “www”, “.com” and all the other pesky line noise. Even Tim Berners-Lee apologized for the “//”. However, I don’t think the address bar is the right place to address this issue.

– The protocol specification is not optional. It’s a part of the URI. A URL bar that doesn’t show the actual URI is not very good at what it does.

-Also, www.google.com/ looks plain silly and unbalanced compared to http://www.google.com/. If you’re so into “prettifying” the URL for inane reasons (it’s redundant!), then get rid of that lingering / at the end.

-I’m going back to Firefox if this hits Chrome as a feature.

The response from the Chrome team was terse but clear. After four days, the issue was closed to further comments and its status was changed to “Won’t Fix”.

In choosing to pursue their vision for the Omnibox, the Chrome developers have taken on the burden of making the user experience better, even while making changes that break from the norm. Early in the issue discussion, Chrome developer pkasting wrote:

However, Chromium UI design is not a democracy and is not based on users’ votes, so “I don’t like this” carries very little weight. Concrete use cases that are actually broken are much more valuable — and have already caused us to file the bugs noted above. The fact that we haven’t elected to revert this change doesn’t mean your feedback has been “disregarded”, it means we’re not convinced a revert is justified– especially when it has been in the product for a couple of days.

The question I ask myself when it comes to issues like this is, will this change make my life easier and does it do so by removing choices that I would rather keep? I stopped typing “http://” a long time ago, because I knew I could. I understand why I might want to use it and the other protocol schemes that might be used in its place but the times when I actually do so are very few and far between.

I think that the impulse to simplify should be encouraged and that this is a small step in that direction. The implementation is very likely to change (and improve) before the general public on the Chrome Stable channel sees this feature but I applaud the Google Chrome team for sticking to their own mandate for this small piece of the user interface.

Technology Tagged: Chrome, Omnibox, protocol, URL, user interface

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As a web developer since 1995, I find my attention increasingly drawn to the intersection of computers, the Internet, communication and education. On this blog, I indulge my interest in these and several other topics. I hope you find them interesting too. Read More…

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