Tuesday, November 12, 2019
The perfect way to start an email and 29 greetings you should avoid
The perfect way to start an email â" and 29 greetings you should avoid The perfect way to start an email - and 29 greetings you should avoid Figuring out how to start an email - especially when youâre writing to someone you donât know very well - can be a challenge.Is âHeyâ too casual? Is âDearâ overly formal? Is âMorning!â too cheery?If youâre thinking the email greeting isnât all that important and that itâs silly to overthink it, youâre wrong.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!How you begin an email sets the tone and may shape the recipientâs perception of you. It may also determine whether they keep reading. So, yes, itâs very important.âMany people have strong feelings about what you do to their names and how you address them,â Barbara Pachter, a business etiquette expert, tells Business Insider. âIf you offend someone in the salutation, that person may not read any further. It may also affect that personâs opinion of you.âWe had Pachter and Will Schwalbe, who co-auth ored âSend: Why People Email So Badly and How to Do It Betterâ with David Shipley, weigh in on a handful of common email greetings.Of course, the perfect way to start an email will depend on who youâre writing to, but in general, when youâre writing a business email to someone you donât know well or at all, they say thereâs one safe choice - and a bunch you should usually avoid.WINNER: âHi [name], ⦠âIf you want to make it a little more formal, you can always use the personâs last name: âHi Ms. Gillett, ⦠ââThe reason I like this one is that itâs perfectly friendly and innocuous,â says Schwalbe.Itâs also Pachterâs favorite. She says itâs a safe and familiar way to address someone, whether you know them or not.ALSO ACCEPTABLE: âHi everyone, ⦠âIf youâre addressing a group of people, Pachter advises you write, âHi everyone.âGREETINGS TO AVOID: âHey!âThis is fine to use with your friends, but the very informal salutation should sta y out of the workplace. Itâs not professional - especially if youâre writing to someone youâve never met, says Pachter.Schwalbe agrees: âI can never get out of my head my grandmotherâs admonition, âHey is for horses.'ââHey there!âAlso, avoid âHey there.â It tells the person, âI donât know your name, but if I try to sound cool and casual, maybe you wonât notice.ââHi [name]!!!!ââPeople sometimes get carried away and put a number of exclamation points at the end of their sentences,â Pachter writes in âThe Essentials of Business Etiquette.â âThe result can appear too emotional or immature.âPachter writes that, if you must use an exclamation point, you should use only one.âGreetings, ⦠âThis is a good backup to âHi [name] ⦠â if you donât know the recipientâs name. But you should always do whatever you can to find out that information.âTo whom it may concern, ⦠âThe recipient might think, âOK, this doesnât concern m e ⦠I donât need to continue reading.âItâs also a cold and very impersonal way to start an email message.âDear Mr./Mrs./Ms. [last name], ⦠âThe âDearâ family is tricky because itâs not always terrible or wrong to use, but it can sometimes come off as a bit too formal.âDear [first name], ⦠âAgain, itâs not the worst greeting in the world, but itâs a little old-fashioned.âDear friend, ⦠ââIf you donât know my name, or canât be bothered to use it, we probably arenât friends,â says Schwalbe.âDear [Job Title], ⦠âGranted, addressing your email to the position your recipient is better than going with âTo whom it may concern, â¦â - it shows that you put in some effort.But it still reads as extremely generic. And if youâre already putting in effort to figure out what the position of the person youâre addressing is, youâd be better off going the extra step and figuring out who that person is. All it takes is a little more resear ch.âDear Maâam, ⦠âApart from being generic and giving off an impersonal vibe, this one can be offensive to the recipient.As one informal New York Times poll found, few women really appreciate being called âmaâamâ - it tends to make them feel old and disrespected.âDear Sir or Madam, ⦠âWay too formal!Plus, this salutation tells the recipient that you have no idea who they are, says Pachter. âWhy then should the reader be interested in what you have to say?âSchwalbe adds: âThis one is very stiff. It always feels like bad news or a complaint will follow.ââHello, ⦠âNot bad, but a bit informal if youâre addressing someone you donât know very well.âGood morning/afternoon/evening, ⦠âIt may not be morning, afternoon, or evening anymore by the time your email reaches the person - or if theyâre in a different time zone - so itâs best just to skip these.âMr./Mrs./Ms. [last name], ⦠âAnother stiff and abrupt one. The recipient may fe el like youâre about to reprimand them.âMr./Mrs./Ms. [first name], ⦠âPachter says that this is how young children address their teachers: âMrs. Susan, can you help me with this math problem?âItâs not appropriate in the professional world.âTo [name], ⦠âThis wording is awkward and juvenile-sounding.âHi Mrs. ⦠ââUse âMs.â unless you know the woman wants to be addressed as âMrs.,'â Rubin writes.â[First name]!âFirst off, itâs a bit informal and abrupt. Then when you tack on the exclamation point, it just gets annoying.âItâs a bit jarring right off the bat - like someone is shouting at me,â Schwalbe says. âEven without the exclamation, itâs a bit abrupt. Better to precede the name with âHiâ than just blurt it out.ââYo!âDo we really need to explain why this one is a no-no?â[Misspelled name], ⦠âSpell the recipientâs name correctly.âMany people are insulted if their name is misspelled,â says Pachter. âCheck for t he correct spelling in the personâs signature block. You can also check the âToâ line. Often, peopleâs first or last names are in their addresses.ââHi folks, ⦠âFans cheer as rock band Deer Tick performs at the Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island July 26, 2014. The three-day festival was founded in 1959.âThough the business world is more informal today than in the past,â Pachter recommends avoiding laid-back, colloquial expressions like âfolksâ in business communications.âHey yâall, ⦠âThis is another laid-back, colloquial expression thatâs best avoided in a professional email.âHi guys, ⦠âTo begin with, âHi guysâ is considered too laid-back for professional emails.But using gendered language to address mixed-gender groups presents other problems. First, itâs inaccurate. And secondly, it could cause offense.âFailing to acknowledge women by using a male catchall phrase evokes the sexism woven into every aspect of being,â writes Dian e Rubino, an adjunct instructor at NYU and Columbia University, for Wiley.âGentlemen, ⦠âThis oneâs also sexist, Pachter says.âHi [nickname], ⦠âDonât take it upon yourself to call William âWillâ or Jennifer âJen.â Unless the person has introduced themselves using a nickname or uses one in the signature of their own emails, stick to their full name.âHi, ⦠âThis greeting not only sounds abrupt, but it also lacks the customization necessary to grab your readerâs attention.Including the personâs name in an email is a crucial way to get their attention, Danny Rubin writes in âWait, How Do I Write This Email?ââDale Carnegie, a legendary author, and speaker on leadership believed a personâs name is the âsweetest and most important sound in any language,'â he writes. âSame goes for email.ââAll, ⦠âThis one also sounds abrupt.Again, if youâre writing to a group, use âHi everyone.ââHappy Friday!!!âYou donât want to be overl y enthusiastic. Itâs not professional and sets the wrong tone. Plus, it might get under the recipientâs skin.[No greeting]Always use a salutation, Pachter writes: âYouâll seem friendlier if you do.âThis article first appeared on Business Insider.
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