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E-commerce and Internet -- E-mailing
E-mailing
By Daniel Deane
E-mailing a person for the first time may be a little bit
tricky. When posting to anyone for the first time, there are
several things to keep in mind. One should keep in mind that one
may be violating a person's carefully guarded privacy or
violating a personal or company or other rule someone thought
up. Be polite. And be prepared for a wide range of welcomes from
friendly to outright rude and crude. On the other hand you may
be extending a hand of friendship which will develop into a
relationship for life.
In general, there are three types of e-mail communities as
defined by economic pressure. In these groups there are three
types of individuals:
1. those who like to talk via email and will accept almost
anything at least once and enjoy the internet for personal
reasons;
2. those who are online for business; entertainment is the
least of what they want to get online;
3. those who may be a member online purely for their own
reasons and do not want to be bothered by anyone except the
privileged few they let in.
The Economic Groups are:
* Those who pay for their privileges by the minute. These
individuals often do not like the monetary loss of unsolicited
posts. They may be short tempered when they receive an post that
they did not ask for. Be patient with these individuals. Their
privacy is important to them and junk mail is just that to them:
JUNK! Do not return their flames. (Except for maybe an apology
for bothering them and to tell them you will not bother them
again.)
* Those who pay for a flat rate for either unlimited access or
a set rate for a set amount of time on the internet before
minute or hourly charges begin to accrue. These folks also value
their privacy. However, I have noted that these individuals are
often community minded and are a bit more tolerant than those
who are pressured by their pocketbooks every time they go online.
* The last group are those who have their access provided to
them. They may be students on a college or university campus or
they may be professionals. Additionally, a few non-profit groups
provide internet access to their members. Those who are students
are using the internet for two reasons: for obtaining
information useful to them in school or in life in general, and
for entertainment. Those who are professionals whose job
provides this perk have obvious reasons for having e-mail
addresses. E-mail addresses are just good business sense in this
day and age. Again professionals, while not on the job, may have
the freedom to pursue personal interests on the internet. (Of
course they would never be guilty of pursuing entertainment on
the internet on *company* time.) ;-)
Three Experience Types of Internet Participants
* The newbie who knows just enough to get himself into trouble
and must ask for help every turn. With the e-mail and Internet
population doubling every few months there are lots of these
individuals. Be patient and helpful to this individual. Remember
you were one of these individuals yourself when you got started.
Not everyone has the experience or superior intellect you have.
* The person who has been around the block a couple of months
or years. You might even call this the intermediate experience
group. These people may or may not know all the rules. However,
they are just knowledgeable enough to tell you how badly you are
acting on the Internet (flames) and "would you not inflict
yourself on those of us who are here before you and know what we
are doing". Be patient with these folks. They have lost sight of
what community is.
* The person who has been around way before the internet got
popular. There are two types of individuals here:
* The person who is tolerant of newcomers and understands that
the Internet is changing and the rules are changing with it. Or
rather the rules are being bent as far as they can go without
breaking. Be patient with this individual. He is the teacher and
benefactor of us all.
* Mr Internet Bear or self appointed internet police. He
considers himself as the guardian of the old line. Upset him and
you may have a e-mail robot sitting on your email address until
your ISP kicks you off. What he has done should be illegal and
we all wish him ill. He is willing to shut down the entire ISP
to get at you and if this does not work, shutdown the entire
token ring that your ISP is on. (This has happened on the
Atlanta token ring section.) Many an ISP, internet business and
private individuals pray that MR Internet Bear who has his own
system is bombed out of existence, that every computer system he
buys has unrecoverable system errors installed into the hardware
and that he is caught and sued for his and his progenies income
for eternity.
* In case you wonder if Mr. Bear is real, ask a long term
spammer or your ISP. They have probably ran afoul of one or two
in a year's time. The damage he can do runs into the millions of
dollars in a few days. That is why his robot is called a BOMB.
One last word on first time e-mail. Be polite. Be willing to
keep records and promptly delete from your recipient list those
who want off.
SPAM
It is generally agreed that Spam is unwanted email. Many
believe that Spammers are abusers of the email system.
Spam is an ugly word that is over used and means any
unsolicited e-mail, one e-mail or dozens or hundreds of
thousands. Many individuals do not mind a little of it. They are
afraid of missing an opportunity to meet a new friend or of
finding a really useful service or business opportunity. Other
individuals make studies of what is said on these e-mails. One
can really get an education on ad writing from these e-mails.
Still others even sign up for the mailing lists or participate
in an activity which makes them a target for unsolicited mails.
Still other individuals do "Unsolicited Bulk E-mail" and know
the cost is to receive "Unsolicited Bulk E-mail" in return. It
is one cost of doing "Unsolicited Bulk E-mail."
If you participate in discussion lists which allow advertising,
or you maintain "Bulk E-mailing Lists", please don't make a pest
of yourself. If your name is seen too often, then some people
will NEVER join you. They will send unsubscribe requests. If you
are on a discussion list, people may unsubscribe or just ignore
you. Make yourself a pest and you will defeat yourself. This is
called loss of mindshare.
Another reason some people are tolerant of unsolicited e-mail
is that all it takes is a couple of keystrokes and offending
mail is gone. If they do not like what the person is sending
(such as, solicitation to visit or receive pornography) They are
willing to write a polite email and ask to be deleted from their
mailing list. I have never been refused. Perhaps Mr, Internet
BEAR has a use after all.
One type of Bulk E-mail is acceptable for all occasions. This
Bulk E-mail is one where a person has asked to be placed on the
list. It is this type of e-mail whether it be a newsletter like
this one or a discussion list that has always been accepted on
the internet.
Happy modeming.
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Presented by Daniel Deane - P.O.Box 3548, Chattanooga TN 37404 -
Publisher of Daniel's InfoZene, a general interest/public
service ezine Internet tips, Humor, Recipes, PSAs, disability
advocacy, and more. copyright 1997 Daniel Deane
Brought to you by World Wide Information Outlet (WWIO) your source of FREEWare Content online. Located on the Internet at: http://certificate.net/wwio/
Tags: E-commerce and Internet
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