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Are Your
Email Messages Good Looking?
By Jim Daniels
"Good
looks" are very important in an email message. This is
often overlooked by many email users. It is a fact that an
emails content is diluted greatly if the message itself is
"not good looking".
Have you ever
received an email message that looks something like this...
Thank you for
requesting
more information about our services! We here
at ABC Company
would like to present a special offer to all of our
cherished customers.
There are two main
reasons why email messages turn out looking like this. Although
the reasons are quite simple, many email users dont
understand them.
Reason number one
is called line length. When composing email, most people just
type and type without using a hard carriage return. If it looks
fine when youre done, your email program probably
automatically wraps the words in a nice legible format. This
word wrap is usually done based on a line length of anywhere
from 70 to 80 characters.
Well, lets say I
receive your message, but my email program doesnt have the
capability of automatically wrapping incoming messages. Since
you performed no hard "end of line" carriage returns
when typing your message, my email software thinks its one
long sentence. Now your nice, easy to read message looks like
that example above.
O.K. So how do you
avoid this problem? Simple! When composing email messages, use a
hard carriage return before you get to the end of each line. I
have found that a maximum line length of 64 works to alleviate
this problem almost completely! Of course, youll always run
into an instance occasionally, depending on your recipients
settings, but this should do the trick 95% of the time!
Another reason
people encounter "funny looking" email messages is
called proportional character fonts. Like I mentioned earlier,
all email programs are different. Therefore the fonts used by
each program varies widely. Basically, there are fixed pitch
fonts like Courier (found on Eudora) and there are proportional
spaced fonts (like AOL and Compuserve email).
With fixed-pitch
fonts, all characters in a paragraph will line up directly above
each other. With a proportional-spaced font, CAPS, space bars
and other keystrokes are wider, so each line is a different
length. The bottom line is this. If you create a message using
one type of font and send it to an email recipient using the
other, the message will not look the same when they receive it!
Once again, the
solution is simple! By using a hard carriage return before the
end of the line you can keep these problems caused by the
difference in email programs to a bare minimum. If you plan on
sending the same message to multiple recipients, or attempt any
drawings, consider testing the message with a friend on another
service.
There is a third
way for your email messages to look bad. Although it is far less
likely to happen, you should be aware of it. Many word
processing or text editor programs allow you to save a file as
another format. (Such as ascii.) It may look great to you, but
when sent via the internet it can become scrambled.
You may have
received one of these messages at one time or another. They are
easily recognized by the repeated "U" characters in
the text. To avoid this problem, simply use the cut/paste or
copy/paste method to extract text from a document in other
programs.
The last thing you
want is an email message with great content, being dismissed
simply because it wasnt "good looking" enough.
Article by Jim
Daniels of JDD Publishing. Jim's site has helped 1000's of
regular folks profit online. Visit http://bizweb2000.com for
FREE "how-to" cybermarketing assistance, software,
manuals, web services and more. No time to visit the site?
Subscribe to their Free, weekly BizWeb E-Gazette
freegazette@bizweb2000.com
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