Sunday, November 2, 2014

Netiquette IQ Blog of The Day - Some Netiquette Fun

The following article is a very clever one on Netiquette meant to be funny. These should not really be used although many people do similar, even more overt, actions. The message here is that we make mistakes most people will cringe at, but only we will think they are clever.

Be wise and stay with conventional Netiquette!

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Sarah Cooper 10/28/2014 The Huffington Post
15 Tricks to Appear Smart in Email
Posted: 2:06 pm EDT Updated: 10/28/2014 2:59 pm EDT

If you don't care about appearing smart in emails, you can stop reading now.
Oh, good. We're alone.
In the corporate world, there is no ground more fertile for appearing smart than the rich earth that is electronic communication. Your email writing, sending and ignoring skills are just as important as your nodding skills, and even more important than your copying and pasting skills. Here are 15 email tricks that will make you appear smart, passionate, dedicated and most of all, smart.
1. Complain about how much email you get.
http://assets.pinterest.com/images/pidgets/pin_it_button.pngAlways complain about your email volume, but never be the first to say a specific number. I once complained about 200 unread emails and I was laughed out of the breakroom. Instead, find out how much email everyone else gets, and then double it. That's how much email you get.
2. Use a "sent from my phone" signature that apologizes for typos.
Use a "sent from my phone" signature, even when you're not sending from your phone. This makes you look like you're always busy and on the go, and also gets you out of proofreading.
3. When your manager responds to a thread, respond immediately after.
It's impossible to pay attention to every active thread all the time, but you must at least pay attention when your manager responds. Make sure you see the moment he responds, and then respond immediately with "totally agree," "definitely" or "took the words right out of my mouth."
4. Be the first to congratulate.
http://assets.pinterest.com/images/pidgets/pin_it_button.pngFeature launched? Respond: "W00t way to go!" Baby on the way? Respond: "Mazel tov!" Peanut brittle on Brian's desk? Respond: "This is delicious!" Whenever something good happens, always be the first to respond and always reply all. This will make you seem like a highly engaged team player.In addition, when you constantly point out how awesome everyone's doing, you leave them feeling great and ignoring the fact that you haven't done any real work in over a year.
5. Share random thoughts at odd hours.
Create a cache of short, random thoughts that you can auto-send in the middle of the night. These could be:
a question about the status of a project
a thought you have about organizational structure
a ridiculous feature request
a link to an "interesting" article
an "interesting" tidbit about a competitor (something we should all be "paying attention to")
Whatever it is, you'll have folks wagging their tongues about how dedicated you are to be thinking about the company at 3 a.m.
6. Put some [information] in the subject.
http://assets.pinterest.com/images/pidgets/pin_it_button.pngYour subject line isn't complete without some clarifying information contained in brackets. Some good ones to use:
Subject: [Update] Latest update
Subject: [Confidential] Please don't share
Subject: [WE DID IT] We did it!
7. Send vague but frequent status updates.
"Just a quick update on how things are going..."

Start every other email with this snippet and you'll immediately impress your colleagues. They probably won't read much past this, so feel free to follow it with a meaningless data point on this month's returning users or the new engineer that's joining the team in four months.
8. Send very specific details on your whereabouts throughout the day.
Going to the airport? It's important to let everyone know when you'll be in a cab, on the train, going through security, at the gate, on the plane, at baggage claim, in another cab and back at the office  --  as well as the minute-to-minute status of your Internet access every step of the way.
9. Start every email with TL;DR.
http://assets.pinterest.com/images/pidgets/pin_it_button.pngStart every email with a bullet point summary, labeled "TL;DR" (Too long; don't read). In it, summarize the main points of your email, using bold and italic formatting. The rest of the email can be a mistake-laden mess because it's very long and most likely no one will read it.
10. Slightly alienate your audience.
Start every email with, "If you don't care about [something you should care about], stop reading now." Do this even for short emails. Some variations on this include:
If you don't care about the future of this company, stop reading now...
If you already know all there is to know about quantum physics, stop reading now...
If you're not curious where I'll be for the next hour, stop reading now...
 11. Use clever abbreviations.
LGTM, SGTM, FWIW, AFAIK, CIL. Use them all.
12. Be the first to suggest a meeting.
When a thread gets past 25 replies, a contest of efficiency has begun and the first person to suggest a meeting is the winner. Be that winner. Suggest that meeting. Use abbreviation: F2F
13. Send a "friendly ping."
http://assets.pinterest.com/images/pidgets/pin_it_button.pngSend a "friendly reminder," "friendly follow-up" or "friendly ping," to old, outdated threads that everyone forgot about months ago. This will make it seem like nothing gets past you.
14. Wait a week before responding to direct requests, then ask if it's still needed.
Never respond to direct requests right away. If your help is truly needed, that person will find you, but most likely he'll just ask someone else. After seven days has passed, respond with, "This got buried, still needed?"
15. Use an overly complex out-of-office auto-responder.
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 In addition to this blog, I have authored the premiere book on Netiquette, " Netiquette IQ - A Comprehensive Guide to Improve, Enhance and Add Power to Your Email". You can view my profile, reviews of the book and content excerpts at:
 www.amazon.com/author/paulbabicki
 If you would like to listen to experts in all aspects of Netiquette and communication, try my radio show on BlogtalkRadio  and an online newsletter via paper.li.I have established Netiquette discussion groups with Linkedin and  Yahoo I am also a member of the International Business Etiquette and Protocol Group and Minding Manners among others. I regularly consult for the Gerson Lehrman Group, a worldwide network of subject matter experts and I have been contributing to the blogs Everything Email and emailmonday . My work has appeared in numerous publications and I have presented to groups such as The Breakfast Club of NJ Rider University and  PSG of Mercer County, NJ.

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