More things you should NEVER do in Office Email
Replies
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Carefully check if using autocorrect. The President of our company went by Stu (short for Stewart), in my response to one of his emails I was shocked to see autocorrect changed his name to Stud. .:blushing:0
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Never e-mail when you can walk to their office and tell them.
This. Documentation is a thing, particularly when people are asking you to complete tasks related to job performance and all. Someone can deny having a verbal conversation with you, but they can't deny the email sitting right there in the inbox, and in your outbox.
And most of the things you guys are saying I don't consider appropriate for any written communication. Aside from maybe smileys, but only when texting. I don't use textspeak when I text because it's irksome to read and I wouldn't inflict it on anyone else either. If typing 3 letters for 'you' is WAY more strain than typing one letter for 'u' then I would suggest you have larger problems to worry about.
Er...sorry. i wud sugst u hv lrgr prblms 2 wury abt
Edit: good lord typing that made me feel dirty. *shudder*0 -
My rules that I have used since I started using e-mail
Never write it in an e-mail if you would never say it face to face.
Never e-mail when you can walk to their office and tell them.
Never use reply all, that way you can't screw it up.
On rule 3, I always email. There's a trail of responsibility there. If I speak to an engineer and they say they are going to do what I asked, and then they don't do what I asked, then there is no proof I ever spoke to the engineer. I even email after I talk to someone to confirm our conversation. C.Y.A. all the time. There are rats EVERYWHERE.0 -
Double check before you use "reply all"
^^This0 -
Use the phrase (for example): "Please contact Bob or myself"
You can't contact MYSELF! If you take Bob out of the phrase you wouldn't say "Please contact myself", you'd say "Please contact ME".
YES YES YES. Thank you! Also, sometimes, "me" is the correct word choice, when confused as to whether you should use "me" or "I." This is one of those instances. Would you say, "Please contact I"? Using "me" where grammatically correct doesn't make you sound like a hillbilly, contrary to what everyone's mothers have told us.Never e-mail when you can walk to their office and tell them.I have to disagree with that one. I don't need people walking into my office unannounced, interrupting me 20 times a day to tell me something that could have been emailed. Plus, if you email me, I have it right there, documented, and I can refer back to it. If you just tell me, I have to write it down myself and track it.
This. Documentation is a thing, particularly when people are asking you to complete tasks related to job performance and all. Someone can deny having a verbal conversation with you, but they can't deny the email sitting right there in the inbox, and in your outbox.
I have to agree with the disagreements. Also, email is very useful if my coworker is on, say, a conference call in her office (which is right next door to mine), and she needs me to grab something for her or needs to ask me a question that she wouldn't otherwise be able to unless she momentarily excused herself from the call. Plus, if it's noisy in the general office area (which happens occasionally), we both shut our doors, and then email is the best option. Her desk is a long way from her door, although I have the luxury of having a tiny office (heh) where I can reach the door from my chair.0 -
Double check before you use "reply all"
Oh my gosh...^^^^^THIS!!!!!
Use punctuation and re-read the email before hiting send0 -
Never edit someone's message and then forward it. My former manager does this.
Seriously?? Wow!0 -
-Have your photo in your signature(creepy as duck and totally jarring before coffee)
People actually do that??
we do this
Really?
Seems highly unprofessional to me.0 -
Don't trust automatic spell correction. A few years ago I was sending a quick evaluation of an employee to another manager and it auto-corrected my misspelling if conscientious changing it to contentious.0
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An EVP at my company uses the following..a lot!
NP
Thx
u (instead of You)
U20 -
Don't trust automatic spell correction. A few years ago I was sending a quick evaluation of an employee to another manager and it auto-corrected my misspelling if conscientious changing it to contentious.
...ouch.0 -
Like the word "DOCK" for instance.
Example:
"this authorization is for the construction of a 4' by 250' DOCK, with a 6' by 20' terminal platform.
As luck would have it, the i is right next to the O
I work in a shipping office and I've done this numerous times. Luckily I've always caught myself! So far, at least.
I have to agree with the double checking of EVERYTHING. Too many times I've read e-mails from supervisors, higher ups, etc that have all kinds of spelling errors and run-on sentences from hell.
I had someone type me an email and they meant to type COUNT but left out the O.0 -
I work in a huge government building, and my sister and mother both work int he same building, just in seperate divisions. SO often people will just type the first 2 letters of my last name into the outlook database we use for emails and send it to the first result (my mom.) I feel so bad for her because she gets so many of my emails. I have to b*** at the people in my office about it. STOP EMAILING MY MOMMY lol0
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So many email pet-peeves......
bad grammar and spelling (really, people? Did you go to school for this? How did you pass an English class?) My boss is a notorious misspeller and horrific grammarizer (is that a word??)
I hate, hate when you have an original email, it goes to a few people, then a few people more - everyone commenting and adding, but NEVER EVER deleting any of the crap down below that is no longer relevant! Emails that are 10 pages with lines and lines of signatures and nonsense are irritating as hell.0 -
My husband and I worked together at a small construction & engineering firm. I sent him a message one day telling him how I wasn't feeling well, or I had had a bad day.. I can't remember exactly, but obviously it came in at about the same time as a message from a coworker of ours and he accidentally replied to him... "I'm sorry, sweetie, I'll make it up to you when we get home"
The guy was a good sport and replied something along the lines of "Well, sweetie, I'm not sure what you are talking about, but what do you have in mind"
It was a very small office and we all knew each other well.. but, you really have to watch who you are replying to!0 -
Or when you think you're reporting someone for foul language and how they're acting in the office, when instead of sending the email to your boss it was sent to that person, FML!!! LOL
I laughed like crazy when i read this one! I did this once to a bff, about her husband... message meant for my husband. whoops!!!0 -
Spell-check is great...but if it's still a "real" word, the e-brain isn't going to pick it up....I work in public land management....miss the "L" out of public and it's a whole different sort of work!0
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Or when you think you're reporting someone for foul language and how they're acting in the office, when instead of sending the email to your boss it was sent to that person, FML!!! LOL
I laughed like crazy when i read this one! I did this once to a bff, about her husband... message meant for my husband. whoops!!!
I once thought I was forwarding one of my boss' emails to my wife with a "see what a complete idiot this guy is" message. I realized the second I clicked the Send button that I'd hit reply not forward. Luckily, right that second my boss walked past my office headed to the bathroom. I ran to his office, deleted the email and emptied his deleted mail folder. sometimes, you get lucky.....0 -
my wife had been talking with her boss about gardening one day and she'd mentioned a type of flowering bush we had which had a very strong sweet smell. Couple days later her boss was trying to tell his wife they should plant one but couldn't remember the type. Called my wife in her office and she answered on speaker phone. "Hey, jackie, what's the name of your sweet smelling bush?"0
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Double check before you use "reply all"
This so much. We have almost 2000 employees at our headquarters building (including manufacturing). Someone will send out an email to EVERYONE with something like "Missing Box for parts from Acme Widgets". Then people will use reply all to tell the sender to check with so and so, and then another person will reply all with something like 'oh I saw that box on the receiving dock'. Then finally the original sender will reply all again with 'missing box found'.
AAARRRRRGGGG
quick way to crash an email system. Send an email to All users (whatever group your company uses) and click the option to get receipts when the email is read, forwarded, deleted, etc. I worked for a major tobacco company that owned a major brewing company (about 50,000 employees) at one time and some idiot did that. And a bunch of people responded to the original email with "don't email everybody, you dope" by clicking the "reply all" button. Took 2 days to get the email system functional again.0 -
Have the quote "Don't take life to seriously, nobody gets out alive anyways" as a signature and a blue cloudy background. Yep, a coworker of mine has that.0
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Use cc instead of bcc on group emails.0
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People need to watch what they're forwarding. Sometimes my boss forwards us stuff where only the last mail contains any important information for us but on the bottom you can see a whole long conversation between two people that clearly wasn't meant to be forwarded as well.0
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Don't plan to end your email with "Regards" ... The "g" and the "t" are awfully close together and if you don't look it over before you send........ awkwaaaaaaaaard..
Best Retards,
TMAN...0 -
DO NOT HAVE AT THE BOTTOM OF YOUR EMAIL A DISCLAIMER STATING " I AM NOT YELLING AT YOU, I TYPE ALL EMAILS IN CAPITAL LETTERS, I FIND IT EASIER TO TYPE THIS WAY", THIS IS FROM A SENIOR MTG UNDERWRITER AND SHE STILL HAS IT TO THIS DAY, ITS BEEN 2 YEARS!0
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Don't sign off with 'kind retards' instead of 'kind regards'.......
I'm so glad I'm not the only one to have done this!0 -
Double check before you use "reply all"
or when asking someone to translate for your ebonics speaking boss0 -
my wife had been talking with her boss about gardening one day and she'd mentioned a type of flowering bush we had which had a very strong sweet smell. Couple days later her boss was trying to tell his wife they should plant one but couldn't remember the type. Called my wife in her office and she answered on speaker phone. "Hey, jackie, what's the name of your sweet smelling bush?"
Holy Christ. That is way too funny.0 -
Like the word "DOCK" for instance.
Example:
"this authorization is for the construction of a 4' by 250' DOCK, with a 6' by 20' terminal platform.
As luck would have it, the i is right next to the O
:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:0 -
my wife had been talking with her boss about gardening one day and she'd mentioned a type of flowering bush we had which had a very strong sweet smell. Couple days later her boss was trying to tell his wife they should plant one but couldn't remember the type. Called my wife in her office and she answered on speaker phone. "Hey, jackie, what's the name of your sweet smelling bush?"
Holy Christ. That is way too funny.
Yeah, I couldn't resist calling him up with "I think you and I need to have a little chat about your interest in my wife's bush..."0
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