Steven Horwitz
Want to really piss me off? Want to really piss off a college administrator? Here's what you do:
Seriously, when you get an email with a question and it has cc's in it, just hit reply to all. Please, it's all I ask as a former administrator who lists this has his number one email pet peeve.
Rant over, return to your regularly scheduled discussions of Austrian economics.
(And don't even bother noting how much time I wasted composing this email compared to the time it took me to add the cc's to the email in question...)
I dunno, Steve. If you send to my university address, it forwards automatically to my private email. But other addressees drop out and it takes quite a bit of work for me to uncover who else got the email. Then I have to cut and paste. Blech. Could be the same thing for person you're fuming over.
Posted by: Roger Koppl | November 16, 2009 at 04:42 PM
That was not the case here Roger.
Plus, this is a reason NOT to forward professional mail to a private address, especially Gmail, where it is, apparently, harder, for some reason, to use reply to all. That's my son's excuse anyway.
I have another pet peeve about why people should actually using their university email addresses for university business, but I'm not in the mood to rant about that one now. :)
Posted by: Steve Horwitz | November 16, 2009 at 04:54 PM
You administrators always err on the side of cc'ing everyone, and that's why you end up in kill files.
;-), sort of.
Posted by: Steve Miller | November 16, 2009 at 06:11 PM
Horwitz for Email Czar!
Posted by: Adam | November 16, 2009 at 08:52 PM
I sense a business opportunity here... an email protocol that allows the sender to specify to whom any replies get copied to; probably easier if it happens from the sender's side to auto-forward any reply to the other CC'd addresses if the replyee didn't have the etiquette to do so themselves.
Posted by: twitter.com/aniceberg | November 16, 2009 at 08:56 PM
I, for one, want to raise the costs of administrators asking questions. This is one good way to do so.
Posted by: Mario Rizzo | November 16, 2009 at 11:16 PM
"an email protocol that allows the sender to specify to whom any replies get copied to;"
You wouldn't need a change in protocol to achieve this, just a change to the client functionality on the sender side to allow for an optional, one-off mail rule when you use CC.
Posted by: Greego | November 17, 2009 at 05:30 AM
Steve, reply-to-all is often considered rude and a lot of people will be hesitant to use it; especially if the CCs are not known to the recipient. The original sender (you) should specifically request it.
Posted by: Greego | November 17, 2009 at 05:33 AM
I can understand reply-to-all being rude when there's a large number of cc's, but when it's, say, no more than 3? What I continue to not understand is why the recipient thinks I included the cc's if NOT so that they are part of the conversation/answer to the question. It simply seems obvious to me that the reason you cc someone on an email with a question is because they too need to know the answer.
@Mario: and you wonder why you don't get any raises or end up teaching in that nasty classroom in the basement... ;)
Posted by: Steve Horwitz | November 17, 2009 at 08:24 AM
I seriously just wanted to say, epic post. Went through a lot of that crap myself so I know where you're coming from.
Posted by: Rob | November 17, 2009 at 03:30 PM
Indeed am epic pot, I totally agree Rob!
Posted by: petsafe stubborn | November 22, 2009 at 11:40 AM