Thursday, November 14, 2019
The definitive guide to exclamation marks in work emails
The definitive guide to exclamation marks in work emails The definitive guide to exclamation marks in work emails Back in the day, the rules were simple.In the office? Suit and tie. Write a memo? Keep it formal.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!Today, social mores have changed and the default setting is often business casual. That means the clothes we wear on down to how we communicate. Two recent studies suggest the office is more like an Ultimate Fighting Championship bout than dignified place of work.â" Marketing firm DDB found millennials would take credit for someone elseâs work to get ahead fives times as often as baby boomers.â" Job placement service RiseSmart reports 16 percent of workers criticize employers online.It seems we have entered an anything-goes era in the workplace. Where are the rules?Whatâs appropriate?If you want to jump on email and bash your boss, go ahead. But before you click âSend,â I have one request: cut back on the exclamation marks.Yes , we glide from gmail to Twitter to gchat and the messages muddle together, but work email should remain a cut above. You might sell patriotic kitten ornaments or cakuleles, but business is business and money is money. Too many exclamation marks imply youâre young and inexperienced (like this). Right or wrong, they make people question your seriousness.I created the guide below to understand how to employ exclamation marks in work emails. Iâm not so rigid and old-school to suggest they disappear altogether. As in all things, moderation is key.Hello and goodbyeLetâs start where all emails begin: the introduction. Plenty of people open a work email with:Hi, _____Good morning!They also end with:Have a great day!Exclamation marks at the beginning and end. No big deal.The other half of the population goes with:Hi, _____Good morning.And for the finishâ¦Have a great day.Which one is right? They both are. Intros and outros are just that; the entrance and exit of the conversat ion. They are only pleasantries so, yes, you can come and go with an energetic tone (!) or something more subdued. Either way, itâs not a distraction to the reader.Let the other person make the first moveNow we depart the safe harbor of the email introduction (where the exclamation mark is up to you) and enter the treacherous unknown: the body of our message. Hereâs where exclamations are a far riskier game.If you already led with:Hi, _____Good morning!Then you might think itâs fine to keep on rolling with the excited streak:I want to send an email to catch everyone up on the project since we have a lot going on! Please respond that you saw this email so I know youâre in the loop!And the reader thinks:âYeesh, calm down over there. Itâs Monday morning, and I havenât even finished my coffee.âSo letâs make a new plan. Rather than start off strong with exclamations, let other people make the first move and match their emotion. That way, youâre always in line w ith how they want to exchange messages.If the person writes back:Thanks so much for the note!Then you say:Youâre welcome!If the person goes with:Thanks so much for the note.Then you reply:Youâre welcome.When you defer to other people, youâre always right. If they want to drop exclamations here and there, so do you. If they prefer to keep it plain, you feel the same way.Double exclamationsIn parts I and II, I make the case you can go either way with exclamation marks. In part III, the tune changes.Double exclamations have no place in a work email. I make no apologies for that rule.Thereâs a difference between energetic and overkill, and it happens somewhere between ! and !!If youâre on g-chat or talking to a friend through Gmail, go nuts!!!But when it comes to work, the double exclamation is double trouble. Remember: youâre a working professional. Business is business. Money is money.See: The One Sentence That Makes Anyone a LeaderYou need people to feel comfortable usin g you or your firm. If youâre young and dropping !! everywhere, it could be seen as a red flag. When the exclamation is necessaryYou might be like my dad and against exclamation marks in all work-related situations. Maybe itâs generational and millennials find online communication so casual and natural.Anyway, part IV is where you âlearn the rules and break them.â Thatâs because there are situations where an exclamation mark matters even if you donât like to use one.Hey there,I just want to tell you I landed the promotion so now Iâm VP of development for the entire east coast. Thought youâd like to know the good news!Thatâs a pretty big deal, right? You canât come back with:Thatâs great news. Congrats.Your answer does not match the personâs emotion. At all. No, the moment deserves:Thatâs great news! Congrats!If you want the person to know youâre excited, then you need an exclamation mark. Plus, if the person wrote the big news email to a group and everyone else has responded with:Amazing!Congrats! Woohoo!Incredible!Thereâs no way you could drop in with:Congrats.Not only do you appear unenthusiasticâ¦it kinda sounds like you arenât happy for the person and sending good wishes through gritted teeth.Some moments require you to fall in line.Trust your instinctsWhen you finish composing an email, look over your work. How many exclamation points have you used?If it âfeelsâ like you overdid it, then you overdid it. Even if youâre only trying to keep pace with the other personâs ! usage.No matter what, you never want to appear less professional than the person on the other end.You want to beâ¦whatâs the word?Ah, yes.Appropriate.This article first appeared on DannyRubin.com.
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