Tips to Send E-mail Forwards
Here's
the best information about:-
1) when
2) how to
send e-mail forwards:
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1) Never.
I do not really enjoy reading e-mail forwards. Oh, I'm not saying that
they're trash. Most of them are quite good. But as a writer, I always wonder
about the author of those wonderful tidbits of wisdom or humor.
Surely every
good bit of wisdom or humor being circulated on the Internet was not authored
by "anonymous", and yet there are never any names attached to those
forwards. Are we really sure that the writer wanted his/her work to be
circulated all over the Internet for free?
Are we certain that the words did
not come from a copyrighted book or web site? If not, we really should not be
forwarding them.
2) See
answer #1 above.
It's really
not necessary to give instructions about how to send forwards if you follow
rule #1.
If you
must send e-mail forwards, rule #1 is to select the recipients carefully.
Never,
ever, ever just hit the forward button at the top of your e-mail and send an
email to your entire address book. If you're like most of us, your friends are
not cookie-cutter people.
Perhaps
you have some friends who only eat red meat and some who only eat veggies. You
might have some friends who love snow and others who abhor it. Some of your
friends might love poetry, while others only read historical novels.
Since
your friends are all different, chances are that not every one of them will
enjoy each and every cutie e-mail that you receive. So, if you must send
something you've received to your friends, be kind enough to sort through your
address book to figure out which ones might actually be interested.
Always put
your name in the To: location and your friends' e-mail addresses under bcc.
Always.
Never,
ever, ever just type all the selected names in the To: place on your e-mail.
Why, you ask? First, by doing that you have just given my e-mail address to ten
or twenty or forty other people whom I may not know or may not want to know.
If only
half of them forward the e-mail on without removing names and only half of
those recipients do the same thing, and so on and so one into infinity, my
e-mail address has been forwarded to hundreds, or thousands of people. Friend,
that is not something I want to happen.
Instead,
type your own name in the To: location. And type all the names or e-mail
addresses in the bcc: location. That's not the cc: location, since that would
defeat the purpose of keeping my address out of the hands of strangers.
Nope, I
want my e-mail address in the bcc: location if you are sending something to me
and dozens of others. (That's blind copy, in case you didn't know.)
Always
cut and paste the information into a new e-mail. Do not just forward the
material, because those pesky >>>> symbols will follow along.
Now, you
may think that hitting the forward button and erasing all the e-mail addresses
at the top of the page, sending it to yourself with blind copies to your
friends is enough. It's not. By hitting the forward button, you've generated
those pesky line break markers, you know >>>>.
If the
e-mail you are forwarding has been forwarded a number of times without removing
those nasty things, it likely has a bunch of them. The remedy for this is to
never just forward a message. Instead, cut and paste it into a new e-mail.
That's
it. These are pretty simple instructions to follow if you MUST send e-mails to
all of your friends, relatives, business associates, acquaintances, and anyone
who has been unlucky enough to make it into your address book.
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