smallbusiness-professional-email-writing
Professional Email Writing
Write clear, respectful business emails that save time, build trust and make the next action easy to understand.
Build an EmailWhat Makes an Email Professional?
Professional does not mean complicated or overly formal. A strong business email is useful, human and easy to act on.
Clear
The reader quickly understands why you are writing, what information matters and what should happen next.
Concise
The message includes enough detail to be useful without unnecessary history, repetition or long blocks of text.
Respectful
The tone is calm, courteous and appropriate for the relationship, even when discussing a complaint or problem.
The Six-Part Email Structure
Use this simple structure for most customer, supplier and workplace emails.
Professional Email Example
This example is short, specific and easy for the recipient to answer.
Hello Alex,
I have attached the revised website quote we discussed on Tuesday. It includes the five-page website, contact form and mobile optimisation.
Please review the quote and confirm whether you would like us to proceed by 4:00 pm Friday, 17 July. If you would like any changes, reply with the details and I will update it.
Thank you,
Ian Findlay
ITIAN Small Business
Technology Simplified — Solutions That Work
Subject Line Examples
A useful subject line helps the recipient prioritise and find the email later.
Action Required
Approval needed for website quote by Friday
Appointment
Meeting confirmation — Tuesday at 10:00 am
Invoice
Invoice 1048 for June maintenance services
Question
Question about delivery address for order 284
Follow-up
Follow-up: product photography proposal
Update
Project update — homepage completed
Before You Select Send
A short final check prevents many common business email problems.
Mistakes to Avoid
These habits can make a message confusing, unprofessional or difficult to answer.
Common Questions
How formal should my email be?
Match the relationship and situation. A first contact, complaint or legal matter may need a more formal tone. A regular customer or colleague may suit a warm, conversational style.
How quickly should I reply?
Set a realistic business standard. Many small businesses aim to acknowledge messages within one business day, even when a complete answer will take longer.
When should I use CC?
Use CC when another person genuinely needs visibility. Do not copy people in simply to apply pressure or fill their inbox.
When should I use BCC?
Use BCC to protect recipient privacy when emailing a group whose members should not see each other’s addresses. For newsletters, use a proper email marketing service.
What should I do when I am angry?
Write a draft, do not send it, and review it later. Remove blame and emotional wording, check the facts, then focus on the problem and the solution required.
