• Dave Robinson

    This is yet another excellent article from Scott-I intend to circulate it to my teammates here at work.

    I do take issue with the point about always responding to emails that ask for a response. In my work, I receive numerous unsolicited emails, phone calls, and letters with a RSVP request from people with whom I don’t have any kind of relationship but who are requesting a reply by email or a return phone call.

    I can either choose to spend a not inconsiderable amount of my time responding to these unsolicited questions and phone calls or spend the time working on behalf of my clients, being a good teammate or even spending more time with family and friends. I make that choice on a case by case basis but increasingly choose to ignore the unsolicited request (and do so without guilt).

    Just because someone wants something from me doesn’t obligate me to always respond. Boundaries are important too.

  • http://www.streamlinedmind.com Hugo

    And what about people abusing the priority settings. Some people set their email standard to high priority.

    Some people actually use this functionality, and when you get an email that says ‘high priority’ it needs immediate action.

  • http://fortyplustwo.com/2008/04/10/how-to-deal-with-email/ How to deal with email :: fortyplustwo

    [...] The Brain has a post about The Email Habits That Make People Hate You. Categories: Getting things done Tags: Tips-Tools Leave a [...]

  • http://financialphilosopher.typepad.com/thefinancialphilosopher/ The Financial Philosopher

    Excellent post! Common sense and courtesy are in short supply these days…

    I’ll add a few items:

    1. Be sure the subject line is descriptive: If the reader does not know what you want or need, how are they to prioritize or organize your email? Why should they even open your email if you have not taken the time to appropriately label it?

    2. Know when to pick up the phone: If your communication is not resolved after two exchanges of email, then a direct conversation on telephone is required.

    3. Find other ways to communicate, if human touch may be more effective or appropriate: If you send several emails per day to a co-worker 10 feet away from your desk, why not get up every now and then and speak directly to them?

    Thanks again for the post…

  • http://homeofficewarrior.com/2008/04/11/guilt-free-shopping-for-the-home-office/ Home Office Warrior » Home office tips and hints… Links

    [...] The email habits that make people hate you is right on topic with some of the other post we have been discussing. This post comes from a great blog called, PickTheBrain. [...]

  • http://labeet.dk/?p=73 Oh no!

    [...] The Email Habits That Make People Hate You [...]

  • http://www.adaringadventure.com/blog/wordpress/ Tim Brownson

    I have to agree big style with 3 and 4. Are we turning into a text nation? And those huge paragraphs that make you think you’ll go blind, please, no more!

    Got to disagree with the humor though. I understand what you’re saying but I will never give up joking around and if every now and then somebody doesn’t ‘get it’, then so be it, I guess I’ll have to learn to live with it ;-)

  • http://www.atmmultimedia.com/web-design/ Web Design East Midlands

    I have to agree with all those emails. The thing that annoys me the most is when reply to your e-mails and their repsonse is so vague to their answers.

    It’s like they expect you to be a mind reader.

  • http://stanleybronstein.com MrPositioning.com (Stanley Bronstein)

    Scott:

    What do you do when it’s a paying client who does these things ???

    Sometimes (unfortunately) we have to put up with these things.

    However, I’ve found with a little training (phrased in the right way), things have improved over time.

    Stanley F. Bronstein
    Mr. Positioning
    Attorney, CPA, Author & Professional Motivational Speaker

  • http://www.adaringadventure.com/blog/wordpress/ Tim Brownson

    One other thing after getting 2 yesterday. Read receipts!! C’mon people if it’s really necesary ok, but people that have every frickin e-mail set up to use the RR is an abuse of it and then when you do have a real reason to use it nobody even notices.

    @Stan, I agree sometimes you just have to roll with it buddy ;-)

  • Fill

    I HATE IT when people use all caps to try to make their point some how more urgent/important. If I’m reading it then they already have my attention and if they have basic high school grammar skills, I’ll understand it with out needing the equivalent of yelling.

    BTW- I would have to agree that gentle (and private) feedback can help for the worst offenders, but most of the time it might be best to just let it go. As a friend once said, you can get into trouble if you criticize what somebody considers their “style”. They can take it quite personal.

  • sunshineme

    In my experience, especially now as I am a manager, I have seen a similar trend in some of the offices I’ve been in with specific “types” of people. I send emails asking for important info or data or collaboration, and I get no response whatsoever over an extended period of time. And I find that the people who act this way are always the same sorts in all the offices I’ve been in. I personally think it is arrogance, white collar arrogance,whatever that means. In these environments you never know what people say and do in their groups, and what individuals have out for you. I miss the days when I was a laborer working in the warehouse. People were up front and very direct, and polite I might add, even if it came with a curse word or two. The only problem was the pay, but I would definitely jump back into that world if the pay could match what I make now.

  • http://instantlyresponsive.wordpress.com/2011/09/30/responding-instantly-the-new-netiquette/ Responding Instantly: The New Netiquette « Designing and Leading Instantly Responsive Organizations

    [...] Here’s a short list from Scott Young, author of The LIttle Book of Productivity.  He wrote a blog, published at at PickTheBrain.com about email habits that make people hate you.  In it he came up [...]