Slashdot Mirror


Companies Getting Rid of Reply-all

An anonymous reader writes "An article at BusinessWeek highlights an issue most corporate workers are familiar with: the flood of useless reply-all emails endemic to any big organization. Companies are beginning to realize how much time these emails can waste in aggregate across an entire company, and some are looking for ways to outright block reply-all. 'A company that's come close to abolishing Reply All is the global information and measurement firm Nielsen. On its screens, the button is visible but inactive, covered with a fuzzy gray. It can be reactivated with an override function on the keyboard. Chief Information Officer Andrew Cawood explained in a memo to 35,000 employees the reason behind Nielsen's decision: eliminating "bureaucracy and inefficiency."' Software developers are starting to react to this need as well, creating plugins or monitors that restrict the reply-all button or at least alert the user, so they can take a moment to consider their action more carefully. In addition to getting rid of the annoying 'Thanks!' and 'Welcome!' emails, this has implications for law firms and military organizations, where an errant reply-all could have serious repercussions."

12 of 248 comments (clear)

  1. Can we get rid of long sigs as well? by Br00se · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I welcome this trend, a few extra confirmation boxes would help.

    Can we also get rid of excessively long sigs, embedded graphics, comic sans and outlook stationary too? Or at least made them more difficult to automate.

    1. Re:Can we get rid of long sigs as well? by KiloByte · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Right, but do you know what happens if you send a plain text e-mail to a business person? They'll print it out, highlight a few places with a color marker, add comments in pen, scan it, put the image into a Word document then send it to you with a subject of "Sending e-mail message" (apparently Word's default subject, might be translated differently in English versions).

      The first time I received a mail like this, I hoped this is a joke done on purpose. After seeing this multiple times from different people from far away parts of the country, from different business sectors, I think I really don't want to live on this planet anymore.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  2. Fix the people not the tool! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those people who constantly send out large blasts of useless email are just not sufficiently harassed by their fellow employees to stop. Reply all serves a very important function when running large multi-day problem resolution threads that require large amounts of collaboration on a global scale. To remove the reply all means that everyone has to remember to constantly add back everyone "important" to the thread. Reply all is a tool, the problem is that sometimes the people using the tool are tools themselves. Fix the people not the tool.

    1. Re:Fix the people not the tool! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Absolutely correct. Too often, managers will try to address the symptom of a problem rather than the underlying problem. Dealing with staff issues is hard, it is easier to skip it and come up bad policies. This kind of avoidance destroys a good work environment. I use reply-all regularly, but responsibly. Rather than get rid of the feature or severely limit it, deal with the individuals that abuse it. Or maybe hire competent office workers and managers -- but that might be too much to ask.

    2. Re:Fix the people not the tool! by somersault · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Buttons don't reply all. People reply all.

      --
      which is totally what she said
  3. Re:Feature/Bug in Outlook by Rich0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yup. Also, I've found that it is much easier to hit reply-all and then trim the list down, than to just hit reply and try to think of everybody who really should be copied.

    Emails can be annoying, but what's the alternative? Walk down the hall? Uh, good luck with that - I can't remember the last time I was on a project where more than about two people on the team were even in the same building. Schedule a meeting? Good luck - everybody is booked through to next Friday in meetings. Pick up the phone? Good luck - they're not going to answer because they're all in those meetings that I just mentioned.

    Email and IM work. The former is asynchronous, and the latter can be discretely used while in meetings.

  4. I'd do the opposite by daffmeister · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My personal peeve is people that hit Reply when Reply All is required. I deliberately included those other people in the original email, because they need to be part of the discussion, don't cut them out. You've just forced me to add them all back in again on my reply.

  5. And Send, too! by rueger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My God. I don't know what's more sad - that we live in an age where some people feel the need to police the use of "Reply All", or where some corporation will actually go to the expense to remove it.

    In days of yore there would have been a pretty simple solution: if you misused it your boss would sit you down and tell you never to do it again. Case closed.

    Now, can someone tell Gmail that it would be handy to be able "Resend" a Sent message that bounced or was deleted at the other end by mistake?

  6. Re:please by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do I look like I'm made of time?!

    http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2003-04-06/

    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
  7. Re:Mailing lists by aztracker1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just remember, if you make something idiot proof, they will build a better idiot.

    --
    Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
  8. Re:please by sortius_nod · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yet again corps can't see the forest for the trees. The tool (reply-all) isn't the problem, it's the people using it. Most companies don't train their staff well enough (or at all) in computer etiquette, maybe start there.

  9. Re:please by chiguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hmmm, this argument sounds familiar: "Don't use centralized policies to enforce good behavior. All it takes is education. It's the parents' fault. Don't restrict me from doing something I want to do."

    Like in the real world:
    * Education quality varies: not everyone has the resources of a Fortune 500 company
    * Even the best education does not necessarily change people's core sensibility: some people are just bad/stupid
    * Deterrence is preferable to punishment: it's cheaper to force near universal compliance than to capture, punish, and cleanup after offenders. Costs may be high when you consider possibly valuable information getting to the wrong coworkers, employees, customers, vendors, etc. In a corporate context, the possible punishments all seem too severe for what is essentially a single key press.
    * Mistakes happen. Design systems to disallow mistakes: People are human

    Sometimes, a central authority has to make policies that restrict people's freedoms for the better of the group. Whether it's mandatory seat belts, air bags, back up cameras, unleaded gas, brake lights, or removal of reply all, protecting society can make sense.

    --
    passetspike!