CRYPTO

“Hi dear” needs death: a screaming for every mailbox that had enough

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Let’s talk about the equivalent email of the nails on the blackboard: the frightening bowl “Hello dear.”

I saw that. Our everyone I saw him. You open your inbox, hoping an important thing – a customer request, real inquiry, and perhaps even a message from a colleague – and instead, there is another mysterious email written from someone you have not heard before before “Hello dear.”

No name. No context. No idea.

Just “dear”.

In Western culture, this is not a magician. He is not a professional. It is not polite. It is lazy and entered with strange frankness. If you are sending an e -mail to a stranger in the context of the work and it is not the trouble of even using his actual name, you really do not respect their time.

We do not call colleagues “dear”.
We do not call strangers “dear”.
We do not volunteer with “dear”.

It is undesirable, unbelievable screaming, and feels like you are about to sell a pyramid outline or a penetration version of the WordPress template to someone else.

We know exactly where these emails come from: Gmail, Hotmail, Outlook. Never from the actual field of the company. Why? Because these are not professionals. These are random people who registered in random post programs for gains.

They are not developers. They do not know what SEO represents. They are only trying to sell your response to some agencies to use low -rent external sources abroad for a few dollars.

If you are going to bustle, at least learn some basic respect first.

Here is a free advice for these unwanted messengers: Learn the cultural tone of the people you send by email. In most western countries, “Hi dear” is a lamb and ancient tone. This is what your grandmother might write on a thanks card-not how professionals start commercial emails. When a completely strange person calls us “dear”, he does not feel warm or respect. It is a feeling of care. It is a fake feeling.

And let us be honest-if you are sending 10,000 messages from the copy poster from the Gmail account pretending to be a web developer, you are not a professional anyway.

You are just noise.

There are sufficient problems in the digital world without the need to delete 20 of these emails every morning. It is bad enough, we have been overwhelmed by fraud and fake bills – do we really need this collapse of “hello dear” above it?

It is already enough.

If you cannot spend enough time to write a person’s name, or even use a real e -mail address, don’t care to click on send. We do not fall for that. We do not respond. Not, we do not need a new web site – especially from someone who believes that “hello dear” is how to do the work.

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