Listly by H. E. Colby
Use these list of resources to craft the best emails possible to impact both your colleagues and clients.
Look at the following suggestions about using e-mails for business writing. Which ones are good advice, and which ones are bad advice? 1. All e-mails look the same so the subject heading should be clear. 2. E-mails are normally read quickly and need to be easily understood.
There's an epidemic out there-an epidemic of bad emails. I really realized it after about the fifth time my boss commented on an email I sent her to look over: "That's a really good email!" I hadn't thought it was anything special, until I started to pay closer attention to the emails I was receiving.
Your clients and colleagues don't have time to engage fully with every e-mail they get. Some of them receive hundreds of messages per day. That's why they start with the ones they can deal with quickly. They may never get around to answering - or even reading - the rest.
Getting People to Read and Act on Your Messages Sendmail Incorporated is a registered trademark. We have no association or connection with this company. Find out how to improve your emails. Email is a widely used tool for business communications, but a 2013 survey by Sendmail, Inc., found that it has caused tension, confusion, or other negative consequences for 64 percent of working professionals.
We've all been there ... You've carefully crafted an email. You've polished each sentence. You've racked your brain for the very best subject line. You hit publish with a sigh of relief. That's done. But when you look at your email stats, you notice that the opens aren't as good as you'd hoped, and the click-throughs are disappointing.
Email. The bane of your existence, a tool that seems to define many of your waking hours, a mode of cstrong textommunication invented only two decades ago. We all use it, some of us love it, and many of us dread it.
Paul Soltoff | May 19, 2003 | Comments How to get your B2B e-mail read and generate responses. Developing effective business-to-business (B2B) email marketing messages is significantly different than developing business-to-consumer (B2C) emails. That is why, after writing extensively about consumer-oriented emails in past columns, I'll now address B2B communications.
Random Observation/Comment #427: My job at the Cooper Admissions department was crucial to my business email etiquette. Communication is almost 75% of my current job, so it single-handedly taught me to follow-up and have an easy-to-read format. I write business emails like I blog.