This month I'll share on Email
Etiquette in discussion groups. For those who are not yet
aware, on the Internet there are hundreds of thousands of
discussion groups available in any topic imaginable. The
most popular group systems used are YahooGroups.com, Topica.com
and SmartGroups.com but there are others. Some web owners
set up their own private groups too, via their website.
The idea behind these groups is that someone starts up
or moderates a topic and people become members (at no cost)
if they are interested. Some of these groups have closed
memberships, i.e. you have to be involved in whatever that
group is about and outsiders cannot join, whilst other groups
are open to all and sundry.
With the whole world being open to membership for these
groups cultural differences need to be considered and it
is possible to easily upset a member and suddenly you have
a heated argument with many others getting involved and
the original meaning and context completely shoved aside!
I've seen this happen in groups and it's a shame, as it
often just takes a little thought and consideration to realise
that perhaps the writer didn't fully understand the language,
or hadn't actually meant what may have sounded rather rude.
There have been times when someone has written something
I thought was offensive or wrong and rather than emailing
back to the list via the group email address, I have chosen
to email the writer direct instead. A much better way to
handle a misunderstanding.
A good rule when handling/writing
email for group discussions - read through it first
and then check which address it is going to, before clicking
'Send'.
The suggestion last month about using signature blocks
really applies in this situation - how will people know
who you are, or where you come from if you only sign off
as 'Kathie'?
Another suggestion - trim
the message before sending it back to the group. What I
mean by this is do not leave all the original discussion
and replies at the tail end as this is unnecessary and makes
it inconvenient for those who have chosen to receive a daily
digest of messages (they keep reading the same things over
and over otherwise) and difficult for those who are on limited
bandwidth for email. But don't delete the whole previous
message - if you are responding to something, or adding
to the discussion. There are often multiple discussions
going on and it could prove difficult for the reader to
understand what you're saying, and in what context, if the
whole previous message is deleted from your response. I
have at times read something posted to a group and thought
'huh?' There is a happy medium here.
Discussion groups give you an opportunity to learn from
others and share ideas, but more than that, it allows you
to make friends on a global scale, and then the world really
does seem to become smaller. And, if you are really knowledgeable
in your field, it also helps enforce this to others and
before you know it, you become a respected member that others
seek to learn from and perhaps be mentored by. What a privilege
that can be!
One word of warning - belonging
to multiple groups can become time consuming and addictive!
You could find yourself spending more time reading and responding
to messages than getting your work done. So, if you work
virtually like I, and my team do, that can become a real
danger to your business. As in all things, moderation is
the key, and you stand to learn many things and make lots
of friends.
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