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COMPUTER
COURTESY |
by:
Thea
Westra |
The
tips that follow should help you to write
e-mail that will be well received every
time
Pay attention to punctuation, spelling,
grammar and capitals. It shows that you
value us and that you've thought about what
you've written rather than an off-the-cuff
rushed message in the heat of the moment.
Your subject line should be descriptive,
especially when we get so many emails or
if we like to save the emails in a file.
It'd be great a practice to start the subject
with "Recipient or group name" then a hyphen,
your subject (specific and changed for each
email), another hyphen and then the date.
E.g. Thea-Email tips attached-15Oct05 Make
the subject crystal clear.
Use short paragraphs and leave lines between
them. This makes for more easy and quick
reading when you experience a lot of email
activity on a regular basis.
Tidy up all those ">" characters when replying
or forwarding. I use a handy tool for this
http://www.dsoft.com.tr/stripmail/ I've
downloaded it and I keep it on my desktop.
Check the source of any "news" or "chain"
mailings before passing on. Here is a good
resource for that: http://www.sophos.com/virusinfo/hoaxes/
Avoid sending unsolicited, large attachments.
That 3MB movie file may be the funniest
thing you've seen for a long time, but don't
automatically send it to everyone to know.
Ask them first if they want to receive it.
A great tool for large file sending is http://www.yousendit.com/
Ensure that your PC is protected against
viruses. Your virus scanner might not protect
against Spyware and Adware. Good quality
free tools are: ~ http://free.grisoft.com/doc/2/lng/us/tpl/v5
~ http://www.lavasoftusa.com/software/adaware/
~ http://smb.sygate.com/products/spf_standard.htm
~ Remember to set your email service to
scan viruses for emails coming in and out.
Use lower case font. When in all capitals,
it is harder to read and may be perceived
as aggressive.
Thou shalt not spam!
Go to http://www.acma.gov.au/ACMAINTER.65690:STANDARD:298294164:pc=PC_1965
Or click here for same http://yatuc.com/a0
Another handy tool http://yatuc.com/index.php?lang=en
Re-read your message before sending. Read
it from the perspective of the recipient.
Consider first if your message needs the
"Reply To All" treatment, or if it is sufficient
to simply "Reply To Sender" only. Always
ask permission if wanting to pass another's
contact details forward. If you need to
keep another's email details hidden when
you "Cc:" then place their email address
in the "Bcc:" text box.
Limit your "non-group related topic" emails
to e.g. one per week, when using the group
email option.
Keep emails short i.e. to a single screen
page. When it's a more complicated issue
to discuss, why not use the telephone and
speak? In emails to busy people, tell recipients
if/when you do/don't want a reply.
Be mindful of when you use the 'priority'
or the 'request receipt' options (these
are under 'Tools' and 'Message' when you
have email open & ready to send). Less use
has greater impact when you need it.
Is it clear who's the sender? Use an email
signature that has contact details and change
the "From:" option for your emails. As an
email signature I use http://www.addbranding.com/
or you can go to your task bar Tools, Options,
Signatures. To change what shows in the
"From:" box, go to Tools, Accounts, Properties
and change "Your Name:" in User Information.
It won't impact account settings, it's safe
to do.
EMAIL HUMOUR Purely for your entertainment:
http://www.pmaco.com/humor/Tomatoe_Cart.html
About the author:
©2005 Thea Westra is an international life
coach who resides in Perth, Australia. She
is editor and publisher of a free, monthly
newsletter which you can receive by going
to her website http://www.forwardsteps.comauShe
also publishes a blog called Triggers http://forwardsteps.blogspot.com
Circulated by Bandoni
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