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By Paco Blanco
You would think that people would understand the electronic
etiquette of the web, but many do not or choose to ignore
it. Here are some rules I that will make your e-mail a pleasant
experience for all.
Rule # 1: UPPER CASE MEANS YOU ARE YELLING. IF YOU RECEIVED
AN E-MAIL LIKE THIS, THE SENDER DIDN’T LIKE SOMETHING
AND IS YELLING AT YOU. WHETHER VIA TEXT MESSAGING ON YOUR
CELL PHONE, FROM YOUR HOME OFFICE,
OR FROM WORK,
IF YOU TYPE IN UPPER CASE, YOU ARE YELLING. DO IT SPARINGLY!
Rule #2: if you think typing your complete e-mail in lowercase
is cute, it is not. besides making your e-mail harder to read,
if you are using a word processor to format your e-mail, you
have to override the automatic capitalization to start a sentence
or go back and retype the first letter of each sentence. lots
of time wasted here. type like the rest of us, save time,
and make the e-mail easier to read.
Rule #3: Sarcasm does not work in e-mail. The voice tones
and inflections so important in conveying a sarcastic observation,
such as “This article is really interesting!”
are missing. Your statement is read and understood as written.
You just complemented the person you didn’t want to
encourage.
Rule #4. Do not forward jokes, cute stories, touching lists,
political comments, religious insights, video files, or favorite
sayings. They are the webs equivalent of unsolicited flyers
found in your mail box that, at my house, are dropped directly
into the trash.
Rule #5: Reply to e-mails… at least those that seem
to have an expectation of resonse. How many times have you
sent an e-mail, waited and waited and waited for a response,
and wondered what happened? Then you bump into the person,
ask them if they received the e-mail, and they say, “sure”.
A quick reply by the recipient of “Thanks. I will get
back to you.” or “Got your e-mail, let me check.”
Or just “Thanks” lets the sender know that your
e-mail did not disappear into the cosmos but arrived and was
duly noted.
Rule #6: Use the “Bc” option when you send out
an e-mail to 50 of your friends or coworkers. The “blind
copy” allows names of recipients of the e-mail to be
hidden except for the receiving person who is shown in the
“To” field. Your friends or co-workers don’t
want their names gratuitously passed around to those 50, who
add it to their forwarding list (see rule #4) which is then
passed on to another forwarding list of a common friend who
passes it on their forwarding list. You see my concern?
ottom line is, we use courteous vocal greetings like “Hi”
“How are ya?” and vocal farewells like “See
you later”, “Have a good day”. We need to
apply the same courtesies in electronic communications.
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