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Introduction to Introduction to Business Writing: Business Writing: Effective Business Effective Business Emails Emails Wendy M. Gough Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan Nagoya, Japan

Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

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Page 1: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Introduction to Introduction to Business Writing: Business Writing: Effective Business Effective Business

EmailsEmails

Wendy M. GoughWendy M. GoughSt. Mary College/Nunoike St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, JapanNagoya, Japan

Page 2: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Before writing the Before writing the emailemail

Make a plan!

Think about the purpose of the email

Think about the person who will read the email and how you want him or her to react

Make an outline or list of the main points and details you want to include in the email

Double check any facts, dates, times, or other specific details that will be included in the email

Page 3: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Things to consider when doing Things to consider when doing business correspondencebusiness correspondence

Page 4: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Who are you writing to and what is your relationship with the person?

If the person you are writing to is in a higher position than you, your email should use more formal language than if the person is someone in the same level position than you.

If you have never met the person receiving your email before, you should use formal language in the first email to him or her.

Once you have sent the first email and received a reply, you can choose to continue using formal language or choose to use less formal language in future emails.

Page 5: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

What is the situation?What is the situation?

Think about the reason you are sending the email and decide if formal or informal language is better.

If you are requesting a service or asking a favor, you should use formal language.

If you are making a complaint, you should use strong words to express your dissatisfaction or problem but you must be polite.

If you are introducing yourself, you should use formal language but you can use words or phrases that let your personality show through as well.

If you are writing a customer relation letter, you should use formal language.

Page 6: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

What do you want to What do you want to accomplish?accomplish?

Think about the reason for writing the email and what you want the person who receives the email to do with it.

If you want the receiver to do something for you, make it clear. Tell the receiver exactly what action you want done.

Tell the receiver if no action needs to be taken.

If you want the receiver to respond by a certain date, write the response date.

If you are negotiating or rearranging a meeting, write your demands or available times clearly.

Page 7: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Some things to remember when writing business emails

Page 8: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Get right to the pointGet right to the point

Don’t use unnecessary words and phrases that distract from the main idea of the email or may

confuse the reader

The person reading your email does not have a lot of time to read your email so you must make it as direct as possible.

Make the reason for writing the email clear at the beginning and only add details that are directly related to the topic of the email.

Page 9: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Use simple sentencesUse simple sentences

Avoiding difficult or complex sentence structures will help you avoid grammar mistakes.

Simple sentences will make the email easier for your reader to understand, especially if the person reading the email is not a native English speaker.

Page 10: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Pay attention to word Pay attention to word choicechoice

Remember that writing, is a form of indirect communication. Unlike having a conversation with someone, you do not have a chance to clarify yourself by restating your ideas or use nonverbal cues to make your meaning clear. You have to make sure your reader understands what you want to say and gets the right “message” the first time.

Page 11: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Use words that are specifically related to the topic but define any words or phrases that you think the reader might not be familiar with, especially words that are specific to a certain type of job, field of study, or product.

Think about how the email might be perceived by the reader. Are there any words or phrases that may make the tone seem angry, flippant, or disrespectful?

Avoid trying to make a joke or say something funny in an email. Sometimes what you think is funny might be misunderstood by the reader and create a bad relationship.

Page 12: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

The subject of the The subject of the emailemail

Always write the subject of the email on the subject line

Remember that business people often receive hundreds of emails every day. If you don’t write the subject in the subject line the person receiving the email might think it is SPAM or junk email and delete the message. If the subject isn’t clear they might delete the email as well, so make sure the subject is direct-don’t use too many words.

Page 13: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

The four Parts of a business The four Parts of a business emailemail

The Opening Tells the reader why you are writing

The Focus Tells the details about the topic

The Action Tells what you want to happen and gives a time frame

The Closing Thank the reader and mention future communication

Page 14: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Basic Email FormatBasic Email Format

Templates from Learnthenet

Page 15: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

The receiver’s email address

Carbon copy

Blind carbon copy

Email subject

Page 16: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

[email protected]

[email protected]

July 5 meeting time change

Page 17: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

Type your email message in the text box, then click send and it will be sent to the receivers you have indicated in the to, Cc, and Bcc areas.

Page 18: Introduction to Business Writing: Effective Business Emails Wendy M. Gough St. Mary College/Nunoike Gaigo Senmon Gakko Nagoya, Japan

ReferencReferenceses

http://www.learnthenet.com/ENGLISH/html/92email.htm