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What Does Your E-Address Tell People About You?

How much time did you spend on deciding on the appearance
of your business cards? Or your letterhead? Why was it so
important to get them just right?

Were you trying to present a professional image?

Now, how much time did you spend on the appearance of
your email address? Did you give it the slightest thought?
Judging by the emails I get from countless colleagues in
this business, few do.

There are two parts to an e-address, just as there are to
your postal address: who you are, and where you are. Who
you are, your e-name comes before the @ symbol, and where
you are, your domain name, comes after it.

Your E-Name

People seem to make up e-names with little thought of what
they convey to the recipient of their email. If you want to
project a professional image, give it more thought than
these examples that strike me as unprofessional, and why:

A012345@xxx.xx - Obviously not a human being;
bdc@xxx.xx - Must I guess who has these initials?
lucy@xxx.xx - Cute, no surname (unless it's Lucy);
Admin@xxx.xx - Great personal touch!
Sydney@xxx.xx - Male, female, first name, surname?
BigMoney23@xxx.xx - Where's BigMoney01, -02, etc.?
life@xxx.xx - Is this just anyone in the life
department?
lifesites@xxx.xx - Or just anyone in the company;
Mimi-and-Max@xxx.xx - How did Max get into Mimi's act? (Or
vice versa?)

The general complaint is that it's unclear who you're
dealing with. Some even look as if they're from spammers or
porn promoters.

People want to know:
a) that they're dealing with a human being,
b) if it's someone they know (not necessarily by their
initials),
c) and not the cute receptionist, (or porn queen),
d) or the impersonal administration department,
e) where there's no doubt about the sex or surname of the
source,
f) and he or she is not one of a number series,
g) or just anyone in the department or firm,
h) or possibly the spouse of their advisor.

Most subscribers to my email newsletter, "TIP: The
Insurance Professional" have professional e-names that
clearly indicate who sent the message. They use the name
they're known by so, if they email a client, prospect, or
center-of-influence, the recipient has no doubt about who
it's from.

Good examples are AlanArcher@xxx.xx, Bill.Burns@xxx.xx,
ddavidson@xxx.xx, etc. Hyphens, and underlines are trickier
to remember, so try to avoid them. Some people even have
problems with periods. I use 'donpooley', and tell people
"it's all one word", to keep it simple.

Initial capitals don't matter, but if you think they help
identify you, use them. Capitalising whole names is
considered rude by email aficionados (unless it's an
acronym), so BILL.BURNS@xxx.xx is not only gauche, but
amateurish, and hence unprofessional.

Think about it. If you want to be considered a
professional, your image must reflect it in every way.
Don't let your e-name dull your image, or confuse your
clients.

Your Domain Name

The second part of your e-address, your domain name, is as
important as your office address. If your image requires a
prestigious downtown office, then your domain should
reflect it. Ditto if you seek to indicate that you're
unique, and special in some way, or a totally independent
advisor.

When we start emailing, or to email friends or relatives,
a commonplace domain, such as: telus.net, sympatico.ca,
yahoo.com, aol.com, etc., is usual, but it tells recipients
of your email either that you are new to digital
communication, or that this is not a business message.

On the other hand, while a domain of a large firm such as:
clarica.com, freedom55financial.com, assante.com does
indicate a business message, it also implies that you are
not independent.

Because of this, many advisors advertise their
independence by registering their own domains, so you'll
see domains such as johnsonfinancial.ca, jackjohnson.com,
rrspguy.com, etc. The key here is something that uses your
name, your business name, or something readily associated
with you.

Domain names are easy to get, and cheap---$35 annually for
.ca, less for most others---but they have to be unique to
get registered.

What Does Your E-Address Tell People About You?

Your e-address says as much about you as your letterhead
or business card, and just as you use them to project a
professional image, so can you use your email address.

You email address may actually be more important to your
image than your letterhead or business cards. How many
letterheads did you use last week? How many business cards
did you hand out? How does their combined total compare to
the total number of business emails that you sent out?

So, which projects your image more often? And how
professional is it?

-----------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2005, Donald F. Pooley, Inc.

Don Pooley has shared his marketing know-how with audiences
in major Canadian cities, London, Australia, Chicago, New
York, San Francisco, Hong Kong, and Singapore, and now in
his free ezine, TIP. Subscribe today at http://www.eTIP.ca and get the free ebook, "Secrets of Soft-Fact Sales".



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