Learn to write smarter and faster; Get more done while protecting your reputation.

“Copy is not written. Copy is assembled.” – Eugene Schwartz (copywriter).

Because most of the writing you and I do is email, I’m going to adjust Eugene Schwartz’s quote to be, “Great email isn’t written, it is assembled.”

None of us read email for the fun of it. Writing is never our goal – getting our work done is. Whenever we write our goal isn’t achieved until our reader understands what we said and/or does what we asked them to do. Unfortunately there are many obstacles in the way, especially when we write email. One obstacle we often forget is that our readers may not be expecting (or wanting) our message. Another obstacle may be our current reputation; if we have a history of being unclear or rude you can imagine our email are not going to get read quickly.

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We fail when the email we write don’t get read, understood or acted upon. But, failure isn’t an option when we are at work. We ‘have’ tobe successful. And, because email is how we communicate 90% of the time, we ‘have’ to write. So, I believe the important question we must all ask is, “As writers, how do we assemble our email so that it cuts through all the other email, priorities and ever-increasing distractions our readers are experiencing?

In this article I want to give you a fresh approach to writing smarter and faster and getting more done while protecting our reputation in three simple steps.

Assemble Step 1. Be Polite

Say Hello.

Before writing what we need our readers to know or do, just say ‘Hello’ or ‘Hi’

Saying ‘Hello’ or ‘Hi’ is one of the best ways to grab someone’s attention. It’s also the best way to take the rude, abrupt and bossy feel out of your message. Readers notice (in a good way) when we say ‘Hi’. Why? Because saying ‘Hi’ is polite. If we don’t say ‘Hi’ it’s like storming into their office unannounced. #Rude

The exception I will offer you is that if you are writing with someone 20 times a day or more you can both agree to not do this because it will likely get annoying. But, still do it for your first email of the day.

Assemble Step 2. Don’t Make Writing Complicated

After saying hello, get-to-the-point in your first sentence. We all are busy and we don’t have the time or the interest to become a great novelist like Margaret Atwood or great copywriter like Eugene Schwartz.

To write great email we have to consider what information our reader already knows in our first sentence. Also, what new information might they need? Our readers will start skimming and we will lose their interest if we write about things they already know. You know this is true because you do it when you are bored by someone’s email. And, we will put them at a disadvantage and potentially delay them giving us the information we need if we don’t include the information they need.

Another tip to keep our writing simple is to keep flowery descriptions, complicated jargon and technical terms to a minimum. If we don’t, we are falling into a trap called ‘the curse of knowledge’ says Harvard psychologist, communication specialist and author Steven Pinker which he defines as“a difficulty in imagining what it is like for someone else not to know something that you know”. 

Assemble Step 3. Write Sentences With Benefits First

To always get our email read, writers have to break a few habits as we learn to assemble our sentences starting with benefit first. 

Look at that last sentence and how I structured it. I have put the whyfirst. 

I could have written, “Writers have to break a few habits as we learn to write our sentence starting with benefits first in order to keep our readers interest.” While this second sentence generally works, we risk boring our readers with detail before we tell them ‘why’ that detail is important. And, if our readers get bored – they will move on. Unfortunately, most of us were taught in school to put information first and then follow with benefit and action item.

This is one of my favourite tips and it can be used in all your writing - not just email and instant messaging. So, don’t bore your readers; grab their attention and interest quickly. I do want to warn you, even though it sounds easy to do, it will require some practice and paying attention to your structure. 

Conclusion:

Every time we write email or instant messages, we are adding or subtracting from our reputation and the reputation of our company. In addition, when our messages are misunderstood, not even read and/or when our tone is interpreted as bossy or angry, the result is that mistakes are made, time is wasted and expenses go up.

The importance of well-written / well-assembled communication is high.

So, before hitting ‘Send’ on your next email, take a moment to ask, “Am I addressing my readers needs and how likely is it that my reader will understand and be able to act on my message?” If your answers to these two questions are‘Yes’ and ‘Very Likely’ then you have done a great job of building a trusting relationship and accomplishing your key goals.

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Bruce Mayhew Consulting specializes in customized Email Etiquette Training, Leadership & New Leadership Development, Generational Differences, Time Management Training and other soft skills training solutions in Toronto and across Canada. Bruce is also an Executive Coach to a few select clients.

Bruce is an experienced motivational speaker in Toronto and has inspired audiences across Canada and within the USA and the UK. Bruce works hard to always make sure your training event, conference, retreat, or annual general meeting is a success.

Thank you for stopping by.













How Your Virtual Body Language Impacts Your Personal And Professional Brand

Like many ‘business buzz-words’ I believe the term digital body language is evolving to include virtual body language. One of the first references I found of digital body language is the 2010 book by Steven Woods called ‘Digital Body Language’. Loosely speaking, this is what Steven calls the online viewing history you and I create when visiting and interacting with different websites. The idea was, and still is that our online history (digital body language) can be analyzed and interpreted by organizations with sophisticated marketing departments to predict what our present and future wants, needs and reactions may be. To give you an example, I think we have all noticed that shortly after we’ve done some online research about a potential purchase, the next thing we know that item begins to show up in our Facebook advertising feed.

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How digital body language evolved.

The evolution of the phrase ‘digital body language’ now also refers to the often-unintentional tone our readers ‘read’ from every email or instant message (IM) we write. This is what many people call our virtual communication, and therefore, our ‘virtual body language’. Every time you and I send an email or IM our readers instantly and often unconsciously interpret our message many different ways but they generally fall into four different areas:

  • Helpful / Supportive

  • Respectful / Honest

  • Pushy / Demanding

  • Dismissive

In other words, every email or instant message we write impacts our personal and professional reputation.

Is Our Virtual Body Language Really A Big Deal?

Yes, this is a big deal. How many email do you write and respond to every day? Studies show most professionals send and respond to between 50 and 250 email a day, often addressed to multiple people; this doesn’t even consider all of the instant messages. The result is that every week your email alone are likely making thousands of impressions with coworkers, suppliers and customers. In other words, your virtual communication and / or virtual body language is building your brand / your reputation every time you hit send. Hopefully you are writing with that in mind.

Still not convinced this is a big deal? Take a moment to consider how may messages you receive that sound vague, bossy, rude and/or read like one long disorganized thought. I bet you get more than a few each day and I bet they also often come from the same people. Now, what is your opinion of these people? Do you rush to read their email and go out of your way to help them? The end result is that their virtual body language negatively impacts their performance and their success… even if they don’t even know it.

In short, the reputation we build over time is either favourable or unfavourable and it will impact our immediate and long-term career success. And, with more of us now working remotely and now also routinely using video calls, the impressions we make is more important than ever.

The success of the companies we work for depends on its reputation, and in many of the same ways the virtual brand you create is critically important to your professional future; it matters what others think of you. Being good at your job isn’t good enough anymore. To excel in this fast-paced, technology driven world, the people we work with have to trust us and feel that we respect them, their time and their expertise/experience.

Now that we agree every email and IM we write makes an impression and whether we mean it or not, the million dollar question is, “Do you intentionally write a positive (or at least neutral) message?” If we are not paying attention to how our readers may interpret our message it is highly likely at least some of our messages sound vague, bossy, rude and/or read like one long disorganized thought.

Conclusion

Companies spend amazing fortunes to control their brand and align it with the company’s values. Unfortunately every employee may be unintentionally undermining their and the company’s digital brand every time they click ‘Send’. This is where Email Etiquette Training is important and can help team members support their own reputation as well as the companies brand.

I don’t think it matters if we call how we communicate digital body language, virtual body language or virtual brand. The important thing is that every time we hit send on an email, instant message or every time we participate in a video call that we recognize others are quickly deciding if we are one-hundred different things. Are your email professional, knowledgeable, trustworthy, respectful, helpful, collaborative, dependable… or are we writing email and IM that are toxic, demanding, disrespectful of others time and needs, working with a hidden agenda, self-centered and egotistical? And, what reputation are we also building for our company?

Thank you for reading. I hope you have enjoyed.

Bruce



About Bruce and Bruce Mayhew Consulting.

Bruce is Corporate Trainer and Executive Coach.

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As a Corporate Trainer Bruce Mayhew (of BMC) specialize in customized Time Management Training, Email Etiquette Training, Leadership & New Leadership Development, Generational Differences and other soft skills training solutions in Toronto and across Canada. Bruce is also an Executive Coach to a few select clients.

BMC helps your greatest assets think productive and be productive.

Bruce is an experienced motivational speaker in Toronto and has inspired audiences across Canada and within the USA and the UK. Bruce works hard to always make sure your training event, conference, retreat, or annual general meeting is a success.