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The Defining Moment



Is it professional to write unrelated content in an almost-empty email?


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.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








40















I am employed in a consultancy company and I work at the client workplace. Monthly, I have a client employee sign a timesheet to certify the number of hours I have actually worked.



I then scan the timesheet and send it by email to a colleague in another department, I'm not sure if HR, Accountant or something like that.



In the body of the email, I just kinda repeat the content of the object, being sure to write the month and the year to which the timesheet refer and greetings at the start and at the end, but obviously, the email tends to be pretty boring since the real deal is the attached file.



So, I wanted to start adding something unique, like a quote taken from the internet or some kind of random curiosity. I would pay attention to be as neutral as possible to not offend my colleague or the managers I add in CC.



Would you consider such a behaviour a unprofessional? What do you usually write in the body of emails which really have no body?










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Snow
    Apr 1 at 8:44

















40















I am employed in a consultancy company and I work at the client workplace. Monthly, I have a client employee sign a timesheet to certify the number of hours I have actually worked.



I then scan the timesheet and send it by email to a colleague in another department, I'm not sure if HR, Accountant or something like that.



In the body of the email, I just kinda repeat the content of the object, being sure to write the month and the year to which the timesheet refer and greetings at the start and at the end, but obviously, the email tends to be pretty boring since the real deal is the attached file.



So, I wanted to start adding something unique, like a quote taken from the internet or some kind of random curiosity. I would pay attention to be as neutral as possible to not offend my colleague or the managers I add in CC.



Would you consider such a behaviour a unprofessional? What do you usually write in the body of emails which really have no body?










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Snow
    Apr 1 at 8:44













40












40








40


3






I am employed in a consultancy company and I work at the client workplace. Monthly, I have a client employee sign a timesheet to certify the number of hours I have actually worked.



I then scan the timesheet and send it by email to a colleague in another department, I'm not sure if HR, Accountant or something like that.



In the body of the email, I just kinda repeat the content of the object, being sure to write the month and the year to which the timesheet refer and greetings at the start and at the end, but obviously, the email tends to be pretty boring since the real deal is the attached file.



So, I wanted to start adding something unique, like a quote taken from the internet or some kind of random curiosity. I would pay attention to be as neutral as possible to not offend my colleague or the managers I add in CC.



Would you consider such a behaviour a unprofessional? What do you usually write in the body of emails which really have no body?










share|improve this question
















I am employed in a consultancy company and I work at the client workplace. Monthly, I have a client employee sign a timesheet to certify the number of hours I have actually worked.



I then scan the timesheet and send it by email to a colleague in another department, I'm not sure if HR, Accountant or something like that.



In the body of the email, I just kinda repeat the content of the object, being sure to write the month and the year to which the timesheet refer and greetings at the start and at the end, but obviously, the email tends to be pretty boring since the real deal is the attached file.



So, I wanted to start adding something unique, like a quote taken from the internet or some kind of random curiosity. I would pay attention to be as neutral as possible to not offend my colleague or the managers I add in CC.



Would you consider such a behaviour a unprofessional? What do you usually write in the body of emails which really have no body?







professionalism colleagues email italy






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 29 at 17:37









MackM

92911329




92911329










asked Mar 29 at 14:06









bracco23bracco23

318125




318125







  • 2





    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Snow
    Apr 1 at 8:44












  • 2





    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Snow
    Apr 1 at 8:44







2




2





Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– Snow
Apr 1 at 8:44





Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– Snow
Apr 1 at 8:44










11 Answers
11






active

oldest

votes


















191














Just leave the email with the attachment and state




This timesheet refers to X.



Please see attached.



Regards, Bracco




Just leave the quote out of it and keep the email basic. Your emails are for the recipient to do their job. As long as you allow them to do that then don't complicate it or confuse them.






share|improve this answer




















  • 16





    Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

    – a CVn
    Mar 29 at 18:09






  • 14





    That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

    – Abigail
    Mar 29 at 23:17






  • 8





    And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

    – Vix
    Mar 30 at 5:57






  • 5





    @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

    – user71659
    Mar 30 at 7:20






  • 2





    @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

    – user71659
    Mar 31 at 22:02


















66














If the e-mail is basically "complete" with subject line and attachment such as your example then I might add "see attached" or something but there's really no point in bulking the e-mail out with "fluff". They want the attachment - they get the attachment and use it. Job done.



Random quotes from the internet will just make you look immature - not that it will be a big deal though since people probably won't read them.






share|improve this answer


















  • 10





    @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

    – only_pro
    Mar 29 at 14:34






  • 42





    @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

    – Flater
    Mar 29 at 14:52







  • 10





    @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

    – Ed Plunkett
    Mar 29 at 15:33






  • 4





    I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

    – Lichtbringer
    Mar 29 at 23:23






  • 1





    I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

    – Michael
    Apr 1 at 9:26



















35














 Hi bracco23,



please see my answer in the attachment.



Greetings, Chris




There is no reason to bloat your email with unnecessary text. These
people will handle a huge bunch of those emails, you will disturb their
workflow
if you keep adding noise.



Also your boss might not get offended by your random quotes, but he
might get offended because your browsing the internet for useless
stuff
.



Keep it short and simple.







share|improve this answer




















  • 10





    @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

    – Chris
    Mar 29 at 22:44






  • 19





    To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

    – L. F.
    Mar 31 at 5:58






  • 3





    Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

    – brasofilo
    Mar 31 at 16:14






  • 1





    @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

    – pipe
    Apr 1 at 11:54






  • 2





    @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

    – L. F.
    Apr 1 at 11:56


















10















Is it professional to write unrelated content in an almost-emtpy email?




No. Why would you confuse the reader by adding something random?



Try to keep it short and simple.






share|improve this answer
































    10














    Informality and unrelated content in work messages are not professional. That does not make it unprofessional.



    When this is acceptable and when it isn't is very nuanced, and depends on the office culture, the audience, how often you do it, how well it is received, your particular relationship with everyone who will see it, your reputation, your age, etc. Generally, if it in any way impedes business functioning the only professional response is to stop.



    People who have these social skills are more popular, more influential, and can see concrete advantages in their careers.






    share|improve this answer























    • The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

      – George M
      Mar 29 at 22:02






    • 1





      @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

      – David Richerby
      Mar 30 at 0:08






    • 8





      The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

      – George M
      Mar 30 at 0:12


















    5














    There's no reason or need to "adorn" the email with superfluous text. There's also no reason to write the same thing in the email as is contained in the attached time sheet.




    Attached is my time sheet for the period xx/xx/xxxx through
    xx/xx/xxxx. Thank you.







    share|improve this answer






























      2














      The random quotes probably are of no benefit to the recipient, the people who choose accounting like staring at numbers all day, they don't need a surprise package from the real world, if they need a break they can go to the water cooler, stare out the window, make some paper airplanes, etc when they are ready for it.



      Stating your name again in the email is probably not needed it's already in the from header and in the signature at the base, the date also is not needed.



      The summary is also not needed, but it is not without merit. having a precis there (like say just the total hours) could help with resolving disputes in a timely manner eg if the attachment is hard to read or if there is a misunderstanding, and they notice that your number does not match the time-sheet you could find out and resolve it before pay-day.



      If you are submitting the timesheet late, having the date could be useful to help you find the email at a later time should you need to. So having the date in the subject line on late submissions could be useful.






      share|improve this answer






























        2














        This really depends on your client company. I've seen different companys. In some of them (mostly young and related to creativity), people would do funny things, play jokes on each others (and also on their clients, but they never crosses a line), use "4-letter-words" in their day-to-day-language - things which on this site would not be seen as professional. In others, those things could be your death sentence (not literally).



        So, I would suggest you to take a look on them. How do they speak? How do they write? How "funny" are they and how serious is work for them? Are they like the members of this Stack Exchange site? I think those questions may help you evaluating what to do.






        share|improve this answer























        • For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

          – Guest
          Mar 30 at 18:25


















        1














        As many have said unrelated information is not needed. If you state the time period that is fine, because it can let them see at a glance which time period without having to open the attachment.



        Putting the time period in the subject can be a big help help also. Not only can they find the appropriate email it can also help to avoid the situation where the email software tries to group all the email messages that have the simple subject such "timecard" into one conversation.



        The worst situation is to only have fluff and no other useful information. You might be training them to always skip reading the short emails because they believe they always only have fluff.



        Always include a signature block with all your expected contact information.






        share|improve this answer






























          1














          Re: Timesheet 01/04/2019



          We've talked about this. Please stop including inspirational quotes in your timesheet reports.



          Thanks,

          Michael




          Attachments: timesheet-2019-04-01.xls



          Hi audit team,



          Please see attached timesheet for 01/04/2019.



          smooth seas do not make skillful sailors



          Warmest regards,

          Bracco






          share|improve this answer

























          • I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

            – bracco23
            Apr 1 at 9:33











          • Also, comic sans makes everything better.

            – bracco23
            Apr 1 at 9:34






          • 1





            @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

            – Michael
            Apr 1 at 9:40


















          0














          Yes, but no fluff. Boring is not a big deal.
          But repeating subject, attachment, and mail body can lead to false positive with their anti-spam. Making the mail more human readable. For now you have a mail with only an attachment, in 2-3 process you will have a mail box with unknown data and no way to filter them.



          To avoid that you can add a lot of things even for simple email like:



          • Tag and introduction/description to ease the research.

          • Content information: From [date] To [date], about [serviceXY/CustomerZ], [process name]

          • File/Process information: hash, creation date, process date, source, sheldured/user demand ..

          • Disclaimer about the sender beeing a robot and mail for error and response.

          Once your canvas is ready, ask everyone if they are ok with it. Explaining the purpose: human readable, easy to find and filter, hash to validate data, and disclaimer so user stop talking to the robot.



          Be careful to not break people integration, and send test email to check if the hash doesn't trigger the anti spam.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

            – Bernhard Döbler
            Apr 1 at 9:54






          • 1





            Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

            – user95634
            Apr 1 at 11:30









          protected by mcknz Apr 2 at 12:31



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



          Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














          11 Answers
          11






          active

          oldest

          votes








          11 Answers
          11






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          191














          Just leave the email with the attachment and state




          This timesheet refers to X.



          Please see attached.



          Regards, Bracco




          Just leave the quote out of it and keep the email basic. Your emails are for the recipient to do their job. As long as you allow them to do that then don't complicate it or confuse them.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 16





            Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

            – a CVn
            Mar 29 at 18:09






          • 14





            That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

            – Abigail
            Mar 29 at 23:17






          • 8





            And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

            – Vix
            Mar 30 at 5:57






          • 5





            @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

            – user71659
            Mar 30 at 7:20






          • 2





            @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

            – user71659
            Mar 31 at 22:02















          191














          Just leave the email with the attachment and state




          This timesheet refers to X.



          Please see attached.



          Regards, Bracco




          Just leave the quote out of it and keep the email basic. Your emails are for the recipient to do their job. As long as you allow them to do that then don't complicate it or confuse them.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 16





            Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

            – a CVn
            Mar 29 at 18:09






          • 14





            That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

            – Abigail
            Mar 29 at 23:17






          • 8





            And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

            – Vix
            Mar 30 at 5:57






          • 5





            @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

            – user71659
            Mar 30 at 7:20






          • 2





            @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

            – user71659
            Mar 31 at 22:02













          191












          191








          191







          Just leave the email with the attachment and state




          This timesheet refers to X.



          Please see attached.



          Regards, Bracco




          Just leave the quote out of it and keep the email basic. Your emails are for the recipient to do their job. As long as you allow them to do that then don't complicate it or confuse them.






          share|improve this answer















          Just leave the email with the attachment and state




          This timesheet refers to X.



          Please see attached.



          Regards, Bracco




          Just leave the quote out of it and keep the email basic. Your emails are for the recipient to do their job. As long as you allow them to do that then don't complicate it or confuse them.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Mar 29 at 14:25

























          answered Mar 29 at 14:20









          TwyxzTwyxz

          15.2k114787




          15.2k114787







          • 16





            Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

            – a CVn
            Mar 29 at 18:09






          • 14





            That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

            – Abigail
            Mar 29 at 23:17






          • 8





            And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

            – Vix
            Mar 30 at 5:57






          • 5





            @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

            – user71659
            Mar 30 at 7:20






          • 2





            @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

            – user71659
            Mar 31 at 22:02












          • 16





            Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

            – a CVn
            Mar 29 at 18:09






          • 14





            That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

            – Abigail
            Mar 29 at 23:17






          • 8





            And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

            – Vix
            Mar 30 at 5:57






          • 5





            @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

            – user71659
            Mar 30 at 7:20






          • 2





            @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

            – user71659
            Mar 31 at 22:02







          16




          16





          Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

          – a CVn
          Mar 29 at 18:09





          Or just "Timesheet for X attached. Regards,".

          – a CVn
          Mar 29 at 18:09




          14




          14





          That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

          – Abigail
          Mar 29 at 23:17





          That's three more lines that I would write. I'd give it the subject "Time sheet XXX 20YY" and attach the file.

          – Abigail
          Mar 29 at 23:17




          8




          8





          And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

          – Vix
          Mar 30 at 5:57





          And automate this process where possible through email templating/mail merge type software, perhaps raise the issue with somebody, there are better ways for the company to make use of your time.

          – Vix
          Mar 30 at 5:57




          5




          5





          @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

          – user71659
          Mar 30 at 7:20





          @Abigail I've noticed that sending a blank e-mail with only attachment tends to get caught in spam filters. It's a technique where spam or phishing content is sent as an attachment or image to bypass content filters. That's one reason why many clients complain when you don't have body text. Also modern clients warn you when you say "attached" and forget to put in an attachment.

          – user71659
          Mar 30 at 7:20




          2




          2





          @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

          – user71659
          Mar 31 at 22:02





          @Abigail Internal emails need to be filtered for malware and phishing due to the risk of account compromise.

          – user71659
          Mar 31 at 22:02













          66














          If the e-mail is basically "complete" with subject line and attachment such as your example then I might add "see attached" or something but there's really no point in bulking the e-mail out with "fluff". They want the attachment - they get the attachment and use it. Job done.



          Random quotes from the internet will just make you look immature - not that it will be a big deal though since people probably won't read them.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 10





            @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

            – only_pro
            Mar 29 at 14:34






          • 42





            @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

            – Flater
            Mar 29 at 14:52







          • 10





            @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

            – Ed Plunkett
            Mar 29 at 15:33






          • 4





            I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

            – Lichtbringer
            Mar 29 at 23:23






          • 1





            I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

            – Michael
            Apr 1 at 9:26
















          66














          If the e-mail is basically "complete" with subject line and attachment such as your example then I might add "see attached" or something but there's really no point in bulking the e-mail out with "fluff". They want the attachment - they get the attachment and use it. Job done.



          Random quotes from the internet will just make you look immature - not that it will be a big deal though since people probably won't read them.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 10





            @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

            – only_pro
            Mar 29 at 14:34






          • 42





            @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

            – Flater
            Mar 29 at 14:52







          • 10





            @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

            – Ed Plunkett
            Mar 29 at 15:33






          • 4





            I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

            – Lichtbringer
            Mar 29 at 23:23






          • 1





            I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

            – Michael
            Apr 1 at 9:26














          66












          66








          66







          If the e-mail is basically "complete" with subject line and attachment such as your example then I might add "see attached" or something but there's really no point in bulking the e-mail out with "fluff". They want the attachment - they get the attachment and use it. Job done.



          Random quotes from the internet will just make you look immature - not that it will be a big deal though since people probably won't read them.






          share|improve this answer













          If the e-mail is basically "complete" with subject line and attachment such as your example then I might add "see attached" or something but there's really no point in bulking the e-mail out with "fluff". They want the attachment - they get the attachment and use it. Job done.



          Random quotes from the internet will just make you look immature - not that it will be a big deal though since people probably won't read them.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 29 at 14:21









          motosubatsumotosubatsu

          54.3k28144214




          54.3k28144214







          • 10





            @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

            – only_pro
            Mar 29 at 14:34






          • 42





            @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

            – Flater
            Mar 29 at 14:52







          • 10





            @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

            – Ed Plunkett
            Mar 29 at 15:33






          • 4





            I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

            – Lichtbringer
            Mar 29 at 23:23






          • 1





            I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

            – Michael
            Apr 1 at 9:26













          • 10





            @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

            – only_pro
            Mar 29 at 14:34






          • 42





            @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

            – Flater
            Mar 29 at 14:52







          • 10





            @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

            – Ed Plunkett
            Mar 29 at 15:33






          • 4





            I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

            – Lichtbringer
            Mar 29 at 23:23






          • 1





            I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

            – Michael
            Apr 1 at 9:26








          10




          10





          @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

          – only_pro
          Mar 29 at 14:34





          @bracco23 Immature is a matter of opinion, but in business you should focus on business: getting things done. If it's not relevant to business, leave it out of the email. When it's someone you work with personally and have a decent, friendly relationship with, that's different. This is not one of those cases. Keep it strictly professional.

          – only_pro
          Mar 29 at 14:34




          42




          42





          @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

          – Flater
          Mar 29 at 14:52






          @bracco23: Sharing irrelevant information like quotes etc is something teenagers often do (and that's okay, it's part of being a teenager to figure out and display your identity). The behavior is therefore generally perceived to be that of a teenager, and thus immature. It's not direct proof of immaturity, but it's a lack of profssional experience combined with a behavior commonly found in teenagers that leads to the inference of immaturity.

          – Flater
          Mar 29 at 14:52





          10




          10





          @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

          – Ed Plunkett
          Mar 29 at 15:33





          @bracco23 The point is that you aren't on the other side of the email. A different person is, and that person will probably consider the quotes immature. It's unfair that they form independent opinions of your behavior based on standards other than your own, but that's out of your control. It's one of the things we can't change.

          – Ed Plunkett
          Mar 29 at 15:33




          4




          4





          I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

          – Lichtbringer
          Mar 29 at 23:23





          I can see something like that not being perceived as immature, in specific company cultures. (Maybe if your company is selling essential oils? :D).

          – Lichtbringer
          Mar 29 at 23:23




          1




          1





          I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

          – Michael
          Apr 1 at 9:26






          I wouldn’t say that quotes are immature. For example accompanying a long-awaited release announcement with a «“It’s finished when it‘s done” – Duke Nukem Forever CTO after 13 years of development» certainly adds some spice. We are humans after all. I do agree that random quotes shouldn’t be included in everyday emails.

          – Michael
          Apr 1 at 9:26












          35














           Hi bracco23,



          please see my answer in the attachment.



          Greetings, Chris




          There is no reason to bloat your email with unnecessary text. These
          people will handle a huge bunch of those emails, you will disturb their
          workflow
          if you keep adding noise.



          Also your boss might not get offended by your random quotes, but he
          might get offended because your browsing the internet for useless
          stuff
          .



          Keep it short and simple.







          share|improve this answer




















          • 10





            @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

            – Chris
            Mar 29 at 22:44






          • 19





            To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

            – L. F.
            Mar 31 at 5:58






          • 3





            Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

            – brasofilo
            Mar 31 at 16:14






          • 1





            @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

            – pipe
            Apr 1 at 11:54






          • 2





            @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

            – L. F.
            Apr 1 at 11:56















          35














           Hi bracco23,



          please see my answer in the attachment.



          Greetings, Chris




          There is no reason to bloat your email with unnecessary text. These
          people will handle a huge bunch of those emails, you will disturb their
          workflow
          if you keep adding noise.



          Also your boss might not get offended by your random quotes, but he
          might get offended because your browsing the internet for useless
          stuff
          .



          Keep it short and simple.







          share|improve this answer




















          • 10





            @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

            – Chris
            Mar 29 at 22:44






          • 19





            To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

            – L. F.
            Mar 31 at 5:58






          • 3





            Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

            – brasofilo
            Mar 31 at 16:14






          • 1





            @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

            – pipe
            Apr 1 at 11:54






          • 2





            @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

            – L. F.
            Apr 1 at 11:56













          35












          35








          35







           Hi bracco23,



          please see my answer in the attachment.



          Greetings, Chris




          There is no reason to bloat your email with unnecessary text. These
          people will handle a huge bunch of those emails, you will disturb their
          workflow
          if you keep adding noise.



          Also your boss might not get offended by your random quotes, but he
          might get offended because your browsing the internet for useless
          stuff
          .



          Keep it short and simple.







          share|improve this answer















           Hi bracco23,



          please see my answer in the attachment.



          Greetings, Chris




          There is no reason to bloat your email with unnecessary text. These
          people will handle a huge bunch of those emails, you will disturb their
          workflow
          if you keep adding noise.



          Also your boss might not get offended by your random quotes, but he
          might get offended because your browsing the internet for useless
          stuff
          .



          Keep it short and simple.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Mar 31 at 23:19









          bruglesco

          5,81052049




          5,81052049










          answered Mar 29 at 14:24









          ChrisChris

          873611




          873611







          • 10





            @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

            – Chris
            Mar 29 at 22:44






          • 19





            To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

            – L. F.
            Mar 31 at 5:58






          • 3





            Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

            – brasofilo
            Mar 31 at 16:14






          • 1





            @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

            – pipe
            Apr 1 at 11:54






          • 2





            @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

            – L. F.
            Apr 1 at 11:56












          • 10





            @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

            – Chris
            Mar 29 at 22:44






          • 19





            To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

            – L. F.
            Mar 31 at 5:58






          • 3





            Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

            – brasofilo
            Mar 31 at 16:14






          • 1





            @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

            – pipe
            Apr 1 at 11:54






          • 2





            @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

            – L. F.
            Apr 1 at 11:56







          10




          10





          @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

          – Chris
          Mar 29 at 22:44





          @Zabba Sorry, this time with attachment.

          – Chris
          Mar 29 at 22:44




          19




          19





          To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

          – L. F.
          Mar 31 at 5:58





          To those people who have problem getting the joke: don't edit this answer.

          – L. F.
          Mar 31 at 5:58




          3




          3





          Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

          – brasofilo
          Mar 31 at 16:14





          Why are you using quotation formatting to write your answer and not using quotes to format the fictional text? This is just confusing...

          – brasofilo
          Mar 31 at 16:14




          1




          1





          @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

          – pipe
          Apr 1 at 11:54





          @L.F. What about those of us who instantly saw the "joke" and wanted to turn it into a readable answer that is easier to parse for people with disabilities and search engines?

          – pipe
          Apr 1 at 11:54




          2




          2





          @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

          – L. F.
          Apr 1 at 11:56





          @pipe Well ... Let’s respect Chris’s choice then ...

          – L. F.
          Apr 1 at 11:56











          10















          Is it professional to write unrelated content in an almost-emtpy email?




          No. Why would you confuse the reader by adding something random?



          Try to keep it short and simple.






          share|improve this answer





























            10















            Is it professional to write unrelated content in an almost-emtpy email?




            No. Why would you confuse the reader by adding something random?



            Try to keep it short and simple.






            share|improve this answer



























              10












              10








              10








              Is it professional to write unrelated content in an almost-emtpy email?




              No. Why would you confuse the reader by adding something random?



              Try to keep it short and simple.






              share|improve this answer
















              Is it professional to write unrelated content in an almost-emtpy email?




              No. Why would you confuse the reader by adding something random?



              Try to keep it short and simple.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Mar 29 at 15:03

























              answered Mar 29 at 14:23









              noobnoob

              1,80111125




              1,80111125





















                  10














                  Informality and unrelated content in work messages are not professional. That does not make it unprofessional.



                  When this is acceptable and when it isn't is very nuanced, and depends on the office culture, the audience, how often you do it, how well it is received, your particular relationship with everyone who will see it, your reputation, your age, etc. Generally, if it in any way impedes business functioning the only professional response is to stop.



                  People who have these social skills are more popular, more influential, and can see concrete advantages in their careers.






                  share|improve this answer























                  • The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

                    – George M
                    Mar 29 at 22:02






                  • 1





                    @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

                    – David Richerby
                    Mar 30 at 0:08






                  • 8





                    The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

                    – George M
                    Mar 30 at 0:12















                  10














                  Informality and unrelated content in work messages are not professional. That does not make it unprofessional.



                  When this is acceptable and when it isn't is very nuanced, and depends on the office culture, the audience, how often you do it, how well it is received, your particular relationship with everyone who will see it, your reputation, your age, etc. Generally, if it in any way impedes business functioning the only professional response is to stop.



                  People who have these social skills are more popular, more influential, and can see concrete advantages in their careers.






                  share|improve this answer























                  • The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

                    – George M
                    Mar 29 at 22:02






                  • 1





                    @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

                    – David Richerby
                    Mar 30 at 0:08






                  • 8





                    The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

                    – George M
                    Mar 30 at 0:12













                  10












                  10








                  10







                  Informality and unrelated content in work messages are not professional. That does not make it unprofessional.



                  When this is acceptable and when it isn't is very nuanced, and depends on the office culture, the audience, how often you do it, how well it is received, your particular relationship with everyone who will see it, your reputation, your age, etc. Generally, if it in any way impedes business functioning the only professional response is to stop.



                  People who have these social skills are more popular, more influential, and can see concrete advantages in their careers.






                  share|improve this answer













                  Informality and unrelated content in work messages are not professional. That does not make it unprofessional.



                  When this is acceptable and when it isn't is very nuanced, and depends on the office culture, the audience, how often you do it, how well it is received, your particular relationship with everyone who will see it, your reputation, your age, etc. Generally, if it in any way impedes business functioning the only professional response is to stop.



                  People who have these social skills are more popular, more influential, and can see concrete advantages in their careers.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 29 at 16:42









                  MackMMackM

                  92911329




                  92911329












                  • The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

                    – George M
                    Mar 29 at 22:02






                  • 1





                    @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

                    – David Richerby
                    Mar 30 at 0:08






                  • 8





                    The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

                    – George M
                    Mar 30 at 0:12

















                  • The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

                    – George M
                    Mar 29 at 22:02






                  • 1





                    @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

                    – David Richerby
                    Mar 30 at 0:08






                  • 8





                    The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

                    – George M
                    Mar 30 at 0:12
















                  The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

                  – George M
                  Mar 29 at 22:02





                  The OP doesn't even know who he's sending these timesheets to. Unsollicited communication is spam, not related to any social skill..

                  – George M
                  Mar 29 at 22:02




                  1




                  1





                  @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

                  – David Richerby
                  Mar 30 at 0:08





                  @GeorgeM Sending timesheets to the timesheet person isn't unsolicited communication. It's literally a part of that person's job to receive timesheets.

                  – David Richerby
                  Mar 30 at 0:08




                  8




                  8





                  The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

                  – George M
                  Mar 30 at 0:12





                  The timesheets are not unsolicited, but random quotes and personalized messages are.

                  – George M
                  Mar 30 at 0:12











                  5














                  There's no reason or need to "adorn" the email with superfluous text. There's also no reason to write the same thing in the email as is contained in the attached time sheet.




                  Attached is my time sheet for the period xx/xx/xxxx through
                  xx/xx/xxxx. Thank you.







                  share|improve this answer



























                    5














                    There's no reason or need to "adorn" the email with superfluous text. There's also no reason to write the same thing in the email as is contained in the attached time sheet.




                    Attached is my time sheet for the period xx/xx/xxxx through
                    xx/xx/xxxx. Thank you.







                    share|improve this answer

























                      5












                      5








                      5







                      There's no reason or need to "adorn" the email with superfluous text. There's also no reason to write the same thing in the email as is contained in the attached time sheet.




                      Attached is my time sheet for the period xx/xx/xxxx through
                      xx/xx/xxxx. Thank you.







                      share|improve this answer













                      There's no reason or need to "adorn" the email with superfluous text. There's also no reason to write the same thing in the email as is contained in the attached time sheet.




                      Attached is my time sheet for the period xx/xx/xxxx through
                      xx/xx/xxxx. Thank you.








                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Mar 29 at 14:40









                      joeqwertyjoeqwerty

                      2,853520




                      2,853520





















                          2














                          The random quotes probably are of no benefit to the recipient, the people who choose accounting like staring at numbers all day, they don't need a surprise package from the real world, if they need a break they can go to the water cooler, stare out the window, make some paper airplanes, etc when they are ready for it.



                          Stating your name again in the email is probably not needed it's already in the from header and in the signature at the base, the date also is not needed.



                          The summary is also not needed, but it is not without merit. having a precis there (like say just the total hours) could help with resolving disputes in a timely manner eg if the attachment is hard to read or if there is a misunderstanding, and they notice that your number does not match the time-sheet you could find out and resolve it before pay-day.



                          If you are submitting the timesheet late, having the date could be useful to help you find the email at a later time should you need to. So having the date in the subject line on late submissions could be useful.






                          share|improve this answer



























                            2














                            The random quotes probably are of no benefit to the recipient, the people who choose accounting like staring at numbers all day, they don't need a surprise package from the real world, if they need a break they can go to the water cooler, stare out the window, make some paper airplanes, etc when they are ready for it.



                            Stating your name again in the email is probably not needed it's already in the from header and in the signature at the base, the date also is not needed.



                            The summary is also not needed, but it is not without merit. having a precis there (like say just the total hours) could help with resolving disputes in a timely manner eg if the attachment is hard to read or if there is a misunderstanding, and they notice that your number does not match the time-sheet you could find out and resolve it before pay-day.



                            If you are submitting the timesheet late, having the date could be useful to help you find the email at a later time should you need to. So having the date in the subject line on late submissions could be useful.






                            share|improve this answer

























                              2












                              2








                              2







                              The random quotes probably are of no benefit to the recipient, the people who choose accounting like staring at numbers all day, they don't need a surprise package from the real world, if they need a break they can go to the water cooler, stare out the window, make some paper airplanes, etc when they are ready for it.



                              Stating your name again in the email is probably not needed it's already in the from header and in the signature at the base, the date also is not needed.



                              The summary is also not needed, but it is not without merit. having a precis there (like say just the total hours) could help with resolving disputes in a timely manner eg if the attachment is hard to read or if there is a misunderstanding, and they notice that your number does not match the time-sheet you could find out and resolve it before pay-day.



                              If you are submitting the timesheet late, having the date could be useful to help you find the email at a later time should you need to. So having the date in the subject line on late submissions could be useful.






                              share|improve this answer













                              The random quotes probably are of no benefit to the recipient, the people who choose accounting like staring at numbers all day, they don't need a surprise package from the real world, if they need a break they can go to the water cooler, stare out the window, make some paper airplanes, etc when they are ready for it.



                              Stating your name again in the email is probably not needed it's already in the from header and in the signature at the base, the date also is not needed.



                              The summary is also not needed, but it is not without merit. having a precis there (like say just the total hours) could help with resolving disputes in a timely manner eg if the attachment is hard to read or if there is a misunderstanding, and they notice that your number does not match the time-sheet you could find out and resolve it before pay-day.



                              If you are submitting the timesheet late, having the date could be useful to help you find the email at a later time should you need to. So having the date in the subject line on late submissions could be useful.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Mar 30 at 11:41









                              JasenJasen

                              1212




                              1212





















                                  2














                                  This really depends on your client company. I've seen different companys. In some of them (mostly young and related to creativity), people would do funny things, play jokes on each others (and also on their clients, but they never crosses a line), use "4-letter-words" in their day-to-day-language - things which on this site would not be seen as professional. In others, those things could be your death sentence (not literally).



                                  So, I would suggest you to take a look on them. How do they speak? How do they write? How "funny" are they and how serious is work for them? Are they like the members of this Stack Exchange site? I think those questions may help you evaluating what to do.






                                  share|improve this answer























                                  • For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

                                    – Guest
                                    Mar 30 at 18:25















                                  2














                                  This really depends on your client company. I've seen different companys. In some of them (mostly young and related to creativity), people would do funny things, play jokes on each others (and also on their clients, but they never crosses a line), use "4-letter-words" in their day-to-day-language - things which on this site would not be seen as professional. In others, those things could be your death sentence (not literally).



                                  So, I would suggest you to take a look on them. How do they speak? How do they write? How "funny" are they and how serious is work for them? Are they like the members of this Stack Exchange site? I think those questions may help you evaluating what to do.






                                  share|improve this answer























                                  • For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

                                    – Guest
                                    Mar 30 at 18:25













                                  2












                                  2








                                  2







                                  This really depends on your client company. I've seen different companys. In some of them (mostly young and related to creativity), people would do funny things, play jokes on each others (and also on their clients, but they never crosses a line), use "4-letter-words" in their day-to-day-language - things which on this site would not be seen as professional. In others, those things could be your death sentence (not literally).



                                  So, I would suggest you to take a look on them. How do they speak? How do they write? How "funny" are they and how serious is work for them? Are they like the members of this Stack Exchange site? I think those questions may help you evaluating what to do.






                                  share|improve this answer













                                  This really depends on your client company. I've seen different companys. In some of them (mostly young and related to creativity), people would do funny things, play jokes on each others (and also on their clients, but they never crosses a line), use "4-letter-words" in their day-to-day-language - things which on this site would not be seen as professional. In others, those things could be your death sentence (not literally).



                                  So, I would suggest you to take a look on them. How do they speak? How do they write? How "funny" are they and how serious is work for them? Are they like the members of this Stack Exchange site? I think those questions may help you evaluating what to do.







                                  share|improve this answer












                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer










                                  answered Mar 30 at 15:54









                                  GuestGuest

                                  211




                                  211












                                  • For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

                                    – Guest
                                    Mar 30 at 18:25

















                                  • For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

                                    – Guest
                                    Mar 30 at 18:25
















                                  For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

                                  – Guest
                                  Mar 30 at 18:25





                                  For what it"s worth, I would be delighted to read your e-mails (if they are really funny). It would make my day.

                                  – Guest
                                  Mar 30 at 18:25











                                  1














                                  As many have said unrelated information is not needed. If you state the time period that is fine, because it can let them see at a glance which time period without having to open the attachment.



                                  Putting the time period in the subject can be a big help help also. Not only can they find the appropriate email it can also help to avoid the situation where the email software tries to group all the email messages that have the simple subject such "timecard" into one conversation.



                                  The worst situation is to only have fluff and no other useful information. You might be training them to always skip reading the short emails because they believe they always only have fluff.



                                  Always include a signature block with all your expected contact information.






                                  share|improve this answer



























                                    1














                                    As many have said unrelated information is not needed. If you state the time period that is fine, because it can let them see at a glance which time period without having to open the attachment.



                                    Putting the time period in the subject can be a big help help also. Not only can they find the appropriate email it can also help to avoid the situation where the email software tries to group all the email messages that have the simple subject such "timecard" into one conversation.



                                    The worst situation is to only have fluff and no other useful information. You might be training them to always skip reading the short emails because they believe they always only have fluff.



                                    Always include a signature block with all your expected contact information.






                                    share|improve this answer

























                                      1












                                      1








                                      1







                                      As many have said unrelated information is not needed. If you state the time period that is fine, because it can let them see at a glance which time period without having to open the attachment.



                                      Putting the time period in the subject can be a big help help also. Not only can they find the appropriate email it can also help to avoid the situation where the email software tries to group all the email messages that have the simple subject such "timecard" into one conversation.



                                      The worst situation is to only have fluff and no other useful information. You might be training them to always skip reading the short emails because they believe they always only have fluff.



                                      Always include a signature block with all your expected contact information.






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      As many have said unrelated information is not needed. If you state the time period that is fine, because it can let them see at a glance which time period without having to open the attachment.



                                      Putting the time period in the subject can be a big help help also. Not only can they find the appropriate email it can also help to avoid the situation where the email software tries to group all the email messages that have the simple subject such "timecard" into one conversation.



                                      The worst situation is to only have fluff and no other useful information. You might be training them to always skip reading the short emails because they believe they always only have fluff.



                                      Always include a signature block with all your expected contact information.







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered Mar 30 at 12:32









                                      mhoran_psprepmhoran_psprep

                                      46k674163




                                      46k674163





















                                          1














                                          Re: Timesheet 01/04/2019



                                          We've talked about this. Please stop including inspirational quotes in your timesheet reports.



                                          Thanks,

                                          Michael




                                          Attachments: timesheet-2019-04-01.xls



                                          Hi audit team,



                                          Please see attached timesheet for 01/04/2019.



                                          smooth seas do not make skillful sailors



                                          Warmest regards,

                                          Bracco






                                          share|improve this answer

























                                          • I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:33











                                          • Also, comic sans makes everything better.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:34






                                          • 1





                                            @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

                                            – Michael
                                            Apr 1 at 9:40















                                          1














                                          Re: Timesheet 01/04/2019



                                          We've talked about this. Please stop including inspirational quotes in your timesheet reports.



                                          Thanks,

                                          Michael




                                          Attachments: timesheet-2019-04-01.xls



                                          Hi audit team,



                                          Please see attached timesheet for 01/04/2019.



                                          smooth seas do not make skillful sailors



                                          Warmest regards,

                                          Bracco






                                          share|improve this answer

























                                          • I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:33











                                          • Also, comic sans makes everything better.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:34






                                          • 1





                                            @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

                                            – Michael
                                            Apr 1 at 9:40













                                          1












                                          1








                                          1







                                          Re: Timesheet 01/04/2019



                                          We've talked about this. Please stop including inspirational quotes in your timesheet reports.



                                          Thanks,

                                          Michael




                                          Attachments: timesheet-2019-04-01.xls



                                          Hi audit team,



                                          Please see attached timesheet for 01/04/2019.



                                          smooth seas do not make skillful sailors



                                          Warmest regards,

                                          Bracco






                                          share|improve this answer















                                          Re: Timesheet 01/04/2019



                                          We've talked about this. Please stop including inspirational quotes in your timesheet reports.



                                          Thanks,

                                          Michael




                                          Attachments: timesheet-2019-04-01.xls



                                          Hi audit team,



                                          Please see attached timesheet for 01/04/2019.



                                          smooth seas do not make skillful sailors



                                          Warmest regards,

                                          Bracco







                                          share|improve this answer














                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer








                                          edited Apr 1 at 9:16

























                                          answered Apr 1 at 9:05









                                          MichaelMichael

                                          983413




                                          983413












                                          • I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:33











                                          • Also, comic sans makes everything better.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:34






                                          • 1





                                            @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

                                            – Michael
                                            Apr 1 at 9:40

















                                          • I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:33











                                          • Also, comic sans makes everything better.

                                            – bracco23
                                            Apr 1 at 9:34






                                          • 1





                                            @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

                                            – Michael
                                            Apr 1 at 9:40
















                                          I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

                                          – bracco23
                                          Apr 1 at 9:33





                                          I had still a few doubts about the applicability of the other answers to my case, but this answer has made the situation clear. Damn, I hate those inspirational images when out of context.

                                          – bracco23
                                          Apr 1 at 9:33













                                          Also, comic sans makes everything better.

                                          – bracco23
                                          Apr 1 at 9:34





                                          Also, comic sans makes everything better.

                                          – bracco23
                                          Apr 1 at 9:34




                                          1




                                          1





                                          @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

                                          – Michael
                                          Apr 1 at 9:40





                                          @bracco23 Don't ever get the tube.

                                          – Michael
                                          Apr 1 at 9:40











                                          0














                                          Yes, but no fluff. Boring is not a big deal.
                                          But repeating subject, attachment, and mail body can lead to false positive with their anti-spam. Making the mail more human readable. For now you have a mail with only an attachment, in 2-3 process you will have a mail box with unknown data and no way to filter them.



                                          To avoid that you can add a lot of things even for simple email like:



                                          • Tag and introduction/description to ease the research.

                                          • Content information: From [date] To [date], about [serviceXY/CustomerZ], [process name]

                                          • File/Process information: hash, creation date, process date, source, sheldured/user demand ..

                                          • Disclaimer about the sender beeing a robot and mail for error and response.

                                          Once your canvas is ready, ask everyone if they are ok with it. Explaining the purpose: human readable, easy to find and filter, hash to validate data, and disclaimer so user stop talking to the robot.



                                          Be careful to not break people integration, and send test email to check if the hash doesn't trigger the anti spam.






                                          share|improve this answer

























                                          • Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

                                            – Bernhard Döbler
                                            Apr 1 at 9:54






                                          • 1





                                            Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

                                            – user95634
                                            Apr 1 at 11:30















                                          0














                                          Yes, but no fluff. Boring is not a big deal.
                                          But repeating subject, attachment, and mail body can lead to false positive with their anti-spam. Making the mail more human readable. For now you have a mail with only an attachment, in 2-3 process you will have a mail box with unknown data and no way to filter them.



                                          To avoid that you can add a lot of things even for simple email like:



                                          • Tag and introduction/description to ease the research.

                                          • Content information: From [date] To [date], about [serviceXY/CustomerZ], [process name]

                                          • File/Process information: hash, creation date, process date, source, sheldured/user demand ..

                                          • Disclaimer about the sender beeing a robot and mail for error and response.

                                          Once your canvas is ready, ask everyone if they are ok with it. Explaining the purpose: human readable, easy to find and filter, hash to validate data, and disclaimer so user stop talking to the robot.



                                          Be careful to not break people integration, and send test email to check if the hash doesn't trigger the anti spam.






                                          share|improve this answer

























                                          • Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

                                            – Bernhard Döbler
                                            Apr 1 at 9:54






                                          • 1





                                            Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

                                            – user95634
                                            Apr 1 at 11:30













                                          0












                                          0








                                          0







                                          Yes, but no fluff. Boring is not a big deal.
                                          But repeating subject, attachment, and mail body can lead to false positive with their anti-spam. Making the mail more human readable. For now you have a mail with only an attachment, in 2-3 process you will have a mail box with unknown data and no way to filter them.



                                          To avoid that you can add a lot of things even for simple email like:



                                          • Tag and introduction/description to ease the research.

                                          • Content information: From [date] To [date], about [serviceXY/CustomerZ], [process name]

                                          • File/Process information: hash, creation date, process date, source, sheldured/user demand ..

                                          • Disclaimer about the sender beeing a robot and mail for error and response.

                                          Once your canvas is ready, ask everyone if they are ok with it. Explaining the purpose: human readable, easy to find and filter, hash to validate data, and disclaimer so user stop talking to the robot.



                                          Be careful to not break people integration, and send test email to check if the hash doesn't trigger the anti spam.






                                          share|improve this answer















                                          Yes, but no fluff. Boring is not a big deal.
                                          But repeating subject, attachment, and mail body can lead to false positive with their anti-spam. Making the mail more human readable. For now you have a mail with only an attachment, in 2-3 process you will have a mail box with unknown data and no way to filter them.



                                          To avoid that you can add a lot of things even for simple email like:



                                          • Tag and introduction/description to ease the research.

                                          • Content information: From [date] To [date], about [serviceXY/CustomerZ], [process name]

                                          • File/Process information: hash, creation date, process date, source, sheldured/user demand ..

                                          • Disclaimer about the sender beeing a robot and mail for error and response.

                                          Once your canvas is ready, ask everyone if they are ok with it. Explaining the purpose: human readable, easy to find and filter, hash to validate data, and disclaimer so user stop talking to the robot.



                                          Be careful to not break people integration, and send test email to check if the hash doesn't trigger the anti spam.







                                          share|improve this answer














                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer








                                          edited Apr 1 at 7:31

























                                          answered Apr 1 at 7:24







                                          user95634



















                                          • Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

                                            – Bernhard Döbler
                                            Apr 1 at 9:54






                                          • 1





                                            Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

                                            – user95634
                                            Apr 1 at 11:30

















                                          • Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

                                            – Bernhard Döbler
                                            Apr 1 at 9:54






                                          • 1





                                            Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

                                            – user95634
                                            Apr 1 at 11:30
















                                          Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

                                          – Bernhard Döbler
                                          Apr 1 at 9:54





                                          Subject should contain the keywords "timesheet bracco 03/19" - the body of the mail should be written to be read fluently starting with an adress "Dear Mr. .." and a greeting in the end. One does not need to copy/paste subject to body and thus repeat phrases.

                                          – Bernhard Döbler
                                          Apr 1 at 9:54




                                          1




                                          1





                                          Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

                                          – user95634
                                          Apr 1 at 11:30





                                          Well a simple querry on my Mailhost tell me that i have 4 digit of mail where subject == attachment == mail body. So many people do copy past thing when the mail have no other meaning that sending an attachment. So my point is "Don't copy past thing.". And if the body is empty put something usefull in it.

                                          – user95634
                                          Apr 1 at 11:30





                                          protected by mcknz Apr 2 at 12:31



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