« What I Learned Thanks to Sunny, a Korean Writer | Main | Passive Verbs in a Father's Day Card »

June 17, 2010

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c02a553ef0133f172f7f6970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Innocent Dropping of Ccs in Email :

Comments

Miss O

It irritates me greatly when I receive emails I did not have to be copied in on and when the sender hits the Reply To All button without really considering if everyone on the list needs to be on reply. I think it is lazy and inconsiderate.

Lynn Gaertner-Johnston

I agree that is it irritating. I am always surprised at the emails I receive that have also gone to dozens of other people, with their email addresses exposed on the To and Cc lines. This doesn't happen frequently in my business emails, but it does in email involving social groups and extracurricular activities. If I were a spammer, I could get plenty of email addresses by copying them from other people's To and Cc lines.

I don't know whether people are being lazy and inconsiderate, but the behavior comes across as inefficient and unprofessional. It doesn't leave the impression of competence and good organization skill.

Thanks for commenting, Miss O.

Lynn

Karla

I agree that with "joke" emails to multiple persons, use BCC. I hate it when I get emails with several pages in an email with several different sends. I usually just delete those without scrolling all the way down. But in business, it's not lazy and inconsiderate to include people that you think might need to know what's in the email. (Worse is when a group of developers have been emailing back and forth about an important issue and "forgot" to include the technical writer or assumed she didn't need to know--let her make that decision!) The recipients can delete the email or ignore it as necessary. Don't tell me they don't have time to scan/read emails--it's part of your dang job!! Don't make the other person's poor time management skills my problem.

Jeannette Paladino

I'm afraid I'm showing my age when I remind people that CC: originally stood for Carbon Copy. That's back in the days before copiers came into use. A secretary would put pieces of carbon paper between several sheets of typewriter paper, behind the letterhead paper, and then type the letter on a manual typewriter. The CC: at the bottom of the letter always included the names and the carbon copies were distributed to them through the inter-office mail. My how times have changed! I have never seen CC: referred to as courtesy copies, but I guess that's the new term now.

Lynn Gaertner-Johnston

Hi, Karla. Thanks for sharing your view. You're right that it makes sense to copy people who may need the information. I like your example of the technical writer.

Your point of view doesn't always get the attention it deserves. That is because of the overwhelming number of unnecessary replies to all that are driving people nuts.

Lynn

Lynn Gaertner-Johnston

Hi, Jeannette. Yes, the Cc now stands for "courtesy copy." When carbon paper became insignificant, we needed a word for that second c.

With all the unnecessary copies in email, I think it sometimes stands for "crazy copies."

Thanks for stopping by.

Lynn

Cathy Miller

Hi Lynn. Here's another reason to use BCC in email when you have a large distribution - spammers lift the email addresses off large distribution lists. They also are alerted if it has FW: in the Subject line.

This comes in play more often with personal emails where friends send jokes (at least I hope they are personal email & not done at work).

Ron

I train my company employees on Intellectual Property matters. The problem with the "Reply to All" is that not everyone on the list should be included. Often, we have legal reasons for not doing so as we don't want to invalidate trade secrets or send confidential information to those who do not need to know. My training advice is always look at the list and make a decision if those on the list really need to get your feedback.
As to BCC: it should be name "blindside me."

Lynn Gaertner-Johnston

Hi, Cathy. Thanks for reminding us about distribution lists and spammers.

Ron, I appreciate your bringing up confidentiality issues. Your comment is a helpful reminder.

Lynn

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Google

Save and share

Add a bookmark to this page in your favorite social bookmarking site.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Assistant Edge
Take your writing from acceptable to excellent.