Overcoming Email Fear: Send It Anyway!

Let’s start with a question: how many times have you written an email, then read it over too many times, edited it, rewritten it, and then still been nervous about sending it? Maybe you still have a few of these in your drafts…

It’s more than once or twice, isn’t it?

Don’t worry – email anxiety isn’t just a ‘you’ problem; everyone suffers from it a little. Even I have been known to hover nervously over the send button before thinking ‘nah’ and going through it again, and I literally write emails all day, every day, for a living.

So, what can we do about email fear? The answer – send it anyway… but let me explain.

What is the Root of Email Fear?

We worry that we’re going to offend someone or that we’ll be judged. What if we made a mistake? What if an unseen spelling error makes us look much dumber than we want to show? What if they don’t like it?

Email fear can be boiled down to a few categories:

Let’s face it – it’s going to be one of those three things; but what do we do to fix it?

Embrace Good Enough

Here’s the thing, ‘good enough’ is better than ‘perfect’. It really is. An email that’s 80% right and got sent is far more likely to do its thing and return value than one that’s almost perfect, sitting at 99% and still in your drafts folder – because that one is doing nothing!

Focus on progress. If you get your message out there, it’s making some progress, even if it’s not perfect. You can work on the way you phrase things or develop your emails for next time, and maybe it’ll be a little better then. You will hone your message as you learn what works.

And get the timing right, because often timing is much more important than the perfectionism of the content. Getting your email to your customer at the right time means they get the message when they need it and not when it’s too late. No one wants to be informed of a sale the day it ends, reminded about their plane tickets when the aircraft is on the runway, or invited to a webinar that is starting right now!

Your email is good enough – send it.

Common Email Fears and How to Overcome Them

Embracing the ’80% there is good enough’ rule helps those who aren’t sending emails due to a need to be a perfectionist, but what about those other worries?

Beating the fear of upsetting people

First of all, unless you really know you’re upsetting someone with what you’re saying or you’re doing it on purpose, chances are you won’t upset them. Relax! But you can cover most bases by:

Conquering the concern about being misunderstood

Does your email make sense to you? Read it back and check, and if it does, then it’ll probably make sense to them, too!

Overcoming fear of mistakes

First of all, everyone makes mistakes. For most emails, the odd mistake is forgotten as quickly as it is read, so don’t beat yourself up too much about them. However, they can also be easily fixed:

Use software to proofread for you.

There are so many good tools out there that will read your email and fix technical issues that you’re spoilt for choice; there’s your email client (probably), tools like Grammarly, AI writing assistants like ChatGPT, and even the good ol’ cut-and-paste into Word technique. If you see a squiggly red line, right-click on it and do what it suggests!

Consider a follow-up email.

Let’s face it, you re-read your email after you sent it, didn’t you? Just to reassure yourself while you wait for the reply…! And that’s when you saw it: the glaring error that makes you want to curl into a ball. You know what? Admit to it. If it’s important that you cover it, send an amusing apology that not only fixes your error but actually can improve your personal brand and relationship.

That’s right, I’m talking about fixing an error as a marketing technique! When you follow up with a humble or amusing ‘Sorry, look what I just did! So embarrassing!’ email, you present your human side and cement your relationship just that little bit more.
(But don’t make mistakes on purpose just to do this, it won’t come across as authentic.)

Beating that fear of rejection

Not everything you write is going to go down perfectly. Instead, focus on providing value each time and building your relationships slowly and steadily.

While seeing people unsubscribe feels like a loss, look at it as just more market research, helping you refine your message and improve engagement with those who really are your customer base.

It’s easy to say ‘shake off the rejection and move on’ – certainly, it’s a lot easier for me to type than follow! But it’s true. Every rejection is merely a chance to learn and move on with more experience, and even the greatest in their fields get rejected and criticised – I know I do, and I’m great, right? Please tell me I’m great!!

Seriously though, it’s hard to take, especially the more importance you place on the email. Take a breath and send it out; once it’s gone, you’ll feel better.

Practical Tips for Conquering Email Fear

Here are a few final practical tips if everything I’ve said so far still isn’t quite giving you the confidence you need to hit the send button.

A Helping Hand with Nathan Littleton

If you need someone to proofread and check your email and offer some genuine and helpful advice, why not send it to me? I’m here to help you get your email marketing past the 80% line every time (note that I didn’t say ‘perfect’, we’re not looking for perfection!). If you’re looking for someone you can trust to help you conquer your email fear, look no further – contact me, Nathan Littleton, today.

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