Saturday, March 14, 2020
Why emails here to stay - Emphasis
Why emails here to stay   Why emails here to stay  People have been ringing the death knell for email on and off for a few years now. But should we be listening?  The latest peal came from French IT company Atos,  which declared that it would phase out internal emails by 2013. And for  reasons well all recognise: too much time spent dealing with too many  emails, of which too few are useful and too many are spam. CEO Thierry  Breton said his staff would instead use good old face-to-face  communication, as well as instant messaging (IM) and social media tools.  The shadow of social media   Rumours also circulated when Facebook launched its  Social Inbox, which brings users emails, chat and texts together in one  place. Both co-founder Mark Zuckerberg and chief operating officer  Sheryl Sandberg questioned the future of email  at least in its current  format.  Email  I cant imagine life without it  is  probably going away, Sandberg announced at Nielsens Consumer 360  conference. If you want to know what people like us will do tomorrow,  you look at what teenagers are doing today. Good to know that in time  well not only be swapping email for SMS and social media, but also  pledging eternal love to Justin Bieber.  Last year did see a drop off in email users, by far  the most dramatic of which (59 per cent, according to US internet  research firm ComScore) was among 1217 year olds. However, the average  13-year-old has different communication needs to the average office  worker. (The fall in use by 2535-year-olds was 18 per cent, and in  3544-year-olds only 8 per cent.)  IM steps up  The main pretender to emails throne is instant messenger. A quick Twitter poll revealed its appeal  its informal, chatty, good for knowing whos at  their desk and for getting a quick response. One woman contributed the  excellent point that, as she is deaf, it is a handy equivalent to the  telephone.  However, IM is not without its drawbacks. It is  distracting, not so good for detail and sometimes used when an email  would be more appropriate. One tweeter summed it up with: Occasionally  useful, often annoying. Especially when youre watching someone  composing what should have been an email.  Many people said they used IM alongside email: evidently it has its place, but its not an email replacement.  Five reasons to love email  With three billion users, email is clearly doing several things right. Here are five unique benefits:  1. Your account will be compatible with your recipients, no matter what programme you each use.  2. You decide when you reply, so you have more  control over your time management  a choice you dont get with instant  messages and phone calls.  3. It encourages thought-out and structured messages by providing formatting tools and (almost) limitless space.  4. Unlike most instant messaging services (or phone  calls), it still works if the recipient isnt there at the moment of  sending.  5. It allows you to keep a record or reference by saving and filing useful information to your own system.  This isnt to say that email cant yet be improved  upon. There are already tools available to help sort through, and even  explore and utilise the data within your inbox. Granted, some of these  do merge information from social sites, and to an extent the line  between the two is blurring. By the time those 1217-year-olds are  taking meetings, email may have become a very different animal. But its  definitely not dead yet: and its still evolving.  And for advice on managing your inbox, check out our Top tips for smart email.    
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