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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
One of the great challenges is the clarity of requests. While I try to make a response as detailed and definitive as possible, different email styles mean that what is being requested and what they are actually after are worlds apart. I've now adpoted a policy of once an email conversation reaches 3 emails, I'll pick up the phone to answer the question and get some clarity, and ultimately answer the question.
Thanks again Chris for incredibly practical and succinct advice.
Brevity is the current king! Long Live Brevity!
one method I use is a ticketing system, which cut out 1/3 of inbound email traffic. Why? because the "Thanks, Stephan" email after I complete something [aka: close the ticket] isn't delivered.
Sans-ticketing system, consider sending replies like this via a 'no-reply' account if you can.
Are you sure that is eye-catching enough :)?, but the flow has some what of a nice feel to it.
I felt that throwing out dates and times before warming into a conversation was rude, but in these busy times it's more rude not to!
Loving this subject.
So you don't answer press releases- any idea how to get them answered? Some of us need to do them for clients, and play the PR game.. but an edge would obviously help!
V
A: Take these "rules" and make them "personal" - to you!
For instance, I could NEVER write in short lists - because that's not ME.
I tend to be more elaborate - because I believe it is more friendly. And no, it may not be "business-like"... but then, I am not either.
Does it work for me? Yes. Will it work for you? I don't know. Test it.
That's what I mean by "make it personal - for you".
Nice tips, overall, thanks Chris.
All success
Dr.Mani
Then this blog post comes in!
Thanks.
I agree that lists via email are an extremely useful and helpful way to
*organize important points
*keep writer focused and off of rabbit trails
*keep the reader's attention
*ensure that important items aren't missed
When I need to really stress something in email I use colored text and I always provide a deadline for when I need answers to my questions. Most of the time this works in generating a quick response.
Your 1, 2, 3 method is definitely something else I will try.
Thanks for the great tips!
Thanks for the Google Docs tutorial. It's a great idea. BTW--how's that "bag of money" thing working out?
I think you should acknowledge that "Diane" is your mom, who reserves the right to over-rule or add her own editorial comments.
Personally, I think "mom as assistant" is a nice illusion for you. :-))
Can I have an assistant too?
"NEED YOUR FEEDBACK: You'd love an early Monday meeting, right?"
More often than not, I try to make the subject line humorous or lace it with office-friendly references and double entendre. I seem to get more responses that way.
If you cannot communicate what is compelling about your announcement in just a few words or sentences, then the editor just gets confused about what the story is about and then decides it is not worth his time to figure it out for you.
It's better to spend the time upfront honing a short but effective message to select people, rather than a long, crappy message and spending the time pitching it to as many people you can get to not listen to you ;-)
* what was involved in making this form
* understand that it would be a 15 min project, not a 60+ minute one, and
* create my own contact form for my site.
Thanks! (for this and all of the great content you so generously share with us all!)
It seems like there is a unifying mindset that these ideas seem to flow from. The idea that you do not just write an email with the "things" you want to say. You write an email with an eye towards what your end goal for the communication is.
Another great piece of advice is to keep the emotion out of responses. In many instances, emotion never is received the way it's intended for the recipient.
Using tools and scripts to auto-sort and remove junk from the Inbox is important but does require a regular check to ensure no one falls into the cracks of email filters.
Using colors and tagging in email is a great way to quickly organize and see what's going on in your email at any given time. I wrote a fairly lengthy post about this but it's helpful, Email Is Not a To-Do List! (Tutorial on Email Tagging). I focused on using Mozilla Thunderbird to do email tagging, in the examples.
Great advice, Chris. I use subject lines on a regular basis as it's needed: "URGENT," "TIMELY," "REVIEW," "REFERENCE" -- using these words before the subject line is to set the expectations on response and the priority.
~Joseph
- document collaboration (please take a look at the attached document)
- schedule coordination (when will you have the time to talk)
- task management (please finish the document by 10 tomorrow)
- discussions (what do you think about the new plan?)
And shift to online collaboration tools for the above, which offer specialized tools for each of the above. We did a whitepaper on this recently - http://www.hyperoffice.com/business-email-overl...
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