Snappy nuggets of business website goodness.
8 May
It is important to consider early on a strategy for what format your company’s staff email addresses will take. Your final decision will depend on the number of employees and how you expect this to grow throughout the life of your business.
For smaller staff numbers, also consider the benefits of creating email aliases for misspellings of staff names, and shortcut names using people’s initials for internal use (e.g. dtj@example.com).
Beyond staff email addresses, you should also get into the habit of utilising department-specific email addresses (which can simply forward to the relevant person(s) in the company.) Examples include accounts@, sales@, support@, hr@, complaints@, privacy@ and jobs@. This way, you can easily delegate work from one staff member to another by simply changing the recipient of the forwarder. This is beneficial both to smaller businesses, which share the load among few staff, and larger businesses, which need continuity over staff transition.
2 Responses for "Create a Policy for Consistent Company Email Addresses"
I love being able to guess a person’s email address based on consistent rules developed by an organisation.
On the other hand, I’m very frustrated if I need to double check an address!
Companies should definitely consider common misspellings of their names and setup forwarders to ensure they capture any mistakes from potential customers. My name is a testament to this idea working well, as there are countless ways of spelling Nicky. I receive a lot of email through my misspelling forwarders.
Kaj, what’s happening! 7.30pm blog posts and you’ve got spelling errors in 2 of them! Do I get a pay-rise for picking them up ;)
Diving
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