Sunday, May 31, 2020
The 9 Most ANNOYING Email Habits Every Office Worker Deals With
The 9 Most ANNOYING Email Habits Every Office Worker Deals With Do you love your inbox? If youâre like most people, the answer is probably a definitive ânoâ. Thatâs because, for most of us, our inbox is a forsaken place where we collect the detritus of our working lives and get the latest updates from that one website we thought might be useful in 2009 whose newsletters we just canât work out how to unsubscribe from. But thereâs one thing that makes all this worse â" the frankly appalling etiquette of our email contacts. âEvery office is filled with people who canât use their emails properly, and it drives everyone mad,â says Brian Johnson, Director of Forward Role, the UKâs leading digital and marketing recruitment specialists. âDespite most peopleâs common sense, some part of their brain switches off when they come to open up a new email and type up that âurgentâ 48-line paragraph and then CC in the entire team.â Below, weâve listed the worse email offenders each office has, and what you can do to mitigate them. 1. The Email Enforcer Like some unsolicited apparition, these Email Enforcers magically appear next to you, just as their oven-fresh email drops into your inbox. âIâve just sent you an email,â they helpfully say. And then they proceed to explain to you everything theyâve said in the email⦠which means that all you can do is just sit there and listen to what youâve just read that second. This is like a parent knocking on their teenagerâs bedroom door after theyâve already let themselves in. Theyâre probably even the type of person who says âKnock knockâ instead of actually doing it. Ugh. When dealing with an Email Enforcer, do: Take in what theyâre saying, repeat it back to them to confirm you understand, and wrap up by suggesting next time they just come and speak to you rather than emailing as well. Donât: Ask them to book a meeting in which they can explain their email in more detail. 2. The Ghost The Ghost is the professional equivalent of that person you dated who never messaged you back. Theyre charming in meetings, pretend like theyre interested in your strategies, and then â" POOF! â" they disappear from the email stratosphere, never to respond to your emails again. You get paranoid. Was it something you said? Maybe they didnât really like your strategy and are avoiding having to tell you. Then you realize youre not alone theyve ghosted before and theyll do it again! When dealing with a Ghost, do: Ask them privately to send back a quick reply confirming that theyâve read and understood your email. Donât: Harass them at the water cooler demanding to know why they didnât email you back. âI thought what we had was specialâ doesnât look good on an HR report. 3. THE SHOUTER HAVE YOU RECEIVED AN EMAIL WRITTEN ENTIRELY IN CAPS LOCK? IT COMES ACROSS AS INCREDIBLY AGGRESSIVE AND MEANS YOU AUTOMATICALLY THINK THAT THE PERSON ON THE OTHER END IS EITHER LIVID OR IS ACTUALLY YOUR GRAN TRYING TO COMMENT ON A FACEBOOK POST. Shouters are people who somehow write entire emails without reading them â" because why else would you send it on? Weirdly, Shouters are often very agreeable in real life, which makes you believe that their habit of yelling their emails is purely an online quirk. When dealing with a Shouter, do: Email back privately and politely inform them that they might have left their caps lock on by mistake. Donât: Use a megaphone to shout your reply back to them. 4. The Blank Subject Liner In a detective novel, a mysterious email is an exciting thing, promising a secretive plot that is exposed by a clever protagonist who can piece together the clues to solve the case. But at work, mysterious emails are about as exciting as your Aunt Audreyâs holiday photos. The blank subject line surprises you every time you see it. You say âWhatâs this?â and click on it, only to find yourself reading the same memo about that one project you finished months ago. Seriously, guys. A two-word summary is not that hard. When dealing with a Blank Subject Liner, do: Explain to the sender that your inbox is usually very full, so without a subject line, their urgent messages might get lost and work wonât get done. Donât: Send them a mysterious email containing your Aunt Audreyâs holiday photos. 5. The Captain of the Seven CCs You get an email from your boss. It looks important. Very important. At that moment, you start to believe that maybe â" just maybe â" theyâve realized they need your help. You hear the word âpromotionâ echo in the distance. Itâs happening. But then you read it and you realize the email isnât addressed to you. It doesnât even have anything to do with you. It might as well say âFOOLED YOU!â in Comic Sans. Instead, you find yourself on a CC list longer than the Treaty of Versailles. Thereâs the marketing director, the head of IT, three interns that no longer work there, your mum, her dog it leads to a lot of confusion, and a lot of wasted time. When dealing with a Captain of the Seven CCs, do: Reply to them directly, asking whether they need your input on this email chain or whether you can be removed from the CC list. Donât: Type something witty and hit âReply Allâ. You know who you are. Stop it. 6. The One-word Wonder Itâs late afternoon. Youâve just spent the best part of an hour crafting that perfect email to your manager explaining the next steps of your marketing strategy. It has charts. It has chapters. It even has a list of contents and an epilogue in which you thank your family for all the support theyâve given you in writing such a wonderfully crafted email. And the reply you get? âGreat, thanks.â CEOs and Managing Directors are particularly bad for this. To them, theyâre just trying to be efficient by providing quick sign-off on a good-enough suggestion so theyâre not a bottle-neck. But to their staff, it can come across like they donât care, which can be frustrating. When dealing with a One-word Wonder, do: Ask for specific feedback in your email at the beginning and the end so they canât miss it if they skim read. Donât: Yell âYouâre not even trying!â before sobbing quietly at your desk. 7. The In-office Auto-responder Thereâs something incredibly satisfying about setting an auto-responder. Itâs a badge of pride â" that little message that tells your contacts that, sorry, you canât answer their email right now because youâre too busy enjoying yourself in some sunny corner of the world. But once youâre back at work, the auto-responder makes you look like a fool. Itâs not just annoying for staff but for clients, too. One might be given some leeway on their first day back, but by day two, itâs embarrassing. When dealing with an In-office Auto-responder, do: Politely inform them that they might have left their auto-responder on and, if necessary, show them how to switch it off. Donât: Make loud, sarcastic comments about how amazing it is that someone could be at work and on holiday at the same time. Youâre not funny, Jill. 8. The False Alarmer False Alarmers are those people that somehow missed the parable of the boy who cried wolf. They mark their emails as âURGENTâ so that they catch your eye, and naturally, you open it in a panic, only to find that they want to know whether there was a milk delivery this morning because they just checked the fridge and, well, weâre out. False Alarmers make trouble for themselves. Itâs not long before you stop opening their urgent emails, which means when they have something important they need to communicate, no one is going to listen. Come on, people, we learned this in primary school. When dealing with a False Alarmer, do: Explain to them that, although you understand they believe their projects are top priority, they should only mark emails as urgent if itâs a genuine emergency. Donât: Secretly fill their pockets with meat before a company hike to recreate the parable of the boy who cried wolf. 9. The Historian You know itâs going to be bad when you see this subject line: âFwd: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Changes to homepageâ. Historians like to forward LONG email chains to people. They want you to scroll to the very beginning, painstakingly making your way back through time until your finger hurts. You scroll past the Millenium, the Great Depression, the Ice Age. Youâre pretty sure the email canât have been around long enough for this email chain to be possible, and yet youâre still scrolling. And just when youâve caught up, they forward you the next batch of updates. Kill. Me. Now. When dealing with a Historian, do: Ask for a quick summary of the key things they need you to action to make sure nothing is missed. Donât: Build a time machine to go back and stop them from being hired. You might bump into yourself and letâs face it, you were not cool in the nineties. No one was.
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