![]() Here are eight easily avoidable mistakes you should know about to keep your image and inbox in tip-top shape. |
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1 |
Failing to follow e-mail etiquette. I believe in the old adage, "You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar." There's no point in belaboring the etiquette issue. We all know we should be polite. But here are a few points to consider: |
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Don't write when you're angry. Wait 24 hours. Calm down. Be reasonable. Have someone else edit your e-mail. |
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Don't use sarcasm. You may think you're clever, but the recipient will be put off. |
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DON'T USE ALL UPPERCASE! That's the e-mail equivalent of yelling. Your recipient won't be appreciative. Go easy on the exclamation marks, too. Overuse dulls their effectiveness. |
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Use clear subject lines. That will help people decide whether to read the e-mail now or later. We're all busy. Your correspondent will appreciate your thoughtfulness. |
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Keep it short. If your e-mail is more than two paragraphs, maybe you should use the telephone. |
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Change the subject line if you change the topic of a thread. |
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Unless the recipient has previously agreed, don't forward poems, jokes, virus warnings and other things. You're just wasting valuable time and bandwidth. |
2 |
Thinking you are
anonymous. If you are sending nasty missives, you
might think no one will be able to figure out that the
e-mail came from you. After all, you set up a phony Web
address. Think again. E-mail contains invisible
information about the sender. |
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In Microsoft Outlook, double click the e-mail. Then click View > Options. |
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In Microsoft Outlook Express, click the e-mail. Then click File > Properties and select the Details tab. |
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In Eudora, double click the message. Then click the Blah Blah button. |
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In Netscape, click the
message to open it. Then click View > Message Source to
display the header. |
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The sender's revealing
information is in the sections that begin with
"Received:." There may be several of these, depending on
the number of computers the e-mail traversed. The
originating computer is in the bottom "Received:." |
3 |
Sending e-mail to the
wrong person. Today's e-mail programs want to make
it easy to send e-mail. This means that when you start
typing the address of a recipient to whom you have
previously sent mail, the "To:" field may already be
populated. Be careful. Always double-check the recipient
is the intended one. |
4 |
Using one e-mail address
for everything. I have four different e-mail
addresses: private, public, one I use for online mailing
lists, and another for when I go shopping online. These
addresses attract mail for those specific areas. |
5 |
Forgetting to check all of your e-mail accounts. Checking all these accounts can be a chore, especially from home. So I use ePrompter (www.eprompter.com), which can check 16 different password- protected accounts. Best of all, ePrompter is free. There are other programs that will do this for a fee, including Active Email Monitor (www.emailmon.com). |
6 |
Clicking "Send" too fast.
Reread every e-mail before you send it! I actually get
e-mails from job applicants with misspellings and
missing words. They all go to the same place: the
garbage. This is a pet peeve. I'm not going to hire
someone who is careless.Even if you're not looking for a
job, you want to be careful. People will judge you
subconsciously on mistakes. None of us is perfect. But
you can catch 99% of these problems by rereading the
text. |
7 |
Forgetting the
attachment. This seems obvious, but I can't tell you
how many times I've received an e-mail with a missing
attachment. Since we all do it occasionally, it
shouldn't be a huge deal. |
8 |
Using your ISP's domain
and not your own. Make your company look big. If you
use a Web account or an ISP's name for your business,
you're not going to look professional. You can buy a
domain name separately for 700-1000 Rs/- per year from a
company such as
DataInfosys (www.registerit.in),. Assuming someone else
hasn't already grabbed it, you can have your company in
the domain name. |