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What is the difference between formal and informal emails?
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What is the difference between formal and informal emails?
We spend a significant part of our workday in our email inboxes. In 2022, the average office worker receives approximately 32 emails a day on top of instant messages, conferences, and one-on-one phone calls, and drafting their own emails.
That's a lot of communication.
When you feel overwhelmed with constant messages, you may feel tempted to throw email etiquette out the window in your replies. What can one bad email do to your career, anyway?
But you know that good workplace communication is an essential pillar of any business. Solid communication constructs solid connections that improve emotional well-being and boost productivity.
In this guide, we'll review the importance of following proper email etiquette rules. Then, we'll break down situations where crafting formal emails or informal messages, why they’re critical to your professional relationships and career growth, and offer formatting and email etiquette tips and templates.
The difference between formal and informal emails is the recipient. You likely write formal emails to colleagues, co-workers, managers, or clients with polite, professional language and use the best email etiquette possible. Informal emails go to friends and family with laid-back language, personal anecdotes, and few structure or formatting requirements.
Keeping track of what makes an email formal isn’t always intuitive. Here are a few general email etiquette rules to remember when crafting an informal or formal email.
A formal email is for professional correspondence sent to someone we don’t know personally or a colleague or client with whom we have a business relationship or are writing for the first time. A business email always requires good email etiquette, appropriate formatting and template styles, and the right tone.
Here are four characteristics of a formal email:
An appropriate format includes:
4. Etiquette: Our online communication is an extension of ourselves and tells our recipient what to expect from a continued working relationship. Instead of handshakes, eye contact, facial expressions, and body language that we observe in face-to-face meetings, formal emails require phrasing that communicates professionalism. You should avoid using emojis, exclamation points, or abbreviations the recipient may be unfamiliar with.
An informal email is used for personal correspondence sent to those we have a friendly relationship with, like friends and family. A personal email is written with simple and casual language and can use a playful or personal tone. Unlike a professional email, an informal email has no format or templates to stick to.
A formal email template should follow these four basic rules:
4. Etiquette: Informal emails don't have specific etiquette to follow — it’s entirely dependent on the type of relationship you have with the recipient.
Email etiquette is a set of principles that guide appropriate business communication when writing to potential and existing clients, business partners, co-workers, managers, and acquaintances in your professional network.
Solid communication skills help you thrive in your professional growth. Writing with respect, clarity, and efficiency builds better connections across your team and avoids miscommunications that are both counterproductive and reflect poorly on you and your organization.
Here are four professional benefits of learning proper email etiquette:
It’s important to know how to start an email professionally. Start the email with the correct salutation, which will change depending on your relationship with the recipient. You don't need to get creative. The main salutations, "Hi" and "Hello" are less formal, or you can choose the more traditional "Dear":
If you're writing directly to a colleague or someone you have a friendly professional relationship with, you can start with the following, start with "Hello" or "Hi." Someone you‘ve never met or have a formal professional relationship with, like a hiring manager or a new or potential client, should be greeted with "Dear."
"Dear Sir," "Dear Madam," "Dear Mr." or "Dear Mrs." might unintentionally misgender and offend someone. If you don't know how someone prefers to be addressed, stay gender-neutral and use their first or full name. Neutral greetings like “Hey there,” “Hey folks,” or “Hey again” also avoids assumptions of gender.
Getting straight to the point doesn't mean you shouldn't greet someone. Keep it simple. Here are a few acceptable greetings:
Having a professional email address is a show of professionalism and seriousness. If you’re representing a business, always use your company email. If you’re a freelancer or contractor without a professional website, create a Gmail with your full name. Leave the nicknames for informal emails.
If you forward all your correspondence to one inbox, ensure you’re sending messages from the correct email.
If someone took the time to write to you, be respectful and follow up with an answer. Responsiveness should be a top priority. Set aside time to go through emails at the beginning and end of your day. Not responding isn't just disrespectful — it will likely make people perceive you as unreliable and unprofessional.
If you’re going to be away for a vacation, create an out-of-office auto-reply to manage people's expectations. They won’t think you’re ignoring their emails or feel frustrated when they don’t hear from you. Keep it brief:
Pay special attention to email threads. When you use the “reply all” button, you might send the email to a recipient who is no longer involved or wants to be left out of the correspondence. Double-check who you’re replying to before hitting send.
If you’re writing a new email to many recipients, using the blind carbon copy, or bcc, the feature is best. Adding email addresses in the bcc field makes those addresses invisible to the other recipients. This both respects your recipients' privacy and avoids unwanted email threads when someone hits “reply all.”
Relying on lots of em dashes, semi-colons, or parenthesis to explain a situation indicates that your email is better suited for a phone call or meeting. Don't overuse unnecessary punctuation. Exclamation points are appropriate for specific situations like:
For day-to-day conversation, stick to the tried and true period and remember to keep it brief.
Choose a font that’s easy to read and avoid unnecessary embellishments like memes, gifs, and emojis. They’ll just distract from your point.
Copying and pasting an entire link looks sloppy and demonstrates a lack of attention to detail. Always shorten URLs or hyperlinks over text.
If you need to include a document, make sure that you mention to your recipient that you’re sending an attachment and double-check that it works properly. If you’re sending a large file through a third-party platform, confirm that the recipient received a notification.
Proofread to ensure that your message is clear, concise, and polite. Double-check for typos and grammar errors, and always run the spell-check feature. If you don't have professional copy-editing skills, download a grammar app to make sure you have crossed your digital t's and dotted your i's.
Spelling someone's name wrong is a quick way to make a bad first impression. If their full name isn't in their email address, check their LinkedIn profile or hover over their email address.
A signature block is a valuable space to provide additional information about yourself and your brand. A work-appropriate email signature might include the following information about you:
Links to appropriate social media platforms, like LinkedIn. Only use Instagram and Twitter if you use your social media accounts to promote your personal brand.
Communication skills are among the most important skills you can learn. As remote work remains present and online communication grows, taking the time to build better-written communication habits will help you nurture respectful relationships, save time, and stay productive.
Think your emails through, stay concise, and always double-check your writing. You’ll make clearing the 32 emails in your inbox the easiest part of your day.
Madeline is a writer, communicator, and storyteller who is passionate about using words to help drive positive change. She holds a bachelor's in English Creative Writing and Communication Studies and lives in Denver, Colorado. In her spare time, she's usually somewhere outside (preferably in the mountains) — and enjoys poetry and fiction.
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