4.1 KiB
4.1 KiB
title, tags, author
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| Email Like a Boss |
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Email at work is about more than sharing information — it's about building trust and shaping your professional image. The same message, phrased differently, can leave an entirely different impression.
Below are 9 common email scenarios, contrasting "low-power" expressions with "high-power" alternatives that make you sound more confident and professional.
Scenario Cheatsheet
| Scenario | ❌ Don't Use (sounds…) | ✅ Use Instead (sounds…) | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Late reply | Sorry for the delay | Thanks for your patience | Swaps an apology for gratitude — the focus shifts from "I was wrong" to "you were generous," acknowledging the delay while making the recipient feel respected |
| Scheduling | What works best for you? | Could you do …? | The former throws the decision entirely back to the other person; the latter offers a concrete option, cutting down on back-and-forth |
| After helping someone | No problem / No worries | Always happy to help | The former implies the task could have been a problem; the latter signals you enjoyed it and would happily do it again |
| Making a suggestion | I think maybe we should … | It'd be best if we … | The former oozes hesitation and self-doubt; the latter delivers a clear judgment — like someone with experience making a decision |
| Text isn't working | Spending 30 minutes rewriting an email | It'd be easier to discuss in person | Recognising the medium itself is the bottleneck and switching channels can be the most efficient move |
| Checking for understanding | Hopefully that makes sense? | Let me know if you have questions | The former betrays doubt about your own clarity; the latter calmly shares responsibility — the reader now has an action item too |
| Following up on progress | Just wanted to check in | When can I expect an update? | The former tiptoes around the ask; the latter names the time frame directly — clear, polite, and professional |
| Owned a small mistake | Ahh sorry my bad totally missed that | Thanks for letting me know | Over-apologising makes things awkward; this acknowledges the catch while keeping the focus on moving forward |
| Need to leave early | Could I possibly leave early? | I will need to leave at … | The former asks for permission; the latter states a plan — you're a professional and don't need to apologise for reasonable needs |
Core Principles
Writing great emails is less about vocabulary and more about stance. Keep three rules in mind:
- State instead of ask — "I need…" carries more weight than "Could I possibly…"
- Thank instead of apologise — Shift the focus from "my shortcoming" to "their support"
- Be specific instead of vague — Offer exact times, options, and action items rather than lobbing the ball back into their court
Next time you open your inbox, take five seconds to ask: can I phrase this more like someone who makes decisions?