Crash Course E Mail Etiquette

17
Crash Course: E-mail Etiquette E-mail Made Easy
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    21-Sep-2014
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Transcript of Crash Course E Mail Etiquette

Page 1: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Crash Course: E-mail Etiquette

E-mail Made Easy

Page 2: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Preventing Virus Outbreaks

Use antivirus software to detect e-mail viruses.

Use Internet-based e-mail accounts that scan attachments for viruses.

Open e-mail only from trusted sources.

Open only necessary attachments.

Page 3: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Preventing Spam

Limit e-mail address postings. Don’t forward chain e-mail messages. Use caution when signing up for e-

mail offers. Don’t respond to unsolicited e-mails. Don’t click Unsubscribe or Remove

links within messages from untrusted or unknown vendors.

Page 4: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Avoiding Phishing Scams

Phishing scams are designed to steal personal information.

Don’t divulge sensitive information in response to an e-mail message.

Be wary of partially completed forms; don’t complete them.

Page 5: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Managing the Inbox

Sort e-mail to enable finding important messages, quick responses.

Respond in a timely fashion. Read entire threads before

responding.

Page 6: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

E-mail Composition Basics

Use proper grammar. Write in complete sentences. Always use sentence case; DON’T

SHOUT USING ALL CAPITAL LETTERS.

Use a spell checker. Always proofread messages.

Page 7: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Effective Writing Tips

Use the inverted pyramid writing style.

Follow the ABCs of good writing: Accuracy Brevity Clarity

Page 8: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Writing Effective Subject Lines

Highlight the main point to summarize the entire e-mail.

Use sentence case. Avoid words like important and

critical. Always include a subject.

Page 9: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Using CC and BCC

Carbon copy copies others; CC leaves e-mail addresses visible to all recipients.

Blind carbon copy copies others; e-mail addresses listed in the BCC field are hidden from other recipients.

Only CC appropriate individuals. Use BCC sparingly.

Page 10: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

E-mail Forwarding Etiquette

Forward messages only when necessary.

Use caution when forwarding sensitive or confidential information.

Use your head; don’t react on impulses.

Page 11: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Extinguishing a Flame War

Flame wars have no place in professional communications.

Choose not to respond to avoid further provoking heated e-mail threads.

Leverage in-person communication to resolve the issue.

Involve management if in-person communication fails.

Page 12: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Keep Addresses Private

Exercise caution when sending external e-mail.

Use blind carbon copy to hide e-mail addresses from other recipients.

Edit e-mail messages before forwarding.

Page 13: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Important/Urgent Messages

Use Important and Urgent icons sparingly.

Refrain from sending too many high priority e-mails to avoid appearing too aggressive.

Page 14: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Working with Attachments

Keep attachments small (less than 2 MB).

Don’t attach more than five files. Save attachments instead of

saving the e-mail. Ensure that recipients know how to

open attachments requiring unfamiliar applications.

Page 15: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Items to Avoid in E-mail

Don’t include any information you wouldn’t want published on the front page of the newspaper.

Don’t e-mail confidential, sensitive, or classified information.

Page 16: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

When Not to Use E-mail

For jokes and chain messages. For arguments or flame wars. For subjects too complicated to

easily explain in e-mail, use meetings instead.

Avoid e-mail when the topic requires interactive conversation.

Page 17: Crash Course   E Mail Etiquette

Final Thoughts

Are there any questions? Don’t forget your copy of the E-

mail Etiquette Quick Reference Sheet.

Thanks for attending.