EMAIL SPECIAL This Is How To Write A Follow-Up Email That’s Not Annoying
It’s always better to assume that whoever you’re emailing has more
important things to do than reply to your message.
As a journalist who
frequently reviews and edits submissions, I often find myself
switching between writing and reading follow-up emails. And if there’s anything
that being on the sending and receiving end of these have taught me, it’s that
many of the tactics people use aren’t very effective (and are really
annoying at best).
As a sender, I’ve learned that it’s
best to work from the assumption that whoever I’m writing to probably has more
pressing matters to attend to than answer my emails. This forces me to
make sure I articulate why it’s in the receiver’s interest to reply. As a
receiver, there’s nothing more annoying than getting an email that assumes I’ll
work to the sender’s timeline, even when it’s clear that it’s extremely
inconvenient to mine, or when there’s no benefit to me whatsoever.
Of course, this is just one of the many dos
and don’ts to think about when writing a follow-up email. Here are others you
might want to consider before sending your next one, particularly if you
need a response urgently.
MAKE IT AS EASY FOR THE
RECIPIENT AS POSSIBLE
Many people struggle with managing their
inboxes as it is. So to make it worth their time to reply to your follow-up,
it’s important that you, the sender, do all the hard work you can on
your end before hitting “send.”
As Jocelyn Glei writes in her book, Unsubscribe:
How to Kill Email Anxiety, Avoid Distractions, and Get Real Work Done, instead of sending a generic message like
“just following up”–offer a concise recap of your request so that the person
doesn’t have to go back and read your long email thread. As Glei pointed out,
“If that person didn’t respond to your email the first time, resending the same
message is probably not going to get better results the second time.”
DON’T CREATE MORE WORK FOR THE
RECIPIENT
As a receiver, there’s nothing more frustrating
than having to search my inbox to figure out what the sender is referring to
before I can even reply. On busy days, these are the kinds of emails I tend to
ignore. If you send someone a signal that it’s not worth your time to do
the hard work yourself, then the recipient will probably feel the same
way.
BE
POLITE AND RESPECTFUL OF THEIR TIME
There’s nothing wrong with following up, but
there is something wrong with following up too soon and
writing emails in a way that screams, “I have no respect for your time.” Kara
Corridan, executive editor Of Scholastic and former health
director Of Parents magazine, previously spoke with Fast
Company about following up on a pitch: “Certain
people that send me something on a Friday and then follow up on Monday–-it’s
ludicrous. Even if we were interested, we couldn’t turn things around that
frequently.”
Leave a little bit of a window for the
recipient to get back to you and understand that they, too, have other
priorities that are probably more important to them than your email. According
to Glei, you’re not “entitled to a response from someone else who, like
you, might be too busy with their own tasks to deal with yours.”
She wrote, “You might begin your message
with, ‘I know you have a hectic schedule, but I’m wondering if you’ve had time
to consider my request to . . . ?’ or something similar. Acknowledging that you
understand the receiver is juggling a lot of tasks, of which your request is
just one small consideration, always helps.”
DON’T BE UNNECESSARILY PUSHY OR
PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE
I’ve lost count of the number of times
people have marked their emails high priority when it’s clearly
not, present arbitrary deadlines that are unreasonable for what they’re
requesting, or use passive-aggressive phrases such as, “Hi, I haven’t
heard from you since I sent my email over a week ago. I assume you’re not
interested, but just in case you are, I thought I’d check in.”
If you’re using any of these approaches to
follow up on your request, then the tactic will probably backfire.
Corridan told Fast Company that emails with passive-aggressive
tones don’t sit well with her. And as Lisa Evans previously
wrote for Fast Company, “Flagging your
email as high priority should be done sparingly and only in real cases of
urgency. Better than marking an email as a high priority? Using a descriptive
subject line that emphasizes the urgency of the message.”
INCLUDE SPECIFICS AND A
CALL TO ACTION IN YOUR SUBJECT LINE
If your recipient is someone who gets a lot
of emails, then chances are that they probably won’t read every single one.
Instead, they’re more likely to skim through the subject line and only
click on the ones that look important to them. The ones that don’t will
probably just be left unread, or relegated to trash.
This does mean that to get their attention,
you’ll have to do a little bit of thinking on what exactly you’re hoping
to get from their response, and find a way to articulate it in your
subject line. Peggy Duncan, productivity expert, author of Conquer
Email Overload with Better Habits, Etiquette and Outlook, and founder of The Digital Breakthroughs Institute, previously told Fast
Company, “I should know precisely what your email is
about just by reading the subject line, the way I would a headline in a
newspaper.”
DON’T USE A VAGUE OR GENERIC
SUBJECT LINE
Nick Martell and Jack Kramer, cofounders of
the financial news newsletter MarketSnacks, previously told Fast Company that “you live and die by your subject line.” “Just checking in,”
they say, “is an email subject-line recipe for ‘ignore.'”
ONLY SEND YOUR EMAIL TO THE
PERSON CONCERNED
It can be tempting to send emails to multiple
people in that team if one person isn’t being particularly responsive, but
overusing this approach is unprofessional and should only be used as a last resort.
Duncan said, “When sending an email, ask
yourself who needs to receive the information you’re sending, and only send it
to those individuals.” If this isn’t clear, ask yourself the question, ‘Would I
pick this person to call about what I’m about to email them?’ If the answer is
no, Duncan said, “Why are you emailing them about it?”
DON’T COPY OTHERS ON EMAIL WHEN YOU DON’T NEED
TO
In your dream world, they’ll have to
talk to each other about this because they all got your email, right?
Wrong. In fact, they’ll probably just forward it to the person who’s actually
supposed to receive the email, and then all you would have done is clog their
inbox. How does that make you feel when someone does that to you? We thought
so.
BY ANISA PURBASARI HORTON
https://www.fastcompany.com/40437743/this-is-how-to-write-a-follow-up-email-thats-not-annoying?utm_source=mailchimp&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=fcdaily-top&position=2&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=07102017
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