ABCs of Email Etiquette Flashcards
A
Acronyms such as TMI (too munch information) or LOL. (Laugh out loud) can confuse/annoy email recipients.
B
Be sure to double-check the address to which you are sending.
C
Cluttered e-mails waste time and effort.
D
Default settings are the best choice when e-mailing someone whose technology tools are unknown to you.
E
Excessive punctuation should be avoided!!!!!!!!!
F
Sending an angry e-mail message–is always unacceptable.
G
Grammar counts.
H
Humor sarcasm, or irony easily can be misinterpreted in an e-mail, where the tone of your voice is lost.
I
Include a subject line in all e-mails that will be meaningful and memorable to both you and the recipient.
J
Judgement is essential when forwarding e-mails.
K
Keep the body of your e-mails short and to the point.
L
Limit each line of an e-mail to fewer than 75 characters.
M
Mind your manners.
N
Never send anything by e-mail you would not want made public.
O
Opening an unexpected attachment can be dangerous
P
Publicisiing someone else’s e-mail address without their permission is an invasion of their privacy.
Q
Quick! Get to the point!
R
Replying to spam–even to unsubscribe–confirms to the spammer that your e-mail address is arrive, and results in even more spam.
S
T
Time matters. Reply to e-mails within 24 hours, if possible. When sending the email, use the “request read receipt” feature.
U
UPPERCASE WORDS LIKE SHOUTING.
V
Very large files or attachments can crash recipients’ e-mail programs–or worse, their servers send a website address instead–or ask the recipients permission to send the file.
W
Warnings about hoaxes, computer viruses, or other “urgent” may be fine.
X
eXort caution when opening links within an email…someone may be phishing for your personal information.
Y
Your tone in an e-mail should reflect who the recipient is, not the communication medium you’re using.
Z
Zip your lip! Email is personal correspondence. You should never–without permission from the sender– quote publicly from, or forward to a pubic forum, a private email sent to you.