5 email etiquette tips that just might change your life

5 email etiquette tips that just might change your life

Get the scoop on jargon, sign-offs, and common faux pas from an executive communications coach.

5-second summary
  • If you’re among the millions of professionals who’ve transitioned to distributed or hybrid work, you’re probably using email more than ever.
  • Common breaches of professional email etiquette include excessive familiarity, excessive formality, and accidentally leading people to believe you’re ghosting them.
  • The key to a good email game is empathizing with your audience.

Mastering the nuances of email in a professional context is a high-stakes game. When you get it right, email is a convenient, effective tool for expressing yourself and exchanging information. But one misstep can damage your relationship with colleagues or clients.

To help us all avoid the embarrassment of erroneous email usage, we turned to Ellen Jovin. She’s an executive communications consultant, creator of the Grammar Table (a Q&A pop-up, sure to make any high school English teacher smile), and author of “Rebel with a Clause: Tales and Tips from a Roving Grammarian.”

Here’s how Ellen answered our most burning email-related questions.

1. As chat and video calls become ever-more prevalent, what role does email play in today’s workplace? 

Although my clients communicate via chat apps and video calls far more than they did previously, they still have a massive amount of email. Email is used internally, it’s used for client and vendor communications, it’s used for discussions that require written records (i.e., a nonpaper paper trail!), and it’s central in many other functions.

Email is certainly the dominant communication method in my own working life, although you could say I live a double life. When I am not at work, I sometimes message friends and family without any capitalization or punctuation! But in my workplace role, I’m scrupulously careful about what I send out from my computer. Good email skills can transform people’s professional lives.

2. How do you think email etiquette in a professional context differs from personal use? 

Well, you don’t typically share cookie recipes or tell Grandma you love her in a work email, but I think many people imagine that the difference between personal and professional email is greater than it is.

If you write naturally and comfortably in personal email but then sound like a jargon robot in your work email, you might want to rethink your professional email voice. People often try to sound sophisticated at work, but in trying, they may adopt a false or unnatural way of communicating. For example:

Hi Jackie,
As per your request, please find attached the illustration.

compared to…

Hi Jackie,
I’ve attached the illustration you asked for.

Your work email should have a style that matches the person you are. Work email can sound like you and still be utterly professional.

3. What are some of the worst (and/or most common) breaches of email etiquette?

We all make mistakes, but it’s important to minimize them in email. Errors – whether in numbers, words, punctuation, or anything else – dent perceptions of the writer’s professionalism.

4. Ok, so what’s your advice for using email to maximum effect?

Audience awareness is everything. At work, I’m trying to make other people’s lives easier. That means brevity and simplicity. It also means not causing unnecessary labor for others. Forwarding a long email dialogue with “What do you think?” at the top is an example of creating unnecessary labor.

Be vigilant about bad habits, because they can creep up on you over the years. Can you think of someone whose email you dread receiving? What do you dislike about it? Endless paragraphs, rude tone, tangled sentences, piles of jargon, confusing errors? Whatever it is, make sure you are doing the opposite in the communication you send out.

5. How have the rules or norms for email shifted over the past decade, and how do you think they might continue to evolve over time?

Emails used to look more like letters. Many excellent ones still do, even though “Dear So-and-so” as an opener continues to decline. (In my own working life, that letterlike greeting is now rare, though I see it in academia, at museums, in fundraising, and in other professional and international contexts.)

I find that people are also more likely to skip openings and closings entirely, especially in ongoing email dialogues, so back-and-forth exchanges can often end up resembling chat. I tend to mirror what my clients do, so I wait for them to initiate no-greeting, no-closing messages rather than initiating those myself.

I can’t imagine how much more email could actually change, because we still have to put words into sentences. I try not to predict the future, though, as whatever I picture will surely be wrong!

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