Tuesday, November 19, 2019
The way you email might be turning your coworkers against you
The way you email might be turning your coworkers against you The way you email might be turning your coworkers against you Letâs get one thing out of the way first: Email is a terrible means of communication. Slack and its ilk included, thereâs still no good digital duplicate to the basic social niceties that grease most of our interactions and make sure we all get along well enough. No amount or combination of exclamation points or emojis can replace a warm smile or a pleasant tone of voice. So while it certainly makes sense to practice writing shorter, more emotionally intelligent emails, thereâs a limit to what youâll ever be able to accomplish between hitting ânew messageâ and âsend.â The real reason your emails are getting on your coworkersâ nerves has nothing to do with what, how, or when you write â" itâs all a matter of human psychology. Hereâs why and what to do about it. Related: What Happened When I Replied âCall Meâ To Every Email I Got For A Week Back to basics Inevitably â" and often without even realizing it â" your colleagues have to fill in a lot of details when they read any email from you. Theyâre making guesses about your intent and tone: Did you mean that particular statement seriously or ironically? Does that sarcasm reflect frustration or lighthearted humor? And that request youâre making â" do you realize the burden it places on others? To answer many of these implicit questions, a sender will fill in the gaps with what they know (or donât know) about you personally. Which means that if your email bothers its recipient, thereâs a good chance it isnât the email itself thatâs the problem, but you. An identical email coming from someone else might be received and interpreted much differently. The solution is simple: As soon as interpersonal guesswork gets in the way of your message, itâs time to inject some interpersonal substance in its place. Engage with your colleagues directly (i.e. not digitally) when you get the sense theyâre feeling annoyed by your emails (or to prevent that from happening in the first place). Pick up the phone when thereâs something you need or when you have to respond to a series of queries rather than just get one simple thing squared away. Set up a quick chat in person to give feedback on a report. Offer to grab a cup of coffee to go over it together. Related: Six Ways To Write Emails That Donât Make People Silently Resent You What you gain by avoiding email (as much as possible) You might object that you donât have time for all this real-time contact. But what email was designed to do in the first place is to make it easier for busy people to communicate. But even most short conversations actually take longer over email. You have to switch over to your inbox, skim the prior message to remember where you left off, and repeat this process several times each as the thread continues. With real conversation, you can often reach the same outcome in about the time it would take you just to read and respond to a single email in the chain. (Thatâs exactly what fellow Fast Company contributor Allen Gannett found when he tried replying âcall meâ to all the emails he received for a week straight.) On top of that, when you actually talk to someone, you have a chance to gauge their reaction to what youâre saying in real time. You can convey your warmth and respect for your coworkers much more easily in person than in written textâ"whether itâs email, Slack, Google Hangouts, or what have you. Related: A Short Guide To Work Phone Calls For People Who Grew Up Texting There are other reasons why analog interactions are usually better than dashing off replies like, âThanks so much! :} Youâre the best Carlos!!â For one thing, when you talk to Carlos in person, his facial expression and tone of voice can give you a sense of whether he sees your request as asking too much, and this way youâll know how and whether to acknowledge the magnitude of the favor. Second, itâs easier to express appreciation in person. Saying âthanksâ in the same email as your request makes it sound like your gratitude is really just another part of the ask. And if you hold off to say thanks in a follow-up email solely for that purpose, then, as short as it is, youâre wasting their time. So donât just save complicated stuff for phone calls and in-person meetings. Try handling a few of your smaller requests in person as well. Youâll build better, stronger relationships at work in the process. And by sending fewer emails altogether, youâll be less likely to annoy the people receiving them. This article originally appeared on Fast Company
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