|
Forwarding interesting or funny
emails is nothing new. Since the dawn of this great medium, people
have been reading something humourous, touching or bizarre and have
sent it off to their list of friends. However, when the email
addresses contain your company’s name, it associates it with the
content of the message.
Recently I received an adult
themed joke/picture in my email box from someone I know. After
opening it, it contained all the forwarded addresses up until it was
sent to me, filled with “>” and certain comments attached. After
taking out all of the Yahoo or Hotmail addresses, as well as ISP’s,
I came up with a list of 47 companies that were listed within the
body of the email. The majority of them were large, multinational
corporations where perception of their brand is very important.
There was a trail of who sent it out to whom, along with some
nicknames people had given each other (i.e. Rob “The Tongue” from a
large pharmaceutical corporation and Greg “Who’s Your Daddy” from a
prominent food manufacturer).
Not only does this put your
company in the wrong light and potentially harm your image, it also
gives the chance for a spammer to harvest the addresses and sell
them. That one email had over 200 email addresses I could have sold.
How do you stop this from
happening? Other than enforcing a business use only email policy,
you can urge employees to use the “BCC” (Blind Carbon Copy) function
when sending emails to multiple addresses. That way, each recipient
only sees their own name and if forwarded, will not contain a
distribution list. However, what if it’s not a joke or an interest
piece? What if it has to do with confidential information, such as
your company’s client list?
Recently a friend of mine received
an email from a large newspaper, inquiring about his company, a
large insurance firm, placing an ad in an upcoming feature. The
email was sent out to multiple clients and everyone’s address was in
the “To:” line for all to see. Not only do you run into the issue of
a spammer using these, but since this was a group of clients, how
much do you think it would be worth to this newspaper’s competitor?
The direct email to the buyer of ad space at large corporations. It
can reflect an image of your company that you don’t hold your
clients in a high regard.
Once you’ve mastered the art of
Blind Copying people on emails, you also have to look at the
validity of the messages you send. The forwarding of hoaxes, both
about mythical viruses and amazing wealth are rampant in any email
system. Recently, a virus warning I received from numerous sources,
pleaded with me to search my hard drive for a file entitled “sulfnbk.exe”.
This is part of the message:
“A VIRUS could be in your computer
files now, dormant but will become active on June 1. Try not to USE
your Computer on June 1st. FOLLOW DIRECTIONS BELOW TO CHECK IF YOU
HAVE IT AND TO REMOVE IT NOW. No Virus software can detect it. It
will become active on June 1, 2001. It might be too late by then. It
wipes out all files and folders on the hard drive. This virus
travels thru E-mail and migrates to the 'C:\windows\command' folder.
To find it and get rid of it off of your computer, do the
following:”
Needless to say, I searched for
the evil file, and sure enough, I HAD IT! So I highlighted the file
and was ready to select delete, when I thought I would check it out
first. I dropped by Snopes.com and looked it up. It was a hoax. The
sulfnbk.exe program is part of the Windows system and is used to
recognize long file names. I was a second away from deleting a
system file that my computer needed because and email “told me so.”
Take this one step further. You get this message, and send it out to
all of your customers, being a hero and saving them all from this
impending virus. After a while you find out it’s a hoax. Now your
company (and you) is associated with not only being foolish, but
getting people to remove system files from their operating systems.
Not the vision with which I want my company to be aligned.
The same goes for the emails that
say something like “if you forward this to 5 people (or whatever
number it gives) you will receive money from Bill Gates, or free
pants from the GAP, because you are helping test their email
tracking system.” The only problem with that is there’s no such
thing. No one is sending you free pants, no monkey will dance across
your screen, and you will not find true love if you forward
something within 2 minutes of receiving it.
A simple use of the BCC function
and a little investigation will not only save face, but could very
well save your job.
Scott Stratten, Speaker/Coach
http://www.Un-Marketing.com
How to Market Your Business Without
Spending Money
PS - If you enjoyed this article, please pass it along
to others who would find it useful
and sign-up for the Un-Marketing newsletter in the top left hand
corner of this page to receive bi-weekly tips on ways to market your
business without spending money! |