REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

Email Etiquette: Emails Are Not Texts

Written by

Share This Post:

A teal background with a white email icon features the text, "Treat an email more like a letter than a text."

This time of year, many people are traveling. They may be on vacation or working remotely while offices clear out and get quiet. This means that there are a lot of emails being exchanged in order to keep absent employees in the loop. So, we thought this would be a good time to talk about a little something that you know you complain about at least once a week: email etiquette.
Email has been around a LONG time. Yet, for some reason, people still use it like it’s their diary, a text message, or somewhere to vent their stream of consciousness. It’s not. Within the workplace, it’s a business tool and should be treated as such. This means there is certain etiquette that should be followed when sending an email, no matter who you are sending it too.
Here are just a few tips!

Spell Names Correctly

Nothing shows less respect for someone than not bothering to check how the recipient’s name is spelled. Hint: Most likely, their name is in their email. Their name might even BE their email. Take the extra two seconds to double check a spelling and avoid an embarrassing mistake.

Spell Everything Correctly

Spell check, people. While the occasional typo happens, emails with misspelled words are less likely to be taken seriously. With all the ways to check for spelling and punctuation (ever hear of Grammarly?), there’s no reason emails should go out with misspelled words. And don’t’ think you can slack off on internal emails. You never know when one might be forwarded to a client.

Don’t Email Angry

When an issue arises, or a frustrating situation occurs, it might be tempting to punch out an angry email. Nothing is more satisfying than the click of the keyboard as your fingers fly. And that’s fine. Write it. Then? Wait. Never send the first draft of an angry email. Get out what you need to get out and then walk away. Read your email when you’ve had a chance to calm down and edit appropriately. Maybe ask someone else take a look. Angry emails may only take a second to send, but the ramifications will live on forever.

Reply to Whom?

If you received an email that was sent to a group of people, make sure to consider who needs to receive a reply. Those people are probably on the email for a reason and need the information you can provide. Make sure to choose “reply all” when appropriate. On the flip side, if your conversation gets off track or takes a turn, do everyone a solid and remove the uninterested parties from the email chain.

An Email is Not a Text

Email should not be treated like texts, and while you might fire off hundreds of them in a day, they still should be properly punctuated, formatted, and words should not be abbreviated to text speak. Careful with the “lol’s” and the emojis. While these may be appropriate for certain people,  be mindful of the recipient before getting too laid back.  
 
A good overall rule of thumb? Treat an email more like a letter than a text. There should be a greeting, a properly formatted body, and a sign-off. Want to practice? Send us one, and we’ll tell you how you did!
 

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

The power of the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship, in a graduate's own words:

"Growth is never accidental, it comes from being willing to learn, adapt, and embrace change. After nine months of dedication, reflection, and business development, I proudly graduated from the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship (WEF) during the Small Business Association of Michigan Annual Meeting.

Throughout the program, I challenged myself to evaluate every aspect of my business, celebrating what was working while identifying opportunities for growth and improvement. The journey was made even more meaningful through the support of an incredible cohort of women entrepreneurs, the guidance of mentor Gina Jacquart Thorsen, and the leadership of bodespeaks and her team.

A sincere thank you to smallbusinessassocofmichigan for investing in second-stage women business owners and creating opportunities that empower entrepreneurs to build stronger, more sustainable businesses."

— Mary A. Barton, President and CEO of Equitable Accounting Solutions and proud WEF graduate.

Applications for the next cohort are now open. Link in comments.
"Out of failure comes growth – you have to see it as an opportunity." 

bodespeaks joined cuzzinjustin on the strictlyfromnowhere Podcast for an honest conversation about entrepreneurship, embracing your superpowers, and building a personal brand that's actually yours, the wins, the setbacks, and everything in between. And naturally, dropped an f-bomb or two along the way. You don't want to miss it.

Full episode in the comments 👇
AI doesn't treat every source equally; it trusts what's credible, cited, and current, like news coverage.

Showing up in the right places isn't just good PR. It's how the robots (and the humans) get you right.

Read the full blog at the link in bio.
"If you don't get up and grind every day, the needle isn't gonna move."

We sat down with brandonmccraney, founder and Master Blender behind olderaleighdistillery in Zebulon, North Carolina. Brandon spent fifteen years just thinking about whiskey before he finally opened his doors, and even then it took four more years, a dozen rejections, construction delays, and a global pandemic to get there. Two years later, Olde Raleigh had already won Best Micro Distillery in the US.

Check out the latest episode of Happy Hour Hustle, where Brandon shares what it actually took to grow a business through COVID, the military discipline that kept him going when everything else said quit, and how working with people turned out to be the hardest part of the job.

Listen to Happy Hour Hustle on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and watch the whole episode on Youtube. Link in bio.
It's 9 months that is impossible to sum up in a video - but here's just a taste. 

This Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship is resources, mentorship, and connections that you can't build anywhere else. We're so exicted for what the next cohort will bring.

Apply now at the link in bio.
smallbusinessassocofmichigan