Cover Image: 33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Business Emails

33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Business Emails

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I'm not exactly sure what I was looking for when reading this but can't say I really learned anything new from it. This might be helpful for grad students going into the corporate world, etc.

Was this review helpful?

If you are just starting out, or English is your second language, it might be helpful? But once you find your voice, the 33 ways could be something that you do day in day out anyway.
It is great, but not essential

Was this review helpful?

Dear Reader,
Are you searching for a better way to write your emails? Do you find yourself with issues such as:
-Frequent typos
-Too many emails
-People not responding to your emails
-Lack of control of your emails
-Lack of purpose with your writing

This book will help you tackle your issues and fix things you didn't even realize were wrong. This is a quick and easy read, perfect for everyone who deals with email. I recommend managers read this book and have their whole team read it as well!

Was this review helpful?

Writing emails is a critical skill but not everyone knows how to compose a professional and effective email. This book lists the top email principles that could help improve workplace communication and increase productivity. Although 33 tips seem to be a lot, they are straightforward and easy to follow.

Some of these suggestions are familiar to me, while some are really mind-blowing! Overall, this is a simple yet effective read! I recommend this book to those who have been in the workforce for a while and are eager to communicate more effectively with colleagues and business partners.

Was this review helpful?

Each day we send and receives tens, if not hundreds, of emails. It’s how we conduct business, if not pleasure as well. But while this is part of our everyday, it’s not a taught skill and something that can go wrong pretty quickly.

As someone who’s been told that my emails sometimes hit the wrong tone (whoops!), this title caught my eye. I’ve also been sending emails to staff and students recently to try and increase use of the school library and our services but for the many recipients, I’ve not been getting many responses. I was hoping this book could give me some pointers.


This book does exactly what its title describes. It provides you with 33 quick and simple tips on how not to screw up your emails. From effectively using the subject line to setting the wrong tone, use of emojis and using the right signature, this book covers the basics of sending business emails. It has some good tips, but I found most of it to be pretty obvious. There were a few new points, like using Dear to start an email is not the preferred salutation and can be found to be overly formal (guess I should stop using it in my text messages then). This book doesn’t enter into the world of marketing and doesn’t give too many tips on how to get people to respond to your emails, but I think by using the strategies outlined, like getting the length of your emails right and including just one point in your email with the action right at the start.

This book is easy to read. Each of the 33 tips has their own section and the sections are short and easy to read through, with research and examples.

The publishers provided an advanced readers copy of this book for reviewing purposes. All opinions are my own.

Was this review helpful?

Cards on the table, this is the first of the '33 ways' series that I have read, and for a leisurely 2-hour read, you won't walk away disappointed.

This is one of those books to which I genuinely wish I could give a half star rating, as it sits firmly within the 3.5 camp.

Pros are that the chapters are short, with the majority containing handy tips and tricks that can be applied in any email-based scenario.

The drawbacks are that a couple of the hints repeat, and likely already employed by those who have only been writing emails for a few months.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher BooksGoSocial for an advance reader copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I was looking more for a book about writing emails 'from' a business rather than 'within' a business, so this wasn't exactly what I was expecting. There's some good advice in here. Some questionable advice in here (really? ending a sentence with a period denotes anger? millennials and gen-z kids need to get over that.).

Was this review helpful?