OhhâŠcâmon Spidermanđđ
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OhhâŠcâmon Spidermanđđ
I hate emailing physicians/research teams... so much stress over the perfect wording, and then when I don't know how to answer, I just delay answering, and next thing I know days have passed and they probably think I'm rude as hell.
True facts.
Emailing Etiquette 101
Sending emails can be scary!
No one ever really talks about the level of anxiety that comes with sending an email you know lots of people (or even one person if weâre being honest) will see. I remember it would take me ten minutes to reread every email obsessively before I sent it off. Even if the email was just a one-sentence reply (yikes)
Over the years Iâve had to get over that in a hurry. In this day and age, you cannot escape emailing EVERYONE, even my little sister in the 5th grade is emailing now. Crazy right?
Because email has become so commonplace over the past few years many of us have had to figure it out on our own. Where was that email communication 101 when you need it?
And that why sending emails can be so scary because most of us were never taught how to do so we kinda just have learned as we go.
That was me.
But now that Iâve had to send emails to all types of people from company CEOs to my great aunt, Iâve come up with the absolute most important tips you need to craft a perfect email every single time.
Don't write in big block paragraphs
This is the most important part of email communication in my opinion. I can tell immediately if someone is new to sending professional emails if they write in big never-ending paragraphs.
Itâs an innocent mistake but think about if you were writing a professional letter, say something like a cover letter. You wouldnât send it in within one big paragraph and hitch a salutation at the end, would you? That would make it impossible to read and since most people read emails on their phones that would make it near impossible to get through.
In almost all digital writing you need to make it skimmable.
Letâs be real, most people wonât read through the whole thing but people like to get the gist, and then if it captures their attention they go back to read the rest.
So make sure you separate your thoughts and make sure you're separating different thoughts, ideas, and questions. To make it easier you can use bullet points, bold text to create visual breaks. Make use of the formatting options that Gmail offers! They are at the bottom of every email you try to send.
P.S: If you canât find your formatting options, The âAâ option beside send will give you all the text formatting tools like bold, italic, underline etc.
Tailor your intro to the person you're talking to
Not this is THE MOST important part of sending emails people will want to actually open.
The issue with most of us is that after sending tons of emails it starts to become second nature. No matter who youâre talking to youâre saying the same things you probably arenât even aware of what the person youâre emailing really wants from you.
This goes from young professionals trying to send cold pitches or just emailing someone from your class. Everyone has different needs and you have to talk to that person in a way that addresses what they want.
An example of this is to say I was your coworker and you need a video from me so that you can finish a part of your project. Youâre not gonna send.
Example 1.
Hi Janice,
I wanted to check in to ask about our Williams project. I really need it by Monday or Iâll miss the deadline. Â Will it be ready by then?
Thanks,
Wanda
That message is very abrupt it only focuses on you and your goals to get the project in on time. Most people wonât react to your need, you need to also offer empathy and see what might motivate them to fulfill your request.
KEEP READINGÂ
Any fics where they have the wrong number but keep texting each other?
First one is texting, the second is emailing. Enjoy! ~Lynne
Little Numbers by  iknowitainteasy
Blaine sends a text message to a wrong number by accident. Things progress from there.
Also available on LJ or Download the PDF/EPUB
~~~~~
Is It Weird? Verse by @a-simple-rainbow
Blaine sends his Topics in Contemporary Music mid-term essay to the wrong e-mail address, writing an extra m where it was supposed to read Humel. Kurt, spending a semester abroad in Paris, is having a challenging night of essay writing and procrastination, and goes a little bit beyond letting Blaine know he got the wrong person, sparking what will soon be described as a âweird pen-palish thing we got going onâ that takes them both by surprise and leaves them hopeful and giddy.
Idk if this is ADHD thing, or just a me thing, but can anyone else just not email normally? Like, itâs either super super informal, or incredibly formal and impersonal, a style which includes extremely convoluted and unnecessarily complicated sentence structure, like when emailing a professor/teacher/whatever?
Like, in Freshman year, I ended my email to my English teacher with âregards, mynameâ