Email for entrepreneurs


Email for entrepreneurs

By Angie McKaig

We've all heard it: email is king of the time suckage. And when you're
working for yourself, it seems to gather even more suction as time goes on.
There are so many tutorials out there on how to optimize your email, how to
make it more efficient, how to prevent it taking up your life that I wish I
had a dollar for each of them.

Email seems to take on an even bigger role once you're carving your own
niche in the world, career-wise. I struggled against that for quite a while.
In reality, all I really needed to know, from day one, were these simple
things:

Looks matter.
Format your emails in a businesslike manner. Have a greeting, a body (with
paragraphs and sentences and everything!) and a businesslike signature (not
just your name!).

Run a business, not an acquaintanceship.
Always respond promptly - same day is ideal; at least every 2-3 days at a
bare minimum.

Emotions have no place in business.
Certain words should just never appear in your emails: I feel, I'm
disappointed, I'm angry, I'm hurt. Businesses don't feel, they don't get
angry, they don't get hurt... they just do business.

Emoticons were created for a reason.
Even if you never use emoticons, never forget the reason they were created:
because it's tough to tell tone via email. Something straightforward and
businesslike to you may seem curt or sarcastic to another. Be as clear as
possible.

Explanations go a long way.
Take the time, when you can, to educate. An extra 10 minutes spent writing a
few paragraphs to explain something to a client can buy a priceless amount
of goodwill.

It's time for a mindshift, entrepreneur.
Email is not something that takes you away from your work. Email is a vital
part of your work. It requires the same care, feeding and watering as the
rest of your business, if not more so. You're not in Cubeville any more,
with a sales department to back you up. You're it, bub. Remember that
without those emails, phone calls and other "interruptions", you wouldn't
have a business.

I know that sounds simple, even basic. But honestly, without these rules, I
wouldn't have a business. :)


source:
www.angiemckaig.com/archives/2006/04/25/email_for_entrepreneurs/

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