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Email Management

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A telephone call or face-to-face conversation may reduce any misunderstandings. ... is the use of the sideways 'smiley face,' :) or :-), to indicate lack of serious ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Email Management


1
Email Management
  • Charlotte ARMA Meeting 4.21.09

2
Table of Contents
  • Defining Email
  • Email Management
  • Email Do(s) and Dont(s)
  • Email Etiquette
  • Filtering
  • Thoughts from the group

3
Email
  • Email (electronic mail) is the exchange of
    computer-stored messages by telecommunication.
  • An email system is a communication tool is not
    intended to be a recordkeeping system.

4
Email Management
  • O.H.I.O Only Handle It Once
  • Use of Filters
  • Use of email folders
  • Use of preview feature
  • Unsubscribe to newsletters or distribution lists
    that you do not read
  • Embrace email for what its worth

5
Email Do(s)
  • If you are sending an email attachment to several
    recipients, think about trying to hyperlink the
    document so all your recipients wont receive a
    large file.
  • Only reply all when necessary.
  • Delete your email message when you no longer need
    it from your inbox or sent mail and your
    trash
  • Try to only use company email for business
    reasons but if you need to use for a
    social/personal reason, create a separate email.
  • Consider communicating complex information
    through other means. A telephone call or
    face-to-face conversation may reduce any
    misunderstandings.
  • If the email doesn't relate to something that you
    are currently working on or doesn't contain
    information that you're required to keep, delete
    it.
  • Review your email folders annually (if
    applicable) dispose of any emails you do not
    need to refer to anymore.

6
Email Do (s) continued
  • Immediately delete e-mail with attachments from
    unfamiliar senders. It may be "spam." Do not
    click open web links in messages from unknown
    sources.
  • Please remember to think about what you are
    writing in your emails so the information is not
    misconstrued.
  • Please remember that your company has the right
    to view your email since youre working on behalf
    of the company.
  • Do not transmit confidential information in an
    external email message unless it has been
    encrypted.
  • Use clear subject lines. This helps employees
    prioritize their email.
  • Check spelling and grammar use spell-check,
    employees tend to be too informal in email
    compared with hardcopy. Treat it the same.
  • All email and electronic communications are
    monitored by Compliance
  • Email your IT Security group if you feel you
    have received a suspicious email.
  • Beware of email soliciting personal information
    (PII) or money.

7
Email Dont (s)
  • Do not send e-mails when you are upset or angry.
    Calm down and respond intelligently or you may
    regret it later. Remember there is a record of
    this.
  • Do not over reply as this may clog other
    employees inboxes and may utilize valuable
    memory.
  • Do not forward jokes, chain letters, or
    inappropriate material.
  • Reading e-mails and sending rapid fire e-mails on
    your handheld device (i.e. Blackberry) during a
    meeting sends a clear message to others that you
    are not fully engaged in the task at hand. While
    you may see this as multitasking, others may
    see this as rude.
  • Do not save emails as .pst files, to a CD or
    flashdrive.

8
Email Etiquette
  • Electronic mail is not like other media. Treating
    E-mail just like the telephone, paper mail, or
    any other medium can lead to misunderstandings
    and mistakes.
  • Emulate experienced users. See how those already
    posting to mailing lists make the most effective
    use of those forums.
  • Be brief. Often a few well-chosen words are
    better than long-winded elaborations.
  • Label your message. Choose a title that fits the
    subject and stick to it.
  • Remember your audience. Use language, references,
    and subjects that will be comprehensible and not
    objectionable.
  • Choose an appropriate medium and forum. Use a
    conference or mailing list on a topic related to
    that of your message.

9
Email Etiquette (continued)
  • Identify yourself. Sign your message with some
    appropriate information such as your name and
    affiliation.
  • Post new ideas. Try not to repeat what has
    already been said except in brief confirmation.
  • Respond to the topic and not the person. Try to
    understand what the person is saying. If you
    can't understand what the person is saying, ask.
    If you must criticize someone, give them a chance
    to respond. If you comment on the style of a
    message, respond to the content as well.
  • Read other messages before responding. Others may
    have already made the same obvious response.
  • Don't respond in anger. Wait a few minutes or
    hours, or even until the next day. If you are
    still angry when you respond, say so.
  • Give the benefit of the doubt. Mistakes,
    misunderstandings, and ignorance are far more
    common than maliciousness.

10
Email Etiquette (continued)
  • Be careful with humor and sarcasm. Many people
    have trouble recognizing these things even in
    person. Some networks have developed typographic
    conventions to get around the difficulties of
    expressing subtleties of expression through ASCII
    characters. One of the more universal is that
    UPPER CASE means shouting. Another is the use of
    the sideways "smiley face," ) or -), to
    indicate lack of serious intent.
  • Do be encouraging and polite. The most effective
    encouragement is often a simple response
    acknowledging a posting.
  • Discourage when necessary. But do it privately
    and politely when possible. Don't discourage at
    all unless you're sure it's needed and that you
    are an appropriate one to do it.

11
Email Etiquette (continued)
  • Assume Permanence and ubiquity. Mail posted to
    discussion lists and sometimes even mail to
    individuals may be saved permanently, with or
    without your knowledge, and may be read by
    anyone, at any time, anywhere. Remember that even
    if a mail message has been deleted, it may exist
    somewhere on a backup tape.

12
Filtering
  • A view filter is an easy way to see only those
    items or files stored in Microsoft Outlook
    folders that meet conditions you specify.
  • Filtering is different from sorting. When you
    sort items, you rearrange the current items in a
    view. For example, in the Inbox, if you click the
    name Joanna Fuller, all the messages in the Inbox
    will appear in alphabetical order with all the
    messages from Joanna Fuller at the top of your
    view. However, all the other messages are still
    there in the Inbox, listed before and after
    Joanna Fuller in alphabetical order. If you
    scroll, you will see them all.
  • When you filter items, you selectively choose
    what items will appear in a view, and only those
    items will appear in the view.
  • The Filter dialog box offers you a variety of
    ways to select and organize your criteria.

13
For example, you can filter all items with
"Joanna Fuller" in the From box to see only items
from Joanna Fuller. All of the other items are
still in the folder and can be seen again by
removing the view filter.
14
Filtering
  • When a view filter is applied to a selected
    folder, the status bar (status bar A horizontal
    bar at the bottom of the screen that displays
    information about the current condition of the
    program, such as the status of items in the
    window, the progress of the current task, or
    information about the selected item.) displays
    the words Filter Applied in the lower-left corner
    of the screen. Multiple Filters Applied displayed
    indicates that both a synchronization filter and
    a view filter have been applied. A
    synchronization filter allows you to choose which
    items are downloaded or kept in your Offline
    Folder file (.ost) (Offline Folder file The file
    on your hard disk that contains offline folders.
    The offline folder file has an .ost extension.
    You can create it automatically when you set up
    Outlook or when you first make a folder available
    offline.).

15
Thoughts from the group
  • If you have any questions, please feel free to
    contact
  • Daryle Lee
  • dalee_at_tiaa-cref.org
  • 704.988.4756
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