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Effective Email Communication
By: Adam Senour, Sat Dec 10th, 2005 12:41:36 AM
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Email, when used properly, can generate additional direct sales
and leads; can be used as a tool to communicate with your
existing client base to let them know of upcoming events which
may affect them; and as a means of ongoing promotion for your
business.
The following is a list of simple guidelines and tips that will
help you become an effective email communicator. Please bear in
mind that many of these guidelines assume that you have never
established any prior dialogue and, as you become more familiar
with your customers, can often be altered to meet your client's
needs. - Send your emails in plain text. While
HTML/rich-text-formatted emails do look much more attractive,
they will often be accidentally blocked by anti-spam filters and
either show up incorrectly or not at all in various email
programs. Plain text, on the other hand, will show up exactly as
intended in all email programs.
- Include a signature
of no more than four lines. Your signature should provide
the recipient with a means to contact you other than email, and
should mention your company name. A good email signature format
will look something like this:
(Article continued below)
Mike Leblanc Any Vacuum Cheap Website: http://www.anyvacuumcheap.ca<
/a> Telephone: (905) 509-1661
This signature provides not one, but two ways for a customer to
reach you.
Note: Many people will put their email into their
signature files. This is, however, unnecessary as the email
itself can be replied to directly and the email address may be
extracted from it. - Use common file formats for
email attachments. There are a wide variety of formats for
attachments; however, these formats are not universal and as
such, many people cannot open various types of attachments.
The following is a list, in approximate order of universal
acceptance (based on my own experiences), of attachments which
are commonly accepted: - TXT (plain-text)
- JPG/GIF (pictures)
- PDF (Adobe Acrobat Reader)
- DOC (Microsoft Word/WordPad document)
- XLS (Excel
spreadsheet)
- Use short paragraphs.
Try to keep your paragraphs to 50 words or less to ensure
maximum readability.
- Don't send unsolicited sales
information/commercial emails. Unsolicited commercial
emails, or spam, are becoming an increasing problem and many
organizations are blocking, deleting, and in many cases
reporting the senders of these emails to various anti-spam
services and search engines in an effort to curtail the sender's
efforts.
- Use second person terms as much as
possible. Words such as "you", "your", and "yours"
personalize your emails, letting your customer know that you're
thinking of him/her specifically.
- Check your emails
for spilling n' grammer...er...spelling and grammar. A minor
typographical error in a lengthy email will generally go
unnoticed, but a series of typographical, spelling, and
grammatical errors will indicate a lack of professionalism and
has the potential to cost you business.
Many email programs, such as Microsoft Outlook, include spelling
and grammar tools to ensure that mistakes are kept to a minimum.
If you do not have an email program with these tools activated,
then alternatively you can open up your favourite word
processor; type your email; check it for mistakes; and then copy
and paste it into your email program. - Respond to
all emails within 24-48 hours. If you cannot answer your
customer's question in this time period, at least send him/her
an email letting them know the status of his/her inquiry and
that it is being taken care of. Some things do take longer than
one day to resolve, and the vast majority of customers are very
understanding of this, as long as they're kept apprised of the
situation.
Depending on your level of familiarity with your customers, some
of these rules can be relaxed and altered to meet their specific
needs. However, adhering to these general guidelines will ensure
that, more often than not, you will become an effective email
communicator.
About the author:
Adam Senour is the owner of ADAM Web Design, a leading web design and
development company in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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