Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Pls come 2 mtg

- Annie Lane

I have noticed a shift in common communicat­ion skills over the past few years in the workplace that I believe has been caused by texting, and it has quickly become a pet peeve of mine.

I work for a large insurance company on the East Coast. I have noticed that work-related emails are becoming less and less profession­al, to the point where some are so vague that I wonder whether the sender realizes how the end product looks to the receiver. I need to point out that I am a 20-something woman, and I do my fair share of texting. However, when I receive an email from someone in a profession­al context, I expect to see more than “tks” or “u” or “mtg” in the body of the email. When I see those abbreviate­d words, I give the emails less importance and am often insulted by them.

When did it become accepted practice to slip into what I consider a sloppy style of communicat­ion on the job? In my opinion, people are entitled to communicat­e in any way they please outside the workplace; however, slang-style writing is unacceptab­le in a profession­al setting.

Thanks for letting me get this off my chest!

— No Texting, Please Though our society is as advanced as it has ever been, it often seems like a dark age for manners. Shine a light by your good example. The next time you get a lax email from a co-worker, respond extra profession­ally — with a formal salutation, a wellformed paragraph and a proper closing. Often this is enough to shift the tone of the whole correspond­ence.

It seems that today a lot of people — too many — have trouble differenti­ating between what’s appropriat­e at home and what’s appropriat­e at work. I, too, believe that in profession­al emails (or even text messages, if you find yourself texting a boss), it’s important to maintain a degree of formality. No one ever lost a job for erring on the side of politeness.

I enjoy your take on advice, for the most part, as well as your concise answers to writers’ issues.

Could you, however, consider dropping the term “caretaker” in favor of “caregiver”? Many of us older folks think of cemeteries when we hear “caretaker”! The latter is so much warmer. — Russ

Shine a light by your good example. The next time you get a lax email from a co-worker, respond extra profession­ally — with a formal salutation, a well-formed paragraph and a proper closing. Often this is enough to shift the tone of the whole correspond­ence.

Goodness me. You’ve got a point. I’ll go with “caregiver” in the future (unless, of course, I’m responding to a letter about cemetery maintenanc­e).

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States