mandarin.orange Posted May 30, 2014 Posted May 30, 2014 Some Friday humor: "21 Things You Say In Work Emails, and What They Really Mean" #4 seems especially relevant to prospective students, looking for potential advisors...or current students, trying to court new collaborators. And #12 reminds me of the amazingly long and detailed "Signing your emails with 'Best'" thread here on Grad Cafe. gk210, CageFree and fuzzylogician 3
maelia8 Posted May 30, 2014 Posted May 30, 2014 Oh man #17 … or its variant, "thanks so much for your help." I am definitely guilty of ending practically every email I send to a department secretary with that. I guess I always thought if it as sort of a proactive way of saying I expect them to be kind enough to answer my question, but I guess it is pretty passive-agressive
mandarin.orange Posted May 30, 2014 Author Posted May 30, 2014 I guess I always thought if it as sort of a proactive way of saying I expect them to be kind enough to answer my question, but I guess it is pretty passive-agressive Well, I use it too, and I think support admin like this are quite used to starting/ending every email with some sort of nicety. Certainly it's better than "Thanks in advance."
the_sheath Posted May 31, 2014 Posted May 31, 2014 Wait crap, /I/ sign my emails with "thanks in advance"! That was bad?! Why? Also why is it that turning passive aggression into a art form is such a huge part of adulthood?
VioletAyame Posted June 1, 2014 Posted June 1, 2014 Well, I use it too, and I think support admin like this are quite used to starting/ending every email with some sort of nicety. Certainly it's better than "Thanks in advance." I do that too, and sometimes I even thank them at the beginning of the emails, then "Thanks again for etc" at the end. I agree that they're probably used to it and it's always better to err on the (overly) polite way. And no, I don't think "Thanks in advance" is any way curt or passive aggressive. I've slowly realized that perhaps I put too much thoughts in the wording of emails on which the recipients will only spend a few seconds glimpsing for the main point. It's still important to be nice and grateful, but the exact wording doesn't matter so much as the tone and content of the whole email.
mandarin.orange Posted June 1, 2014 Author Posted June 1, 2014 Hmm...guess I read once (long ago) that "thanks in advance" was passive-agressive, or implying there would not be enough time for a follow-up email after said thing was done to properly thank them. But I got that from a similar internet/article post like this (long ago), so who knows.
juilletmercredi Posted June 1, 2014 Posted June 1, 2014 2 & 3 are DEFINITELY what I am thinking when I put those things in an email to my advisor. I totally use "Thanks in advance" to be passive-aggressive. It's my way of saying "You're totally going to do this." Otherwise I just put a regular thank you, lol.
themmases Posted June 3, 2014 Posted June 3, 2014 I enjoyed this, but they left off my favorite: rephrasing your request in a forward of your original email so they can see how long ago you asked. mandarin.orange 1
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