Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Initial email, I include greeting. But the back and forth on a topic? No greeting. It’s a conversation.
This is fine. Similar to saying hello or good morning the first time you see a person for the day, but not repeatedly throughout the day.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, no this does not annoy me. I work in biglaw. If that annoyed me I'd be insane.
Anonymous wrote:You all are insane. You really need to have a good morning in order to be receptive to a work request? How old are you?
Anonymous wrote:I definitely use salutations externally. Internally with people senior to me, people I’m not often emailing, or if I’m asking something. But if I’ve emailed you several times in the past week or day—especially about the same project—and we work closely together, I might not use one.
I actually cringe at “good morning” or “have a great weekend,” because they presume I’m reading the email around the time you sent it, which is rarely the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like this is a Millennial vs. Gen X thing. I'm Gen X and I find only the Millennials don't bother with a greeting.
Listen, manners count. I don't care whether it's an email, a letter, or a note in a bottle: manners count.
Gen X here. I don’t do a greeting except the initial email. But if I’ve already talked to you that day, or if its a reply to an existing string, no greeting.
I work with Boomers - they don’t do it either.
I work in IT, so it may be more related to industry than age.
The only people that send me emails with greetings are salespeople.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious-- when you receive an email without a greeting/salutation in the intro (e.g. "Beth, The XYZ report needs to be sent to legal vs. Good morning Beth, The XYZ report needs to be sent to legal) does it bother you?
I find it extremely rude, yet a lot of people send emails this way. What gives with not placing a standard greeting in the intro with the person's name? It comes across as abrasive and abrupt. Assuming that you would provide the standard greeting on a phone call or when you walk into someone's office with a similar request, why is it ok to leave it off of an intro to an email?
Anonymous wrote:I don't start an email with a greeting and hate it when people respond with one.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like this is a Millennial vs. Gen X thing. I'm Gen X and I find only the Millennials don't bother with a greeting.
Listen, manners count. I don't care whether it's an email, a letter, or a note in a bottle: manners count.