This is a strong point. Most of the times, our emails are about atomic points, so I definitely agree that we should stick to one single piece of communication.
The objective, as usual, is to make it easy for the reader.
Interestingly, I'm just now reading a book titled "Nobody wants to read your sh*t", so this point resonates!
This is a strong point. Most of the times, our emails are about atomic points, so I definitely agree that we should stick to one single piece of communication.
The objective, as usual, is to make it easy for the reader.
Interestingly, I'm just now reading a book titled "Nobody wants to read your sh*t", so this point resonates!
Occasionally, we might have to give a longer update via email, so more than one single point is required. In that case, we can use some of the other tactics I mention.
This is a strong point. Most of the times, our emails are about atomic points, so I definitely agree that we should stick to one single piece of communication.
The objective, as usual, is to make it easy for the reader.
Interestingly, I'm just now reading a book titled "Nobody wants to read your sh*t", so this point resonates!
Occasionally, we might have to give a longer update via email, so more than one single point is required. In that case, we can use some of the other tactics I mention.
Agreed. TL;DR is often a winner.