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Vox Pop: Your best "best practice" for email?

Short Subject: Now You’re Talking (1927)


prosaic [on email]

Chris Streeter picks up on a thread that I’ve been thinking about a lot lately (and he’s kind to mention the relationship to Inbox Zero).

He reminds us that the etiquette for using a telephone was once well-established enough to earn a place in the encyclopedia:

the encyclopedia told you how to answer the phone. not how to pick it up and dial or how the phone switching system worked, but what to say. it even had illustrations (little susie picking up the phone, announcing her residence, listening attentively, etc.). anyway, the point is, nobody ever set the ground rules for email. nobody ever said, this is what the subject line should cover, this is how many sentences an email ought to be, this is how long you should reasonably expect a person to wait to reply, etc. they just threw it at us and let everyone make up their own rules. of course, everyone will make up their own rules anyway, and that encyclopedia sure did a helluva lot of good with our phone manners, didn’t it? but still, the idea that we have never, ever, worked out a set of rules or mores for email is kind of incredible.

I think a lot of people would scoff at the idea of a standard for email communication, and I’ll admit that I’m not sure what a truly comprehensive – or even 80-percent-universal – set of best practices would look like. But, that, in some ways is the problem.

Netiquette” was pounded into my head from day one on the ‘net, but I’ll freely admit I’ve never been 100% – at least partly because email was clearly the Wild West from a lot of people’s perspective. We’ve each been free to evolve or fall ass-backwards into an understanding of how email should be used. How would we begin to ensure that any two given strangers could be on roughly the same page about what email is even for?

I doubt this is a problem that has one answer, but I’m intrigued to consider how we might start solving it if it were. So…

The Question to You:

Think about what you’d do if you ran the world. If you had to choose a single best practice for email usage — format, length, subject matter, even when not to use email.
If you could wave a magic wand and put one guideline in place that would be honored by 80% of civilized people, what would it be? Be creative as you like, but remember: it has to be generic enough that it would work for 80% of email communication everywhere.

What should almost everyone start doing differently with their email today?

Scott's picture

The one thing I hate...

The one thing I hate about university is the level of email I get. Pet peeves include lecturers or tutors sending emails with only the module number as the subject line, completely unhelpful given that the lecturer probably only has cause to email you about something related to that module. Also emails with auto reminds about the deadline, I am just about able enough to keep a track of a deadline and getting sent an email every day until the deadline is a bit too much. Last one, faculty specific email sent to the whole campus.

As such my best practices are:

Subject line that allows the recipient to decide whether they need to read the email now or can leave it (not everyone is on IBZ yet)

The email body should be concise, if it is a task then bullet point, who,what,when by and where(if apt.); if it is a FYI email then one point per paragraph to allow easy quoting.

And only notify those who need to be notified.

 
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Inbox Zero

The original 43 Folders series looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way. Don’t miss the free video of Merlin’s Inbox Zero presentation.

Making Time

3-part series on attention management for artists and makers. Read Bad Correspondence, The Job You Think You Have, and One Clear Line.