ROUTINE ANd POSITIVE mESSAGES In general, email is used to exchange information with clients and colleagues anytime of the day or night.
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While that makes email convenient for both reader and writer, it also means your message may not be read or responded to immediately. Therefore, email should not be used for urgent issues. Email is also used when several or many people must view the same message.
Some say email is most appropriate for short messages that require a response to an inquiry or ask for information.
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However, it is not uncommon to see longer emails that deal with more complex issues. Likewise, emails often act as replacements for traditional letters or memos.
All emails contain basic elements you
should incorporate into short, long, formal, or informal messages, as outlined in the following discussion.
Subject Line
An emails subject line accurately and succinctly reflects the message’s content. Working people are busy and their email inboxes are packed with dozens or even hundreds of messages to sift through. Writing subject lines with specific wording that clearly identifies the topic will help your reader. Notice how the following vague subject line leaves the reader wondering, while the specific subject line leaves little to the imagination.
Vague subject line New Policy
Specific subject line New Parking Policy Effective June When writing your subject line, avoid inflated
or emotional appeals such as Urgent or
Critical Situation. (If a situation is truly critical, you should probably phone the individual instead of sending an email) Also be aware of ethical choices when writing a subject line and don’t make claims that are misleading or untrue. While it maybe tempting to lure a reader into an email by using a catchy subject line like
Free Subscription! unless you are actually offering a free subscription,
you are misleading readers, who will not appreciate being lured into a disingenuous email that wastes their valuable time.
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Greeting and Salutation
A greeting at the beginning of an email is a visual cue that shows the recipient whereto start reading. The type of greeting or salutation in an email depends on the recipient and the level of formality required by the situation. Writing to an outside audience—those not in your organization—is usually a more formal situation, souse a person’s title Mr, Ms, Mrs, Dr, Prof) until that individual replies using a first name. Once
you are on a first name basis, you can tone down the level of formality and write Dear Brad You can also wrap the salutation into the first line of your email as follows:
Thanks, Brad, for the information about the geothermic survey.
For less formal situations, use one of the following salutations:
Hi, Brad,
Brad,
Hello, Brad, Good morning, Brad,
If a discussion thread—a series of emails on the same topic—is ongoing, you may find that a greeting becomes unnecessary. This is a common practice, but only after the thread of the conversation has gone on for several formal e-mails.
Finally, addressing a group differs from addressing individuals. If sending an email blast to a list of customers, for example, you may want to choose a greeting such as Dear Valued Customer If sending
an email to a committee, it is appropriate to begin the correspondence with the committee’s name, as noted in the following.
Dear Land Assessment Committee:
Avoid using the generic To Whom It May Concern Use of this greeting in an email shows you haven’t done your homework.
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If an email is replacing a traditional letter, use a standard letter salutation,
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which we will discuss later in this chapter.
Opening
The first paragraph of emails delivering routine news or information should contain an expanded explanation of the topic mentioned in the subject line. For example, the opening for the email about the new
ROUTINE ANd POSITIVE mESSAGES parking policy subject line we discussed earlier would begin by frontload- ing the first paragraph and elaborating on the subject.
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