Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
Sign-offs to avoid in most situations:
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Thanks'
"Fine if it's for a favor the person has done, but obnoxious if it's a command disguised as premature gratitude," Schwalbe says.
Licht agrees. It "comes off as not really that thankful," she says. While it doesn't particularly bother Pachter, the consensus is that you can probably do better. Skip.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Thanks again'
Again, Schwalbe and Licht aren't fans.
It's "even worse then 'thanks' if it's a command and not genuine gratitude," he says.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Thanks!'
Everyone agrees that what Schwalbe calls the "whole 'thanks' family" really makes sense only when you're genuinely thanking someone for an actual thing they did for you.
That said, the exclamation-point version is Licht's go-to for internal communication when she's expressing actual gratitude. It's happy and sincere, she says. Schwalbe, too, considers himself a general "fan of exclamation points," within reason.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Thanks so much'
Licht and Pachter think it's fine. Schwalbe has had enough of my questions about the "thanks" family.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'TTYL,' 'TAFN,' etc.
Avoid slang and acronyms, like TTYL ("talk to you later") or TAFN ("that's all for now"). These are unprofessional and confusing.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'All best'
Pachter notes that, in general, the rule is that the more words you use, the more formal the closing, which makes "all best" slightly more formal than "best." Licht, though, isn't a fan of this one, calling it "too effusive."
"Are you really sending ALL your best, or just some?"
Still, it's a relatively safe choice.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Best wishes'
"Ever so slightly more formal than 'all best' or 'best,' it's a good one for initial contact," Schwalbe says. Licht thinks it's "stuffy." Another pretty low-risk option.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Sincerely'
"Is this a cover letter? Because otherwise, no," says Licht.
"Very formal, and could seem cold if it follows more intimate sign-offs," Schwalbe cautions.
But Pachter feels that it all depends on the opening salutation. If you began with "dear," then "sincerely" is appropriate, she says.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Looking forward'
Totally fine, they agree — assuming you're actually going to see that person in the near future. Otherwise, skip it.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Speak with you soon'
"Only if you really want to," Schwalbe says.
If you don't, though, it's not a good option.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Talk soon'
The more casual cousin of "speak with you soon," this one follows pretty much the same rules as its relative. If you actually will be talking soon, it's fine — though Licht isn't sold on it). If you don't actually plan to talk soon, it's insincere.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
12. 'More soon'
"You are committing yourself to a second reply," Schwalbe cautions. "Do you really want to do that? Or should you just take a moment and answer the thing properly right now?"
Licht feels even more strongly.
"Promises can be forgotten," she says. "Under-promise, over-deliver."
Skip.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'xx'
"Absolutely not," says Pachter, who feels that it's just not professional. But Schwalbe says that it has become "remarkably accepted even in casual (very casual) business correspondence."
That said, it's "best to use in reply to someone else who is using and not initiate."
Licht says that she uses a version of it herself — "Aliza x" — for "friendly yet professional" notes, but agrees you have to have a "pre-existing close relationship."
Use cautiously.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'xoxo'
Ironically, it's the hugs, not the kisses that make this one inappropriate. While "xx" may have a place in the working world, "xoxo" is "really for dear friends and people with whom you are even more intimate," Schwalbe says.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Warmly'
A fan of the whole "warm" family, Schwalbe thinks that "warmly" is less formal than "sincerely," but a little more formal than the whole "best" family, and Pachter likes it, too.
Licht, however, is unimpressed.
"Snorefest," she says.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Warmest'
This one is unexpectedly controversial: Schwalbe likes it, Licht thinks it's a "double snorefest," and Pachter finds it "a little teenage."
Tread carefully.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Cheers'
"It's fine," Pachter says, though she's not sold on it.
"It always seems a bit like you want to be Australian," Schwalbe says.
To Licht, it seems "pretentious, unless you're actually British."
Schwalbe suggests a test: Would you say it to people in person? If so, go for it. If not, reserve it for the British.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
— [your name]
Licht and Schwalbe agree that it's "cold" and "abrupt."
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
First initial ('A.')
The problem here is confusion.
"I personally don't like it," Pachter says. "What does it stand for? I guess it's okay, but it's not something I would do."
Schwalbe points out that unless you know someone well, it's annoying because "you aren't telling them what to call you. If I do 'W,' people don't know if I'm 'Will' or 'William.'"
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
[nothing at all]
While it's "absolutely fine as a chain progresses," Schwalbe says, "it's nice to end the first volley with a sign off."
Once a conversation is underway, though, Pachter approves of getting rid of both the salutation and the close.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Yours'
"I never understood this one," Licht says. "Yours what?"
If you are going to use it, though, Schwalbe says that it's one of the more formal options, though it's not quite as formal as "sincerely."
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Yours truly'
According to Pachter's "more words, more formal" rule, this is a step above "yours."
Still, Licht says it strikes her as "fake."
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Yours faithfully'
"I always assume it's going to be a marriage proposal," Pachter says.
Don't use it.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Respectfully'
"A little stiff," Schwalbe says. "Also, it brings to mind, for people of a certain age, Diana Ross singing 'Upside Down.'"
Unless you're addressing the US president, Licht says it's too formal.
If you do happen to be addressing POTUS, though, you're on the right track. A variation — "respectfully yours" — is indeed the standard close for addressing government officials and clergy, Pachter says.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Regards'
"Hate, hate, hate," says Licht, though she says that she hates the supposedly more casual abbreviated version — "Rgds" — even more. "It's like you're so busy you can't even spell it."
Schwalbe, however, doesn't mind it.
"Nice," he says, noting that it's "a little formal." Think of it as the equivalent to the "warm" family, he advises.
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Take care'
Licht gives it a lukewarm "ehh," and Schwalbe says it provokes anxiety.
"I feel this is akin to 'safe travels,' albeit with a slightly medical connotation." It makes him "a bit paranoid," he says. "Like you know I'm in danger and I don't."
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Looking forward to hearing from you'
A minefield of power dynamics, this one is "a bit presumptuous, but fine if you are doing a favor for someone," Schwalbe says.
It's not fine, however, if you're the one asking.
Plus, as Licht points out, it puts you in a "subservient position where you can't take action, but must wait for the other person's cue."
Here is the perfect way to end an email - and 28 sign-offs you should usually avoid
'Love'
This is totally inappropriate at work. Even if you're friendly with the person you're emailing, skip it.
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