Ten laws for better email

by Matthew Stibbe on January 14, 2008

Connect - keyboard button Most emails are badly written. No surprise, perhaps, since we write more emails than anything else. By 2010, the business world will have produced 27,000 billion gigabytes of email. So what goes wrong?

  • Not written with the reader in mind
  • Not written to be scanned or read quickly
  • Too many topics in one email
  • Important information or requests buried in verbiage
  • Reply in haste, repent at leisure
  • Poor grammar, spelling and punctuation
  • Using email when some other communication would have been better

So I have drafted ten laws for better email:

  1. Email is about the reader, not the writer. Don’t think about what you have to say. Think about what the reader needs to hear. There’s nothing more tedious than an email that starts out with 200 words of self-justification when all it needs is a single sentence containing a question.
  2. Email exists to solve problems, not create them. Don’t fire people by email. Unlike Radio Shack – see previous post. I try to avoid dealing with money matters by email. Don’t drunk-mail. Don’t email when angry. Don’t argue by email.
  3. The headline is the email. The subject line should be clear, factual and specific. It should also encourage the reader to open and read the email. Think about the subject lines used by chain emails (see my post: The evil power of chain emails) and spammers – made you look!  Don’t be afraid to change the title of a long-running discussion thread if the subject matter has moved on. Put the old subject in brackets afterwards for continuity.
  4. Fewer words, greater understanding. I like this email from Cambridge Consultants which I blogged two years ago. With email, shorter is better. Also short words are best.
  5. Emoticons rule!! :-)   Seriously, shading an email with some emotional colour can make it more personal and reduce the risk of misinterpretation.  See Email etiquette revisited for more on this.
  6. Think before you forward. Forwarding, CC’ing (and especially BCC’ing) and, in some cases, sending brief thank you emails can spam up people’s inboxes and make emails political. In fact, most of the email-related work crises I’ve seen have involved inappropriate forwarding, CC’ing and – in the two worst cases – BCC’ing.
  7. Respect privacy in group emails. Ever received a round-robin email addressed to hundreds of people where all their addresses were included. This is a gross breach of privacy and it is also pretty much the only circumstances where a BCC is appropriate.
  8. Be succinct. Imagine your email was a telegram and that you were paying by the word. Avoid long paragraphs. Consider using one-sentence paragraphs. Keep sentences short. Use bullets for lists. Use subtitles to break up long emails. Use strong active verbs. Let the passive and subjunctive be avoided. Avoid jargon and acronyms.
  9. Highlight actions and key points. It’s fine to use underlining, highlighting or bold to help people concentrate on the key points. I have colleagues who highlight action items and important dates.
  10. Wait a minute. Re-read your emails before you send them. Out loud. Rewrite it if you can make it shorter.

Related posts:

  1. Email etiquette revisited
  2. Ten tips for better emails
  3. How to write an efficient email press release
  4. You’re fired. By email. With euphemisms.
  5. Effective email writing

{ 7 trackbacks }

Manage Your Writing
January 18, 2008 at 12:32 pm
Email is about the reader « brisebois blog
January 18, 2008 at 1:32 pm
Talent Zoo Journal
January 24, 2008 at 10:23 pm
Music TrollyeBus » Ten rules for better email
June 19, 2008 at 2:13 pm
20 Ways to Disrepect My InBox | Confident Writing
September 8, 2008 at 8:21 am
Toxic email - Intersection Consulting
November 14, 2008 at 4:56 am
10 Laws for Better Email | Thomas Umstattd Jr.
January 12, 2009 at 9:52 am

{ 11 comments… read them below or add one }

Michael January 14, 2008 at 1:46 pm

Excellent advice. I need to pass along your article to everyone at my work place. Most of these tips work very well for comments on blogs too – especially “fewer words, greater understanding.”

Judith January 14, 2008 at 4:35 pm

Great post, Matthew! I am always encouraged when folks type about this very important topic that all too many disregard. There are a couple more considerations when it comes to Business E-mail Etiquette.

I have a site full of free E-mail Etiquette services, articles, a Blog and even a Netiquette Quiz.

Why not stop by NetManners.com and check out my article Business E-mail Etiquette Basics?

Take care ~
Judith | NetManners.com

Roy Jacobsen January 14, 2008 at 7:39 pm

This is an evergreen topic; I posted an article on the subject last July, but I don’t think you can have too many people singing this song.

Your emphasis on the reader’s needs, and on simplicity, can be applied to everything we write. Well said.

Karen Phelps January 15, 2008 at 2:26 pm

Great advice, my boss sent me this after I got in an email row with a distantly associated fellow employee. I am far to apt to fire off a nasty gram than I should be. Although I’d still probably fire her by email if it were my right to do so I appreciate this post very much, they are words to live by.

Andrea January 17, 2008 at 12:05 am

I was directed to this on a day when a dear friend had forwarded yet another mindless time-waster. (She’s addicted!)

I’d love to send her this – after a judicious delay, of course.

Thank you for the ten rules. Useful anywhen.

Bruce Pilgrim January 17, 2008 at 12:58 pm

“Too many topics in one email” is a big one. I’ve found that if I ask two questions in one email, I almost always get one answer (sometimes less than one). If I need a person to answer three questions, I send them three different emails in rapid fire. It’s probably a little annoying to the receiver, so I only do this when time is short and I really need those answers ASAP.

Matthew Cornell January 17, 2008 at 6:23 pm

Thanks for the tips, Matthew. In addition, I found a lot of good email advice in the book “The hamster revolution,” including their A-B-C tool for content (structure ea. message in this order: Action summary, Background, and Close) and their 1-2-3 tool (ask 1. Needed, 2. Appropriate, and 3. Targeted).

MayaAndMarketability February 22, 2008 at 6:38 am

Speaking of Subject Lines and Headlines… could you point me to case studies that prove using “you” versus “I/me” (ego) in headlines is more effective. Convincing clients to write customer-centered headlines can sometimes be a challenge. Businesses get stuck stroking their ego and starting all their marketing materials with “I do this for you…” type headlines. Aargh!

kumarraj March 15, 2008 at 2:29 pm

Thank u, Matthew. I think these are the 10 commandments of newly users like me and offcourse to all e-mail users. once again thank you.

Juanita Price October 24, 2008 at 2:57 pm

Thanks Matthew- for the Ten Laws for Better Emails

Chris April 21, 2009 at 10:10 pm

Simple and straight forward: Great, Thanks!

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