Thank You! Good to see this as there are too many inept users; Additionally: 1) ALL CAPS is the same as screaming - don’t do it. 2) Stay in the same Font, Color and Size please! Don’t make it an eye-chart. 3) If you need to emphasize something use BOLD or Highlight it. 4) Use a format that is pleasing to the eye - no one enjoys your boxes, changing indents, etc. 5) Minimize your graphics or images. Use attachments if necessary. 6) Make it easy to understand, i.e. brevity, isolate key points, and proofread to avoid ambiguity.
Thanks, Victoria, for raising our awareness to all these aspects of our daily e-mailing activities. Yes, we are well-advised to communicate openly about our e-mail-etiquette and make clear agreements about it. This makes life and communication easier and more cheerful for all of us.
My boss once sent me an email with a question mark, I responded with two question marks. Five minutes he was at my desk explaining what he wanted me to do with it. 😁
I agree with the part that will the sender wonder why I haven't responded if I'm just in the Cc section. Everyone has to play by the same rules or things get misinterpreted easily.
FYI CC = carbon copy, BCC = blind carbon copy... in the past a secretary would put a carbon sheet between the page being typed on the typewriter making a duplicate for other recipients.
I thought I had a reasonable etiquette but I was guilty for a couple of these. This talk just elevated my email skills to another level. I just started my workday and have already applied a couple of these rules. Thank you.
Re: greetings, I find it useful in active chains to open with “Thanks, (name)” to whomever’s point I’m replying. It’s not just polite but helps to keep the continuity more clear for readers coming into the chain in the middle or occasionally.
Re: greetings, I find it useful in active chains to open with “Thanks, (name)” to whoever’s point I’m replying to. It’s not just polite but helps to keep the continuity more clear for readers coming into the chain in the middle or occasionally.
Saw the thumbnail and thought that Bailey Quarters/ Jan Smithers had returned in new-fangled form. But luckily Victoria is a real person with some truly useful information. Thanks!
Ano Nym my point is that if we purely use email etiquette in every non-socialising situation then our socialising will become staid, lacking in personality. Surely the art of writing or videotape to keep attention needs more than limited responses or interaction. Having said that at least if either of us don’t like the channel we can chose a different channel. Thank goodness for differing tastes, it keeps the world in balance.
@@lesleyoliver5582 When a refugee tells his/her story emptional speech is suitable. But someone talking about email-ettiquette...lets say a blogpost could have been just as long as this comment. An ikea manual must'nt be a musical.
Ano Nym Really? I believe that ALL people have something to say not just from an emotional level. You say we should shortcut the chatter. So why did you comment and not simply. Move on to the next video. You see, we all have something to say that some may listen to whilst others may consider we are wasting their time. Curiously fascinating human being, I find.
There’s a lot of time spent on inbox management. We should be focusing on outbox management. This is a great talk and speaks so much to my firm views. This is great.
She’s got an air the entire talk that makes it seem as if she received one too many e-mails she didn’t like, and now she’s fed up and goes around teaching xD Edit: I thought she would talk about something very useful, such as how to organise prev reply text when one person in the conv messes up the thread.
May i suggest that the Ted Talk speakers prepare their speeches on a lesser narrative but more on graphics or visual presentation for an easy and good impact the viewers. Thank you.
Often use "Thanks in advance" to save on sending a follow up email. For example, if it's a task the respondent does as a service eg. buying stuff online. Or, sometimes when asking a rhetorical question eg booking an appointment.
The problem with all these "rules" is that they don't work if the other person is not aware of them. For work, there are only two sorts of email. Ones that are giving you information you need and ones trying to get you to do something. Unless it's your boss or team member you don't have to do other people's work for them. So you can ignore any others asking you for things. This talk doesn't recognise the multiculturalism in work places. It assumes everyone is English or english-speaking as a first language. So keep words simple and avoid slang terms. Also be explicit in what you say.
The other thing you can do if you'd otherwise be having a 2am emailing session is write them all in a word document or as drafts then copy/paste them all into emails in the morning. It also lets you sober up before emailing your boss which is nice.
Viva insights is great for delaying emails automatically. It will send the email during the receivers work hours. Especially good if you’re a manager that wants to signal that you don’t expect answers at midnight (even if you’re sending emails at that hour). Also if you work in different time zones. 😅furthermore, your outlook dosnt have to be open for it to send like the normal delay functionality.
Thanks in advance. 9:25 The full term when used correctly in the US is "Thanks in advance for your prompt attention in this matter". It implies a sense of urgency. Get it done and don't waste time with more emails.
There is to "etiquette" to my e-mails, I'll shoot straight to the point, no fluff, short and minimal answers. Unhappy ? Don't care, come talk to me if you want a "discussion" or more "entertainment". I don't say "hi" nor do I say bye or any other "usual letter ending stuff". Odd thing is, people have told me they enjoy talking to me over e-mail because it feels like they're just talking to me directly, and not to a formal version of myself.
A few months ago I had to miss a few days of school for a dance competition, so I emailed the teachers whose classes I’d be missing. This is the general template I used: Dear [teacher] Sorry to disturb your [time]. Unfortunately I will be missing the [class] on the [date] due to a(n) [reason]. I will make sure to [catch up/etc]. Thank you for your understanding, [signature] Now I feel bad for saying thank you in advance...
"Regards" sounds passive aggressive to me. I agree with the "Best wishes" idea. Although sometimes I use "Kind wishes" or "Warm wishes" in a less formal situation. Someone sent me an email signed off with "warm wishes" once and it really stuck with me because that's the only sign off that sounds genuine.
Thank you for this Ted talk. My emails always get misconstrued. Sometimes I wonder if I should be more mean to match the image in my email recipients’ minds.
If you have three points to make, send three different emails to three different people. If one of the points is actually absorbed and acted upon, consider yourself successful.
I don’t agree with the “Etiquette” part, though. There are MANY international companies that operate 24 hours. I send emails all the time when I’m scheduled to work at 2 a.m ~ especially if my boss or colleague or client is receiving the email in a different time zone.
I agree. This is nice ending, but not for every email. Change it up to make it relevant for each email. "Thanks for your help", "Have a great weekend", "Enjoy your weekend", "Take care", "Stay safe", "Many thanks".
you should never use BCC, unless you send an email to multiple recipients with a purely informational content (e.g. an email list you use for sending out informational articles to your clients). never use BCC in consequential emails (email with a consequential content)
I wish she had mentioned one of my pet-peeves... “Read-Receipts.” Maybe it’s just me, but I find them condescending from people I know on a personal or professional basis, and downright intrusive from those I don’t.
Well, I used 'Kind Regards' most of the times. The first time I received an email with this ending was from a British person. I thought it was more 'sweet' than a pompous way.
I love this! What happens if you're someone like me who has created for five emails over the years and just wasn't responsible with my email... Each one has hundreds or even thousands of unread emails. there's no way that in this lifetime I could possibly clean all those up without just deleting them and getting a fresh start. What do you think? maybe I can go back 3 months for each email address and just double check on those contacts.
Re:thanks, I usually only use “thanks” for greetings, as I commented earlier. Otherwise I like to say “Thank You”, because I reckon a pronoun is literally the least one can give. :) Thanks for teaching me not to thank in advance. Great point. Thank You!
I think I'll still go with the passive-aggressive "Thanks in advance" when it calls for it. I actually don't think it's that rude if you are asking something of someone that you know they will have to do.
Another tip in the body of the email is to double space your ideas. Most people read emails on mobile devices and a lot gets lost when you cram everything into one big long run on paragraph. Make it easy on the recipient. Unclear writing is a sign of unclear thoughts.
A few good thoughts here, but the aversion to detail in emails doesn't make sense in every situation, and I'd offer that most emails would do better with a more complete approach to logically ordering the facts needed to achieve whatever outcome the email is intended for. Communication is difficult because everyone speaks and listens through their own filters/context, so how does providing less information create more efficiency (unless the information was superfluous, of course), given some recipients may require all details/timelines/issues laid out in a digestible format that can be referred back to at a later date? This seems less of a primer for improved communication and more of a reaction to shortened attention spans, declining reading comprehension skills, and thin-skinned people who read aggression into every "thanks in advance". Ironically, as one of the other comments so helpfully suggested, her presentation was greatly improved by increasing video speed by 1.5. Thanks in advance for considering my perspective ;)
I'd say sign off with whatever is relevant in each email. Like you might end with "Thanks for your help." or "Thanks for your support." or "Thanks for your understanding." You might want to consider some other responses such as (on a Monday) "Have a great week." or (on a Friday) "Have a great weekend." Or in these challenging times, why not end with "Take care" or "Stay safe"! :-)
I think this is the first time I’m saying this about a TED Talk but I disagree with some of what the speaker is conveying. IME, leaders who send one word emails (e.g. ?) are not necessarily poor communicators as many align with their team directly to explain their “email language” which is created for brevity and efficiency.
There's not even a single thing she mentions in 15 minutes I didn't already know. So either me and everyone in my company are doing it right or she has nothing substantial to say. Maybe next time reflect on 5:00 before stealing our time.
As a pastor's kid, I kinda absorbed my dad's way to end emails, he uses, "In His bonds", which is perfect becayse my first office job is Christian, I don't know if I shiuld keep it though.
Quite a good summary but got off track from the CC rule… well it would be nice if everyone followed it but if only you do it and they mention your name and you ignore the email just because you are CC’d in vs addressed in the TO entry then it’s a broken/flawed concept, also you can be CC’d and later directly addressed and then what? Ignore it? Just treat each email as important as any other unless you 100% know everyone follows the CC rule, I know that we all need to take any recommendations with a grain of salt but people do listen to advice and will take things to the extreme. Also “Best wishes” sounds to informal, as a friendly sign off 100% agree but not a serious formal email, Kind Regards works well and commonly accepted as formal reply by all in most industries
someone got really pissed off because they got rickrolled after handing out their business card to people so they made an entire ted talk about it, i can sense it
I dont think : ok, received, agreed, approved is rude... we do have to be quick and efficient at work. Though I do agree that the question mark is... 2 is cruel...3 agressive for sure. Well noted for the sign off.
Im extremely dissapointed she didnt end this speech with "Best wishes"
Bob The Chair or Thanks in advance 👍🏽
It's TED talk. Not an email.
YES! Me too!
She should’ve said “God bless”
Lovely talk, but I suggest listening at 1.5x speed
This was really helpful thanks!
1.25 and you can still take notes
Saved me time, thanks 😊
Hehe thank you :)
Appreciate it.. Just sounds like she's running out of breath..
It seemed like the silliest topic but when I watched the WHOLE video I realized it was really useful. Thanks TED.
I agree.
@@Aritul st_
Thank You!
Good to see this as there are too many inept users;
Additionally:
1) ALL CAPS is the same as screaming - don’t do it.
2) Stay in the same Font, Color and Size please! Don’t make it an eye-chart.
3) If you need to emphasize something use BOLD or Highlight it.
4) Use a format that is pleasing to the eye - no one enjoys your boxes, changing indents, etc.
5) Minimize your graphics or images. Use attachments if necessary.
6) Make it easy to understand, i.e. brevity, isolate key points, and proofread to avoid ambiguity.
You changed indents on #4, but I enjoyed your comment anyway.
Good stuff! But the most important etiquette for email is to read the email yourself before you hit Send!
Yes
Thanks, Victoria, for raising our awareness to all these aspects of our daily e-mailing activities. Yes, we are well-advised to communicate openly about our e-mail-etiquette and make clear agreements about it. This makes life and communication easier and more cheerful for all of us.
My boss once sent me an email with a question mark, I responded with two question marks. Five minutes he was at my desk explaining what he wanted me to do with it. 😁
15:25 Why did she sign off with "thank you" when she taught us to sign off with "Best Wishes" ?
Sincerely and Thanks in Advance,
Confused
lmao
To prove a point that it's not an email?...
As someone who usually ends with "thanks" or "thank you" I feel validated by the ending.
Are you a Damn Executive Officer (DEO) of something?
The problem is person whom I will send these emails, are not enlightened enough to watch this video and know these rules
I suggest you set an example by using these rules yourself. Exempla trahunt.
@@nepozabime Thanks.
Also sent this video's link to my team members.
I agree with the part that will the sender wonder why I haven't responded if I'm just in the Cc section. Everyone has to play by the same rules or things get misinterpreted easily.
Haven't ever thought, but this is a part of my college assignment😌
Should be taught in school! Just like they taught us how to write a ( snail mail ) letter back in the day.
Buddcar Cook it is and I’m struggling
FYI CC = carbon copy, BCC = blind carbon copy... in the past a secretary would put a carbon sheet between the page being typed on the typewriter making a duplicate for other recipients.
I thought I had a reasonable etiquette but I was guilty for a couple of these. This talk just elevated my email skills to another level. I just started my workday and have already applied a couple of these rules. Thank you.
Re: greetings, I find it useful in active chains to open with “Thanks, (name)” to whomever’s point I’m replying. It’s not just polite but helps to keep the continuity more clear for readers coming into the chain in the middle or occasionally.
Re: greetings, I find it useful in active chains to open with “Thanks, (name)” to whoever’s point I’m replying to. It’s not just polite but helps to keep the continuity more clear for readers coming into the chain in the middle or occasionally.
Really enjoyed it- 15 minutes of worth watching as if it was a minute
Saw the thumbnail and thought that Bailey Quarters/ Jan Smithers had returned in new-fangled form. But luckily Victoria is a real person with some truly useful information. Thanks!
This could have been shorter. I would like to suggest using your E-Mail etiquette in every non-socializing situation.
Sounds like becoming a roobot.
@@lesleyoliver5582 You decide what a socializing situation is.
Ano Nym my point is that if we purely use email etiquette in every non-socialising situation then our socialising will become staid, lacking in personality. Surely the art of writing or videotape to keep attention needs more than limited responses or interaction. Having said that at least if either of us don’t like the channel we can chose a different channel. Thank goodness for differing tastes, it keeps the world in balance.
@@lesleyoliver5582 When a refugee tells his/her story emptional speech is suitable. But someone talking about email-ettiquette...lets say a blogpost could have been just as long as this comment.
An ikea manual must'nt be a musical.
Ano Nym Really? I believe that ALL people have something to say not just from an emotional level. You say we should shortcut the chatter. So why did you comment and not simply. Move on to the next video. You see, we all have something to say that some may listen to whilst others may consider we are wasting their time. Curiously fascinating human being, I find.
There’s a lot of time spent on inbox management. We should be focusing on outbox management. This is a great talk and speaks so much to my firm views. This is great.
She’s got an air the entire talk that makes it seem as if she received one too many e-mails she didn’t like, and now she’s fed up and goes around teaching xD
Edit: I thought she would talk about something very useful, such as how to organise prev reply text when one person in the conv messes up the thread.
May i suggest that the Ted Talk speakers prepare their speeches on a lesser narrative but more on graphics or visual presentation for an easy and good impact the viewers. Thank you.
Will Garcia Zapanta YUP!
That's a good suggestion. It might help those viewers who are hearing impaired.
Lovely! I love this woman, her intelligence! Fantastic!
it's super nice when talks are this practical
This was a great video on a simple, everyday task that we all thought we were doing correctly!
"Best wishes" sounds like it's Christmas.....? XD
she on the talk cuz she THICK bro
I always think wedding when I see it.
makes me think of saying good-bye as ond leaves on a deadly adventure
I actually hate it and don’t like it when people use it. Worst is ‘BW’ or ‘Bw’. 🤢.
My boss needs to watch this.
showed this video to him/her yet?
It's all about the preference and knowing your audience.
"Thanks in advance" is so passive aggressive for me
Omg - I didnt have a problem to use "Thanks in advance" in most of my response. Cant imagine the kind of attitude it delivered to the receivers.
Often use "Thanks in advance" to save on sending a follow up email. For example, if it's a task the respondent does as a service eg. buying stuff online. Or, sometimes when asking a rhetorical question eg booking an appointment.
this is "Essential"
I've never known how to write emails😂
Loved the video and delivery of the talk.
I as an immigrant learned so much. I did not know that email could be so much important.
15:24 I expected her to say "best wishes"
Why? she not ending an email
This is not email. It's TED talk.
Very helpful now I know the best sign off to use Thank you
The problem with all these "rules" is that they don't work if the other person is not aware of them. For work, there are only two sorts of email. Ones that are giving you information you need and ones trying to get you to do something. Unless it's your boss or team member you don't have to do other people's work for them. So you can ignore any others asking you for things.
This talk doesn't recognise the multiculturalism in work places. It assumes everyone is English or english-speaking as a first language. So keep words simple and avoid slang terms. Also be explicit in what you say.
perfection overloaded.
The other thing you can do if you'd otherwise be having a 2am emailing session is write them all in a word document or as drafts then copy/paste them all into emails in the morning. It also lets you sober up before emailing your boss which is nice.
Love her dress! Wish I knew where it was from.
Costco
Learned a few things from this and got some clarity. Thank you!
Viva insights is great for delaying emails automatically. It will send the email during the receivers work hours. Especially good if you’re a manager that wants to signal that you don’t expect answers at midnight (even if you’re sending emails at that hour). Also if you work in different time zones. 😅furthermore, your outlook dosnt have to be open for it to send like the normal delay functionality.
Really liked it 😀 thanks for this in advance mam
Thanks in advance. 9:25 The full term when used correctly in the US is "Thanks in advance for your prompt attention in this matter". It implies a sense of urgency. Get it done and don't waste time with more emails.
Why is ‘’Kind regards’’ not a good way to end an email ? I didn’t understand
That's a good question. I think that's just her opinion.
Could it be a British Vs American etiquette maybe ? I use "Kind regards" because all my British colleagues were using it.
Alexa takes care of all my emails. Thanks in advance
There is to "etiquette" to my e-mails, I'll shoot straight to the point, no fluff, short and minimal answers.
Unhappy ? Don't care, come talk to me if you want a "discussion" or more "entertainment".
I don't say "hi" nor do I say bye or any other "usual letter ending stuff". Odd thing is, people have told me they enjoy talking to me over e-mail because it feels like they're just talking to me directly, and not to a formal version of myself.
Good stuff, but a talk about how to keep email concise and not waste peoples' time should probably not be longer than 5 minutes.
Can't believe i found such a boring subject, interesting. Great job.
And that's a baaaddd red dress and she's wearing it!
Great talk!
brilliantly explained e-mailing process
Thanks for the info about BCC. Seventy percent of my communication at work is through email and I will DEFINITELY put BCC to use.
Imagine my disappointment when she said ‘Kind Regards’ was too pompous. That’s my go-to sign off 😔
Très pertinent sur les nouveaux modes de communication
A few months ago I had to miss a few days of school for a dance competition, so I emailed the teachers whose classes I’d be missing. This is the general template I used:
Dear [teacher]
Sorry to disturb your [time]. Unfortunately I will be missing the [class] on the [date] due to a(n) [reason]. I will make sure to [catch up/etc].
Thank you for your understanding,
[signature]
Now I feel bad for saying thank you in advance...
Thanks in that context sounds fine to me.
I think your email is very nice. "Thanks for your understanding" is perfect at the end.
"Regards" sounds passive aggressive to me. I agree with the "Best wishes" idea. Although sometimes I use "Kind wishes" or "Warm wishes" in a less formal situation. Someone sent me an email signed off with "warm wishes" once and it really stuck with me because that's the only sign off that sounds genuine.
I was waiting for that signing off line I.e thanks in advance😂
I really like the speaker. Great presenting skills.
I think most of those sign offs she mentioned not to use are ok. What's wrong with varying it a little?
Thank you for this Ted talk. My emails always get misconstrued. Sometimes I wonder if I should be more mean to match the image in my email recipients’ minds.
This is an awesome presentation
Best wishes
If you have three points to make, send three different emails to three different people. If one of the points is actually absorbed and acted upon, consider yourself successful.
I don’t agree with the “Etiquette” part, though. There are MANY international companies that operate 24 hours. I send emails all the time when I’m scheduled to work at 2 a.m ~ especially if my boss or colleague or client is receiving the email in a different time zone.
Just sign off with "have a great day"
I agree. This is nice ending, but not for every email. Change it up to make it relevant for each email. "Thanks for your help", "Have a great weekend", "Enjoy your weekend", "Take care", "Stay safe", "Many thanks".
This sounds more like a high school presentation than a ted talk
I also like to compose the subject last to summarize neatly.
Especially useful when you feel the urge of sending email, but you have no idea what to write about.
you should never use BCC, unless you send an email to multiple recipients with a purely informational content (e.g. an email list you use for sending out informational articles to your clients). never use BCC in consequential emails (email with a consequential content)
This was a very helpful talk! Thanks! :D
It was extremely useful. 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
✈🚀💥😆😅😄 VIVA CHAVEZ ! Maduro se queda!
I can't believe everyone doesn't know and do this already
I wish she had mentioned one of my pet-peeves... “Read-Receipts.” Maybe it’s just me, but I find them condescending from people I know on a personal or professional basis, and downright intrusive from those I don’t.
Well, I used 'Kind Regards' most of the times. The first time I received an email with this ending was from a British person. I thought it was more 'sweet' than a pompous way.
I DEFINITELY think there is a difference between British vs. English signing styles.
I am so surprised about this. I use that most as well. I switched it to 'Best Regards'.
I have also seen 'Kind regards' a lot while working in the UK. I find it nicer and warmer than 'Best wishes'.
What about just Thanks?! What does Best Wishes mean if Thanks in advance is inappropriate
Great tips
What about starting with Blessings?
golden advice
Those emails that are signed off ‘best’
Plz provide all video with English subtitles.
Thankyou so much!
I love this! What happens if you're someone like me who has created for five emails over the years and just wasn't responsible with my email... Each one has hundreds or even thousands of unread emails. there's no way that in this lifetime I could possibly clean all those up without just deleting them and getting a fresh start. What do you think? maybe I can go back 3 months for each email address and just double check on those contacts.
Thank u all very much
Re:thanks, I usually only use “thanks” for greetings, as I commented earlier. Otherwise I like to say “Thank You”, because I reckon a pronoun is literally the least one can give. :) Thanks for teaching me not to thank in advance. Great point. Thank You!
I think I'll still go with the passive-aggressive "Thanks in advance" when it calls for it. I actually don't think it's that rude if you are asking something of someone that you know they will have to do.
Another tip in the body of the email is to double space your ideas.
Most people read emails on mobile devices and a lot gets lost when you cram everything into one big long run on paragraph. Make it easy on the recipient.
Unclear writing is a sign of unclear thoughts.
A few good thoughts here, but the aversion to detail in emails doesn't make sense in every situation, and I'd offer that most emails would do better with a more complete approach to logically ordering the facts needed to achieve whatever outcome the email is intended for. Communication is difficult because everyone speaks and listens through their own filters/context, so how does providing less information create more efficiency (unless the information was superfluous, of course), given some recipients may require all details/timelines/issues laid out in a digestible format that can be referred back to at a later date?
This seems less of a primer for improved communication and more of a reaction to shortened attention spans, declining reading comprehension skills, and thin-skinned people who read aggression into every "thanks in advance". Ironically, as one of the other comments so helpfully suggested, her presentation was greatly improved by increasing video speed by 1.5.
Thanks in advance for considering my perspective ;)
PSA: BEFORE you click reply, check for any DL's in the adress list.
What loooks like a single adress could infact be a thousand or more.
I usually end my emails with "Thanks for your time/patience", meaning "Thanks for the time you spent reading the email". Is it that bad?
'Thanks for your patience' sounds like you're wasting the other person's time in some way.
@@LeeKnowsCatss well, somehow. The reader spent some time for sure. I hope it s spent, and not wasted.
I'd say sign off with whatever is relevant in each email. Like you might end with "Thanks for your help." or "Thanks for your support." or "Thanks for your understanding." You might want to consider some other responses such as (on a Monday) "Have a great week." or (on a Friday) "Have a great weekend." Or in these challenging times, why not end with "Take care" or "Stay safe"! :-)
Very important advice
I think this is the first time I’m saying this about a TED Talk but I disagree with some of what the speaker is conveying. IME, leaders who send one word emails (e.g. ?) are not necessarily poor communicators as many align with their team directly to explain their “email language” which is created for brevity and efficiency.
Hi Everyone,
I was just wondering, did she mention, proofread your email before sending it?
Best Wishes!
yep
thanks.
I’ve been wrong all along. Especially with the “thanks in advance” lol
There's not even a single thing she mentions in 15 minutes I didn't already know. So either me and everyone in my company are doing it right or she has nothing substantial to say. Maybe next time reflect on 5:00 before stealing our time.
My HR department needs to hire her to train people. You're lucky.
That's why I started off the video at 1.5x speed.
@@Jasmine-fu7qr Thanks, at least I learnt something from your comment! Now working on getting my 15 minutes back over the next few weeks.
Maybe dont say "our time" if you mean "my time"? Ive learned something new from this video, i.e. the cc rule. Thanks for that
As a pastor's kid, I kinda absorbed my dad's way to end emails, he uses, "In His bonds", which is perfect becayse my first office job is Christian, I don't know if I shiuld keep it though.
My Replika send me this... Why though
Quite a good summary but got off track from the CC rule… well it would be nice if everyone followed it but if only you do it and they mention your name and you ignore the email just because you are CC’d in vs addressed in the TO entry then it’s a broken/flawed concept, also you can be CC’d and later directly addressed and then what? Ignore it? Just treat each email as important as any other unless you 100% know everyone follows the CC rule, I know that we all need to take any recommendations with a grain of salt but people do listen to advice and will take things to the extreme.
Also “Best wishes” sounds to informal, as a friendly sign off 100% agree but not a serious formal email, Kind Regards works well and commonly accepted as formal reply by all in most industries
someone got really pissed off because they got rickrolled after handing out their business card to people so they made an entire ted talk about it, i can sense it
This is what rich people think about instead of things that are worth thinking about
Cheybat ha ha...first-world problems
Is "rich people" == "working people" in your world? Don't worry. It's easy to get a job
my email signature is
Sent from the future, beware spoilers.
Adding a spoiler alert after the spoilers? Timey-wimey.
I think everyone but me used my email
..wish I could learn more about it's uses when it mattered
Everything important should be included in the first sentence. They are not going to read the second sentence most of the time anyway.
I dont think : ok, received, agreed, approved is rude... we do have to be quick and efficient at work. Though I do agree that the question mark is... 2 is cruel...3 agressive for sure. Well noted for the sign off.