1 / 19

Email Etiquette

Email Etiquette. notes on e -communication. Fleur Eshghi — September 2010. Notes. Read books: email Communication: “Bliss or “ Diss ” Communication” Cherie Kerr

emlyn
Download Presentation

Email Etiquette

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Email Etiquette notes on e-communication Fleur Eshghi — September 2010

  2. Notes Read books: • email Communication: “Bliss or “Diss” Communication” Cherie Kerr • Death by PowerPoint: How to avoid killing your presentation Michael Flocker

  3. Notes • Some stuff got obsolete by the time I finished the book • Met many Google philosophers – online! • Read several Universities email etiquettes, including Fordham’s • Learned new concepts and phrases, such as Cyber Frisbee, Cyber Boomerang, etc.

  4. New Concepts • Technological anarchy: say anything anyway anytime on Internet • Email: Frisbee toss of Cyberspace • Email value system • Flaming phenomenon • Email Remorse Technology is the tyranny of classrooms. Reverend Robert Grimes, S.J.

  5. Conventional Etiquettes • Email etiquette = DMV pamphlet • Edit, spell check , reread, etc. • Clear subject – specific point • Reply within 24 hours – unless spam, leaving people out there with no reply is rude

  6. Etiquettes to Think About • The case of “Reply to All” • The case of “Reply with History” • The case of attachments • The case for file names

  7. Etiquettes to Think About • The case of BCC • The case of long email’s discussion back and forth • The case of too short email Lost In Translation

  8. Challenges • Missing personal effects • Missing non-verbal communications cues, facial gestures, body language, tone of voice. • %75 of communication is non-verbal • Spontaneity Lost In Translation

  9. Challenges “Medium is the Message” Marshall McLuhan • Every medium has its distinct language • The languages are not alwaysdirectly translatable • Languages are ways of thinking, they are not just a collection of words Lost In Translation

  10. Dont’s • Email: • Bad news, emotional tones, anger, criticism, shouting match disagreement; • Anything you don’t want to be floating on Cyberspace; • Response to an emotional email: • invoking emotion: “Flaming phenomenon” • Avoid impulsive email Pick up the phone or arrange a face to face

  11. Why Not Impulsive Email? • People tend to read negative email over and over again • What is heard vanishes from memory quicker than what is read • It sits around in mailboxes, printed out, circulated and acquires a level of importance that was never intended. Avoid “Email Remorse”

  12. So What Should We Do? • When in doubt, pick up the phone • “Think before you click” “Don’t send email to someone you can throw stone at.”

  13. Projecting An Identity Watch out for: • Sense of humor • Sarcasm

  14. Handling Irritating Email • Trash it, ignore it? • Brief and to the point responses; • Respond to opinions with evidence or facts that are relevant; • Resist the temptation to fire of a response; • Pick up the phone – if you can keep cool

  15. Reduce Flaming Email • Read the original message again. You might be misinterpreting the message by the sender. • Draft a response and let it cool off for a time before sending it. Reconsider your response again after a walk to the coffee or ice cream shop. • Wait until the email is completed before writing the To: addresses. • Don’t get dragged in to tit for email-tat • Break the cycle of message and response. Pick up the phone.

  16. Some Protocols • Don’t Glance at your PDA during meeting • Don’t cut of your dialogue when PDA notifies of the incoming email • The case of multi-tasking

  17. Current Challenges with technology An Ugly Toll of Technology: • Impatience and Forgetfulness NY Times: “Hooked on Gadgets, and Paying a Mental Price”, June 7, 2010 • Carelessness and disregard for propriety in general

More Related