E-mail:
Inbox |
To: |
All members of staff |
From: |
Jennifer Ranford <j.ranford@firm.com>
|
Date: |
|
Subject: |
E-mail Writing Guidelines |
Please note and follow the guidelines below
concerning the writing of company e-mail messages.
- Subjects
Give
the message a subject/title. E-mail messages without a
subject may not be opened because of a fear of viruses
and especially note that it is very easy to forget to
type this important information.
- Subject
contents
Keep the subject short and
clear but avoid such headings as: ‘Good News’,
‘Hello’, ‘Message from Mary’. These headings are common in
messages containing viruses. Short but specific
headings
are needed,
e.g. |
Order No. 2348X Delayed
Shipment Laboratory Equipment Order
|
- Greetings
Start the message with a greeting so as to help create a
friendly but business-like tone. The choice of using
the other name versus the surname will depend on who
you are writing to. If you have communicated with the
receiver previously and he/she is at a similar level to
you, then the use of the other name would be
appropriate. If the receiver is more senior to you, or
if you are in doubt, it would be safer (particularly in
the first communication) to use the person’s
surname/family name together with a title, e.g.
Dear Mr Smithson, Dear Ms Stringer.
It is also
becoming quite common to write the greeting without a
comma, e.g. Dear Miss Lawson e.g.
Dear KK
- Purpose
Start with a clear indication of what the message is
about in the first paragraph. Give full details
in the following paragraph(s). Make sure that the
final paragraph indicates what should happen next.
e.g. I will send a messenger to your office on Tuesday
morning to collect the faulty goods. e.g.
Please let me have your order by the beginning of
the month.
- Action
Any
action that you want the reader to do should be
clearly described, using politeness phrases. Subordinates
should use expressions such as 'Could you...' or ' I
would be grateful if...'. Superior staff should also
use polite phrases, for example, 'Please...'.
- Attachments
Make sure you refer, in the main message, to any
attachments you are adding and of course make extra
sure that you remember to include the attachment(s).
As attachments can transmit viruses, try not to use them,
unless you are sending complicated documents.
Copy-and-paste text-only contents into the body of the
e-mail. If you use an attachment, make sure the file name
describes the content, and is not too general; e.g.
'message.doc' is bad, but 'QA Report
is good.
- Endings
End the message in a polite way. Common endings are:
Yours sincerely, Best regards, Best wishes, Regards,
If you did not put a comma after the greeting at the
beginning of the message, then do not put a comma
after the ending either, e.g. Best wishes e.g. Regards
- Names
Include your name at the end of the message. It is most
annoying to receive an email which does not include
the name of the sender. The problem is that often the
email address of the sender does not indicate exactly who
it is from, e.g. 0385915d@polyu.edu.hk
Please follow
these guidelines with all e-mail messages that you send.
Kind regards Jennifer Ranford
Human Resources Manager
| |
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