“Yours in best practice…”

Tiffany Markman
3 min readOct 19, 2020

How to start and end a business or professional email — but properly

Image Source: Unsplash

Dear Sir/Madam. Hi there. Greetings. Howdy. Hey. Dear Beloved. However you choose to kick off your emails, there’s messaging in it. And that messaging is the first impression your reader gets. So: get it right.

Or, at the very least, don’t botch it entirely.

I run business writing courses and I’ve yet to get through a single training day in which someone hasn’t identified email salutations (the ‘hello’ part) and closes (the ‘goodbye’ part) as two things they desperately want to cover.

But first:

How you start and finish your emails ultimately depends on two things: the context of your relationship with the reader (formal, informal; unfamiliar, familiar, etc.) and the message content. Make your selections based on that.

Okay, let’s go.

Salutations

AKA THE HELLO

The flowery

When an email begins, ‘Honoured Friend’, ‘Dear Beloved’, or ‘Greetings’, there’s a bell in your head (or there should be) that trills ‘Spammer!’, ‘Mail-order bride’ or ‘Someone asking me for money’.

Stay away from these. Even if you really want to convey your affection, respect or honour, this is not the place.

I don’t have the energy to deal with the evil ‘To whom it may concern’ and the complacent ‘Dear Sir/Madam’, except to say that both read like junkmail or worse, laziness.

If they’re neither, you’ve created distance between yourself and your reader, so rather take the time to find out their name — or use another salutation.

The casual

‘Howdy’, ‘Howzit (South Africa), ‘Hey’, and casual greetings have their place. I’m not going to hop on the keep-it-formal bandwagon and urge you to abandon all personality and friendliness. Email lives and dies with rapport.

But keep in mind that business emails are just that, and that these salutations are more suited to intra-colleague communication, those with whom you communicate really, really often or know really well, and instant messaging.

The simple

‘Hi’ and ‘Hi there’ are nice ish. Straightforward.

Vanilla yoghurt, if you will, at room temperature.

They’re relaxed enough to work for most email, which is nowhere near as formal as a letter, and they’re plain enough not to offend anyone.

First prize with ‘Hi’ is to combine it with a first name, if you have one (but not with a full name — ‘Hi John Smith’ — as this is spammy).

Another nicely generic set of salutations is the ‘Good morning / Good afternoon / Good day’ trio. They’re bland enough to serve when you don’t have a name, or when you’re unsure about the appropriate level of formality.

But be sure your reader in your same time zone or you’ll unnecessarily date your own correspondence — or come across like a pyramid schemer.

The standard

‘Dear [Name]’

Students on my courses ask me if this is ‘too boring’ to use for business writing, as it’s by far the most common.

It’s also the longest-lasting, going back centuries.

But ‘Dear’ is so standard; so typical; so expected, that you can use it almost always. It’s also useful across both formal and informal emails.

Closes

AKA THE GOODBYE

The old-fashioned

Yours truly

Yours faithfully

Thanking you

The smarmy

Ciao

Cheers

Bye

The cheesy

Yours in sales/entertainment/service/whatever

Enthusiastically yours

The simple

Thank you

Many thanks

The standard

Yours sincerely

Sincerely

Regards / Kind regards / Warm regards

Best wishes

I’m not sure how I feel about ‘Yours’ on its lonesome. It feels a bit love-letterish to me. If you agree, stick with ‘Regards’ instead. It’s safer.

Got it?

Great.

Warm regards,

Tiffany

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Tiffany Markman

I’m a copywriter, trainer & speaker, specialising in messaging, brand voice, content strat and creative ideation. I’ve worked with 573 brands in 16 countries.