A Beginner's Guide to Effective Email:
Page Layout

Kaitlin Duck Sherwood ducky@webfoot.com

Words on a computer screen look different than on paper, and usually people find it harder to read things on a screen than on paper. (I know some people who go so far as to print out their email to read it!) The screen's resolution is not as good as paper's, there is sometimes flicker, the font may be smaller, or the font may be ugly. Your recipient's mail reader may also impose some constraints upon the formatting of the mail. This means that good email page layout is different from good paper document page layout.

Shorter Paragraphs

In addition to the above-mentioned problems, frequently the mail will be read in a document window with scrollbars. While scrollbars are nice, it makes it harder to visually track long paragraphs. Consider breaking up your paragraphs to only a few sentences apiece.

Line Length

Most software to read mail does not automatically wrap (adjust what words go on what line). This means that if the software you use to write mail wraps your words for you, your recipient may end up with a message that looks like this:
	 I've got the price quote for the Cobra subassembly ready; as soon as I get a decision on the thromblemeister selection, I'll be ready to go.  Have you talked to the thermo guys about whether they are ready to go with the left-handed thrombo or do they want to wait and check out the right-handed one first?
It is even worse with some mail readers - they truncate everything past the eightieth character. This is not the way to win friends and influence people.

A good rule of thumb is to keep your lines under seventy-five characters long. Why seventy-five and not eighty? Because you should leave a little room for the indentation or quote marks your correspondent might want if he/she is going to quote a piece of your email in his/her reply.

Terser Prose

We spend twelve to twenty years being rewarded for being verbose in our writing. (How many times when you were in school were you told to write a N-page paper?) This is not appropriate for email, and the fewer people who are getting the email, the terser you should be. If they want more information, they can ask for it. (Also note that in some places, people get charged by the byte and/or have limits on how much disk space their email can use!)

My rule of thumb is that you should try to keep everything on one "page". In most cases, this means twenty-five lines of text. (And yes, that means that this document is way, WAY too long for email!)

Some mailers support "attachments", where you can specify a document (or even a binary file) to send with your mail. If your correspondent has a mail reader that can handle attachments, this works very well: a long attachment can be looked at later. However, if your correspondent can't handle attachments and you send a non-ASCII file (like a Word document, a binary, a picture, or even compressed text), be advised that it will appear as just so much garbage. It might be better sometimes to post the document on the Web and email a URL.


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Ducky

Last modified 5 Apr 1995

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