Wednesday, July 22, 2020
Get to the point fast to get better replies to business emails
Get to the point fast to get better replies to business emails Inboxes are crowded places. With the constant flow of email marketing vying for our attention, itâs more important than ever to get strategic about business email. Emailing eats up a quarter of the working day. That means that on average, we spend two hours a day clearing out the inbox. No surprise that so many of us fall into the category of âstress emailers.â We react quickly, skim emails, and respond either right away or not at all. (A USC study found that 50 percent of email replies are sent in fewer than 60 minutes.) I spoke to Tarzan Kay, a copywriter specializing in email marketing, who shared some simple tricks for highly effective emailing. âThereâs so much great science to help us understand inbox behaviors, and how to get better, faster responses,â says Kay. âI limit emails to one subject, and keep them to a grade 7 reading level. Not because I donât think my reader is smart, but because sheâs incredibly busy â" if she canât digest it in 20 seconds or less, thereâs a good chance itâs going into the âsave for laterâ pile. Later rarely comes.â Language is a powerful motivator, and an equally powerful de-motivator. Even a subtle turn of phrase can change the mindframe in which the remainder of an email gets read. âI sprinkle my emails with lots of feel-good âtrigger phrasesâ to warm up my reader and put them in the mood to reply. Starting an email with a simple phrase like âI like the way youâve [insert admirable thing]â can be the difference between a glowing reply and getting sent to trash.â (Grab her free âtrigger phrasesâ cheat sheet here.) Here are Tarzan Kayâs top 5 tips for getting faster replies to business emails: 1. Write a straight-to-the-point subject line Subject lines donât need to be stylish or pique curiosity. Save that for email marketing, or cold prospects that need to be courted. Subject lines are most effective when theyâre crystal clear and affirm the body of the email. For example: âSpeakers for Job Conventionâ is better than âConvention Ideasâ âSat Aug. 4 Meeting @ 10amâ is better than âMeeting Timeâ 2. Get to the point fast and reaffirm the main idea Donât assume the recipient remembers the subject to which youâre referring. Inboxes are chaotic, and itâs inconvenient to have to search through previous emails to pick up the thread. For example: âVery generous of you to offer me the corner office. I accept.â is better than âWonderful. I accept.â âGlad you liked my presentation at last weekâs job convention.â is better than âGlad you liked it.â 3. Play copycat to the recipientâs email style Some busy execs love to send zero-frills emails â" one-liners with no greetings or small talk. If thatâs the case, you can dispense with the foreplay as well. Say what you need to in as few words as possible. On the other hand, if youâre just getting to know someone, and his emails regale you with tales of last Saturdayâs golf game, feel free to reciprocate. Bonus points if you can relate back with a tale of the famous hole-in-one you hit in the summer of â92. 4. If you need action on multiple items, number them If there are multiple questions that need answering, and theyâre scattered throughout the email, itâs a lot of work for the recipient to comb through and answer each question. Itâs quite likely at least one will slip through the cracks. Donât make the recipient work too hard. Number your questions, and add bullets to action items, if youâve included those as well. That way she can reply back in the body of your email, using it as a template. 5. Add formatting Most of us scan emails the same way we scan articles. This is especially true for group emails, where tasks are delegated to a few different people. Use bold text. Underline it. Write it in red. Highlight names. Your point will come off quicker. Anything in caps draws the reader in immediately. THIS WORKS great for highlighting the main call-to-action. Finally, shorter is almost always better. Say what you can in the fewest number of words possible. Comb through it before sending, and eliminate any extraneous words. You wonât win any literary awards, but youâll most certainly get more helpful replies, quicker. Consider that your gold star.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.