What Your Email Style Reveals About Your Personality
You think about how
you're perceived in every other social setting--why not email? Get your point
across while staying true to yourself before hitting send.
Most of your work communications are
probably over email. You likely email your colleagues and clients more
frequently than you speak to them on the phone or meet with them in person.
Unlike face-to-face communication,
it can be more difficult to effectively convey important aspects of your
personality, attitudes, and style in email.
Is there a connection between our
email persona and our real-life persona? How competently can the average person
infer our personality from our emails? The answer comes in four points:
People use language in different
ways, and those differences are a function of their personality. Our choices
are spontaneous and unconscious but they do reflect who we are. Text mining
studies have found associations between key words and major aspects of
personality. The more frequently people use those words, the more likely it is
that they display certain personality traits.
For example, extraverts talk about
fun-related stuff: bars, Miami, music, party, and drinks. People with lower EQ
are more likely to use emotional and negative words: stress, depressed, angry,
and unfortunate. Narcissists talk about themselves--the number of
self-referential words (e.g., “I,” “me,” “mine,” “myself,” etc.) is indicative
of someone’s self-love and entitlement. Artistic and intellectual individuals
use highbrow words, such as narrative, rhetoric, and leitmotiv.
There is also huge variability in
people’s communicational style, even when the words may not differ that much.
For instance, absence of typos is a sign of conscientiousness, perfectionism,
and obsessionality. Poor grammar reflects lower levels of IQ and academic
intelligence. Emoticons are a sign of friendliness (if the email is informal)
or immaturity (in work-related emails).
Long emails reflect energy and
thoroughness, but also some degree of neediness and disorganization. Chaotic
emails are a sign of creativity or psychopathic tendencies. Instant responses
reflect impulsivity and low self-control. Late responses are a sign of
disinterest, and no responses signal passive-aggressive disdain.
Even when emails do reflect our
personality, human observers may fail to interpret the cues. This tends to
occur for two main reasons: they are either not paying sufficient attention
(focusing instead on what they want to say), or over-interpreting things.
Importantly, correct interpretations
require paying attention to contextual factors, such as awareness of the
sender’s main motivation, and distilling the signal from the noise. It is also
important to determine whether cues are truly related to senders’ personality
or transient mood and behaviors.
The bottom line is that even the
most intuitive observer of email behaviors may fail to perform as well as a
computer-generated algorithm, especially if they have never had physical
interactions with the sender or lack any background information on them. Of
course, this does not stop people from making inferences. Human beings are
prewired to make instant and unconscious evaluations of people, and we tend to
disregard information that is not congruent with our initial prejudices--this
is why stereotypes are so pervasive, and that goes for the email world, too.
Online trust is the backbone of a
huge economy: we wouldn’t have eBay, Uber, Tinder, or Airbnb unless we were
open to the idea of trusting strangers simply based on their digital footprint
or crowdsourced reputation. Yet going beyond superficial relations with others
still requires face-to-face interactions--and it probably always will. This is
why our impressions of others are rarely the same in the digital as in the
physical world: even phone conversations omit key information about
individuals’ personalities.
Ultimately, chemistry cannot be
translated into data. And unlike computers, humans are more trusting when they
can make decisions on the basis of their intuition, rather than pure data.
Perhaps this is the main explanation for the fact that face-to-face meetings
are far from extinction. Video technology is popular, but only because it has
replaced phone conversations, rather than physical meetings.
--Dr. Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic
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http://www.fastcompany.com/3031362/work-smart/what-your-email-style-reveals-about-your-personality?partner=newsletter
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