Last week, I received a letter from a well-known author. He had a fairly trivial question about foreign rights. Interestingly, his letterhead had no e-mail address. Nor did it have a phone number. I thought, How quaint.

I also thought, What a hassle. First, the letter sat in my inbox for several days. Why? Because I assume that anyone who wants a quick answer to something sends an e-mail or leaves a voice mail. About the only letters I get any more are direct mail solicitations or solicitations for charitable contributions. I assume that the only reason these don’t come via e-mail is either the sender doesn’t have my e-mail address or, even if he does, doesn’t want me to regard it as spam.
The only way to reply to this author was to send an actual letter. Talk about “blast from the past.” I probably don’t send more than half a dozen letters a year. Even then, it’s usually because it’s a legal matter that requires this kind of documentation. It’s hard to believe that in 2007, anyone is still sending letters. Snail-mail—at least for most business correspondence—is dead.
People just don’t have the time for an “inquiry-response cycle” that takes weeks. Even faxes are dead. In the 1990s, fax machines were cutting edge technology. Today, they are about as useless as an electric typewriter. I can’t even remember the last time I sent or received a fax. I still subscribe to eFax.com, which allows you to send and receive faxes on your computer, but even that sits idle. In today’s world, even a fax is too much hassle.
E-mail has dramatically shortened the response cycle. Instant messaging is only raising the expectations. People send e-mails and expect a response within hours. In the 90s, when I owned my own company, my partner and I had an unwritten policy that we would respond to everyone within 24 hours. This always impressed our clients. They knew they could count on a quick response. But, by today’s standards, even that wouldn’t cut it. People want answers—and they want them now.
As the CEO of the company, I usually get quick responses from everyone. But I know this is not the norm. I’m spoiled. My employees know what I expect and fear what may happen if they don’t respond quickly. But I constantly hear stories of people within our organization who take forever to get back to their colleagues. What are they thinking? Don’t they know that this is career suicide?
One frustrated manager wrote to me this weekend and suggested that this is one cause of lingering cynicism within our company. He said, “I know if I need something from them [i.e., the non-responders], I’ll have to follow-up six to ten times (that’s a literal six to ten times, not figurative) to take the next step in whatever I’m doing.”
Occasionally, these problems back-up to me. Nine times out of ten, it is because the person with the problem couldn’t get an answer from someone else in the company. They’ve tried to be patient. They feel badly for contacting me. But they are at their wits end. They don’t know where else to turn.
This is not a very smart career move on the part of the person who didn’t respond. It is not a good way to get on the CEO’s radar. But it’s also not very smart when you fail to respond to your colleagues.
Here’s what people so often fail to realize: Your next promotion is not just dependent on impressing the boss. The further you advance in your career, the more your next promotion is dependent on the recommendation of your peers and key individuals within your company.
In my experience, the best way to build your personal “brand” within the Company, garner the respect and acclaim of your colleagues and direct reports, and have them speak well of you, is to be responsive. Answer their e-mails and voice mails promptly. Follow-up on your assignments. Do what you say you are going to do.
Here are four tips for becoming more responsive:
- Empty your inbox daily. If you have more than 100 e-mails in your inbox at any one-time, something is wrong with your personal management system. I get more e-mails than that every day. My goal is to empty my e-mail inbox daily. The key is to read the e-mail once, then make a decision and act. If you can’t act on it immediately, put the item on your task list and file the e-mail in another folder. Only unprocessed messages should be in your inbox.
- Acknowledge receipt. If you can’t act on a request immediately, then at least acknowledge that you received the e-mail. Be proactive. Stay in communication. If people don’t hear from you, they assume—and often correctly—that nothing is happening. By keeping people informed, you get almost as much credit as having fulfilled the original request.
- Set others expectations. If the request is going to take a week or two to answer, set the other party’s expectations. I find that most people are very reasonable as long as they know what to expect. Again, the key is follow-through. If you tell them it’s going to take a week, then do everything you can to get it done on time. If you experience an unexpected snag, then be proactive in informing the other party. Tell them the problem and ask for an extension. The key is to be proactive.
- Follow-up on assignments. To succeed in almost any position, you have to keep your word. You must do what you say you are going to do—without other people reminding or nagging you. People have enough difficulty managing their own workload without feeling like they have to manage yours, too. If you need a system, then read (or re-read) David Allen’s Getting Things Done. I highly recommend it.
In today’s environment, responsiveness is a competitive advantage. Nothing will advance your career more than this. Likewise, nothing will hold you back more than a failure to be responsive.
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You’ve hit upon one of my greatest pet peeves – we’re all busy, but those who don’t bother to respond make more work for all of us. Thanks for the easy to follow tips (now if only the offenders will read and follow them!)
Land Lines, Snail Mail and DeadMedia
Its fitting to read this in the Star Tribune on the day the U.S. Postal Service raises the First Class stamp rate to 41 cents.
More than a quarter of young adults have only cell phones, making them the leading edge of a strengthening move away f…
I once won a “paper-plate award” that said: #1 Rapid Response Emailer, forwarding and responding to emails faster than lightening.
I cannot stand for messages to be left unattended in my inbox and it makes me crazy to have to wait on someone to respond to my request.
Thanks for this post. I’m decent at keeping my email organized, and my inbox clear, but you’ve given some good points to help me raise the bar.
When I was reading this morning’s posting, I thought of the people I work with at Thomas Nelson who are responsive and great to work with. Since you say that you hear about those who do NOT respond, I thought you might like to know your employees who I love to work with because they help us sell more books, and get more products into the hands of those who will read and use them!
Curt Harding is an exceptional publicist, and someone who I will actually refer my media contacts to, because I can trust my reputation in media relations with. He’s a gem. I actually look forward to sending him a request, as I know it will get done!
Brittany Lassister is relatively new in her job in marketing / publicity with the International Sales team, but she is learning quickly. She really does try to facilitate communication between the different areas of Thomas Nelson, and always works to get an answer (which I know isn’t easy). She responds very quickly and works hard on behalf of Thomas Nelson and us as the customer.
Brian Mitchell has been a HUGE champion of working with us internationally. We have so appreciated that he gets back to us personally, leading by example for those who work with him. He is responsive, and awesome to work with. It is great to know that we have a friend at Thomas Nelson.
Rod Schumacher is another gem. He has a full plate, but always treats us very well, and responds quickly. We really enjoy working with him.
Anyhow, there is a little praise for some of your great employees who respond – it makes me think that they’re some of the most competent you have!
This makes me think of P.J. O’Rourke, an avowed luddite. No E-mail, but I suppose he at least uses a telephone frequently.
The situation you describe is really surprising. I rarely hear of an editor having a problem contacting a writer (except near deadline). It’s usually the reverse, with writers complaining endlessly about not hearing from editors and publishers.
I like your tips. Numbers 2 and 4 are what people miss doing most often.
–Mike
http://www.michaelabanks.com
Imagine my frustration in dealing with one of our historically largest customers (a $2.2 billion company) that not only doesn’t have email or internet, but doesn’t utilize voicemail or have employees with computers! Everything is either snail mail, live phone, or fax. But then you ALWAYS talk to a human and leave messages with humans when you call there (during office hours).
On the other hand, I think some people get overwhelmed by the process. So much contact, so fast.
Realizing this, if I don’t get a response to an email, and I really need the response, I go back in time. A phone call is just the thing.