Send (Revised Edition)

Ebook
0"W x 0"H x 0"D  
On sale Sep 02, 2008 | 288 Pages | 978-0-307-27061-0
The essential guide or anyone navigating the often overwhelming world of email.

Send—the classic guide to email for office and home—has become indispensable for readers navigating the impersonal, and at times overwhelming, world of electronic communication. Filled with real-life email success (and horror) stories and a wealth of useful and entertaining examples, Send dissects all the major minefields and pitfalls of email. It provides clear rules for constructing effective emails, for handheld etiquette, for handling the “emotional email,” and for navigating all of today’s hot-button issues. It offers essential strategies to help you both better manage the ever-increasing number of emails you receive and improve the ones you send. Send is now more than ever the essential book about email for businesspeople and professionals everywhere.
© Elena Seibert
David Shipley is the executive editor for Bloomberg View. Previously he was deputy editorial page editor and op-ed page editor of the New York Times and a senior presidential speechwriter in the Clinton administration. He is the coauthor, with Will Schwalbe, of Send: Why People Email So Badly and How to Do It Better. He lives in New York. View titles by David Shipley
© Michael Maren
WILL SCHWALBE has worked in book publishing (currently as an editor at Macmillan); in digital media; and as a journalist, writing for various publications, including The New York Times and the South China Morning Post. He is the author of Books for Living, The End of Your Life Book Club, and coauthor, with David Shipley, of Send. He lives in New York. View titles by Will Schwalbe
“Informative, entertaining, thorough, and thoughtful.” —Dave Barry, The New York Times Book Review
 
“Read it or weep.” —Michael Lewis

“Handy . . . Written with concision and good sense.”  —The Wall Street Journal
 
“Witty and wily . . . Fun to read.” —O, The Oprah Magazine
 
“With Shipley and Schwalbe’s excellent instructions in hand we can email as confidently as we load the dishwasher and turn on the microwave.” —New York Review of Books

“This is just the book I’ve been waiting for.” —Bill Bryson
 
Send can help any of us send emails that build better business relationships and get better results.” —Spencer Johnson, M.D., author of Who Moved My Cheese?
 
“Witty and wise . . . Send is far more than Miss Manners for the Web; it’s brimming with fascinating insights. . . . [It] should make Shipley and Schwalbe the ‘Strunk and White’ for the Web.” —Daniel Goleman
 
Send is an easy to read primer, full of practical tips for every emailer.” —Bob Eckert, Charman and CEO, Mattel, Inc.
 
 “The definitive tome on email. Send is to email what The Elements of Style is to writing. Thank God it’s here at last. (BCC: David Shipley and Will Schwalbe)” —Guy Kawasaki, author of The Art of the Start
 
“A fascinating, entertaining, and, above all, informative look at email—and how it changed the way we communicate with one another. What Strunk and White is to style, this book is to email. It’s a terrific read. I highly recommend it.” —Charles Osgood

About

The essential guide or anyone navigating the often overwhelming world of email.

Send—the classic guide to email for office and home—has become indispensable for readers navigating the impersonal, and at times overwhelming, world of electronic communication. Filled with real-life email success (and horror) stories and a wealth of useful and entertaining examples, Send dissects all the major minefields and pitfalls of email. It provides clear rules for constructing effective emails, for handheld etiquette, for handling the “emotional email,” and for navigating all of today’s hot-button issues. It offers essential strategies to help you both better manage the ever-increasing number of emails you receive and improve the ones you send. Send is now more than ever the essential book about email for businesspeople and professionals everywhere.

Author

© Elena Seibert
David Shipley is the executive editor for Bloomberg View. Previously he was deputy editorial page editor and op-ed page editor of the New York Times and a senior presidential speechwriter in the Clinton administration. He is the coauthor, with Will Schwalbe, of Send: Why People Email So Badly and How to Do It Better. He lives in New York. View titles by David Shipley
© Michael Maren
WILL SCHWALBE has worked in book publishing (currently as an editor at Macmillan); in digital media; and as a journalist, writing for various publications, including The New York Times and the South China Morning Post. He is the author of Books for Living, The End of Your Life Book Club, and coauthor, with David Shipley, of Send. He lives in New York. View titles by Will Schwalbe

Praise

“Informative, entertaining, thorough, and thoughtful.” —Dave Barry, The New York Times Book Review
 
“Read it or weep.” —Michael Lewis

“Handy . . . Written with concision and good sense.”  —The Wall Street Journal
 
“Witty and wily . . . Fun to read.” —O, The Oprah Magazine
 
“With Shipley and Schwalbe’s excellent instructions in hand we can email as confidently as we load the dishwasher and turn on the microwave.” —New York Review of Books

“This is just the book I’ve been waiting for.” —Bill Bryson
 
Send can help any of us send emails that build better business relationships and get better results.” —Spencer Johnson, M.D., author of Who Moved My Cheese?
 
“Witty and wise . . . Send is far more than Miss Manners for the Web; it’s brimming with fascinating insights. . . . [It] should make Shipley and Schwalbe the ‘Strunk and White’ for the Web.” —Daniel Goleman
 
Send is an easy to read primer, full of practical tips for every emailer.” —Bob Eckert, Charman and CEO, Mattel, Inc.
 
 “The definitive tome on email. Send is to email what The Elements of Style is to writing. Thank God it’s here at last. (BCC: David Shipley and Will Schwalbe)” —Guy Kawasaki, author of The Art of the Start
 
“A fascinating, entertaining, and, above all, informative look at email—and how it changed the way we communicate with one another. What Strunk and White is to style, this book is to email. It’s a terrific read. I highly recommend it.” —Charles Osgood

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