5 Business Email Habits You Need To Stop Right Now

1. Vague Or Outdated Subject Lines

‘Hi’ or ‘Enquiry’ are not good subject lines. If you’re expecting your reader to open an email, give him some idea of what it will be about. Don’t keep your reader guessing by using vague subject lines. Similarly, don’t use old subject lines. If your lunch date with a co-worker has passed, don’t keep using the same thread. Create a new email thread or simply change the subject line to something more relevant to both of you.

2. Abbreviations Or Acronyms

Not only are they unprofessional, abbreviations and acronyms could cause confusion or misunderstanding. Not everyone thinks FYA means ‘for your action’! Take the time to consider your reader and spell out the words instead.

3. Writing In One Long Paragraph

Nothing is more disheartening than opening an email only to see that it contains just one very long paragraph. It’s hard to read and makes it difficult for your reader to focus and pick out the key points.

Make your message reader-friendly by leaving a blank line between paragraphs, and start a new paragraph every three to four lines.

4. Sending Vague Messages

Before you even begin typing, it helps if you plan your message first – consider the flow from opening to details to action and then to close. Check through it again when you’re done and ask yourself these four quick questions:

  • Have you included all the essential information?
  • Can you remove any redundancies?
  • Does the information flow smoothly?
  • Is the action clearly stated?

5. Sending Messages That Are Just Plain Sloppy

If there are no clear goals in your email, some misspelled words, long-winded sentences, and if you never bothered to double-check it before you hit send, you can bet your email might just end up in the bin.

I hope you will resolve to work on ensuring that you and your company make a great impression on email. Structure your messages logically with an introduction or some back story (Thanks for your call, etc), add the details, tell the reader what action you want, and end with an appropriate close.

The bottom line in all email communication is this: what you write and how you write it will affect what people think of you and your organisation, so it’s important to help yourself and respect your reader by using email appropriately

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