Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Heres why you shouldnt use smiley face emojis in work emails
Heres why you shouldnt use smiley face emojis in work schmelzglassHeres why you shouldnt use smiley face emojis in work emailsThe next time you want to drop a smiley face emoji into a work email, it might be wise to hold back - especially if the sender is someone you havent met yet.A recent, three-experiment study by researchers from Ben-Gurion University of Negev, Amsterdam University and University of Haifa revealed that unlike smiles in real life, smiley emojislessen perceptions of competence and dont elevate perceptions of warmth.Overall, 549 people from 29 countries took part in the research, which welches funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research.Citing research, the authors defined warmth as traits that reflect a rolles perceived social intentions, such as trustworthiness, sincerity, kindness, and friendliness. They defined competence as traits that reflect a persons capacity topursue goals and intentions, such as efficacy, skill, confidence, and intellig ence, also citing research.Sending a smiley emoji in an email might just make someone think you are less capable, which could affect the information they share with you and your working relationship, the study found.Why you should keep your fingers off the smiley emojisOf all the findings, here are some that stood out.In the first study(which also featured an anfangsbuchstabe pilot studyto gather data), participants assumed they were doing a project by creating a presentation for students looking to take class overseas,with three people from other nations.They were randomly assigned to one of the four conditions a picture with a smiling face, a picture with a neutral face, a message with smileys, and a message without them.Faces with smiles made people more frequently judge them as more warm and able in comparison to neutral ones. But smiles in messagesonly made people think they were warmer by a small amount and made them think they were much less able, in comparison to a text-only message.In the second study, people read an email message from someone they would hypothetically be working with and judged their competence and warmth. They had to write a response back and pick what they thought they thought the senders gender was.Smiley emojis were found to have a bad impact on how the participants judged ability and none on warmth.In the smiley condition, participants thought the sender was a woman more often than a man, but it didnt have an impact on what people thought of them.Formality played a role in the third study. Participants read an email message hypothetically sent by a new hire to an administrative assistant who did notlage know the employee. The message was a query about a staff meeting (formal condition) or a social gathering (informal condition). The study adds that the email featured two smileys or none at all. Participants judged the persons warmth and ability, and how fitting the message was.The researchers found that smileys worked against th e judgment of ability and didnt influence how warm participants thought the sender was under the formal condition. But under informal terms, the sender was seen as more warm and what people thought about the persons ability was not affected, although the research adds that these effects were partially mediated by perceptions of (in)appropriateness.Why your relationship to the sender is importantNo matter who you are, you might not want to include a smiley in a work email to someone you havent met - depending on the nature of the interaction.Dr. Ella Glikson, a post-doctorate fellow at BGUsDepartment of Managementin theGuilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management, commented on the findings in a statementPeople tend to assume that a smiley is a virtual smile, but the findings of this study show that in the case of the workplace, at least as far as initial encounters are concerned, this is incorrectFor now, at least, a smiley can only replace a smile when you already know the ot her person. In initial interactions, it is better to avoid using smileys, regardless of age or gender.Keep this in mind for your next work emailIts clear the rules of emoji etiquette are still being formed.In another study, smiley-face emojis were reportedly found to be largely acceptable by respondents. The same research says to steer clear of emojis with hearts, memes, and typos.When in doubt about how to write an email message clearly and effectively, model it after Steve Jobs he was known to use a simple layout, no filler words, and include one clear purpose.Or take a page out of the smiley emoji study, which says a smiley is not a smile.
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