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Vox Pop: Your best "best practice" for email?
Merlin Mann | Aug 5 2007
Short Subject: Now You're Talking (1927) Chris Streeter picks up on a thread that I've been thinking about a lot lately (and he's kind to mention the relationship to Inbox Zero). He reminds us that the etiquette for using a telephone was once well-established enough to earn a place in the encyclopedia:
I think a lot of people would scoff at the idea of a standard for email communication, and I'll admit that I'm not sure what a truly comprehensive -- or even 80-percent-universal -- set of best practices would look like. But, that, in some ways is the problem. "Netiquette" was pounded into my head from day one on the 'net, but I'll freely admit I've never been 100% -- at least partly because email was clearly the Wild West from a lot of people's perspective. We've each been free to evolve or fall ass-backwards into an understanding of how email should be used. How would we begin to ensure that any two given strangers could be on roughly the same page about what email is even for? I doubt this is a problem that has one answer, but I'm intrigued to consider how we might start solving it if it were. So... The Question to You:Think about what you’d do if you ran the world. If you had to choose a single best practice for email usage — format, length, subject matter, even when not to use email. What should almost everyone start doing differently with their email today? 56 Comments
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I confess getting a certain...Submitted by piminnowcheez (not verified) on August 6, 2007 - 11:15am.
I confess getting a certain kind of satisfaction at seeing a student (Scott, above) complaining about e-mail he gets from faculty. Most of the complaining I hear is about e-mail traffic in the opposite direction. But the comment about faculty-specific messages going campuswide made me wonder: for how many of us is it true that some administrative level in our own organizations is our chief source of spam? I regularly get e-mails several times a day pertaining to offices in my institution where I will never set foot, and it only recently occurred to me that there was no real reason I couldn't treat them like the spam they are - now I use a mailbox rule to funnel everything into a folder that I review...not very often. » POSTED IN:
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