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The most common workplace email faux pas revealed

A nationwide study of 1,000 Brits has uncovered a list of the biggest mistakes you can make on work email, with adding a kiss coming out top.

More than 40% of office workers think โ€˜xxโ€™ on work correspondence is completely unprofessional.

The study by Pure Commercial Finance also revealed eight percent of British workers feel flattered to have received a kiss-laden missive, a more suspicious one in twenty find it manipulative and a sign that the sender wants something.

Yet the omission of a kiss can also cause stress to British workers, according to the data. One in ten admitted they feel very upset if someone who usually sends kisses stops.

Not surprisingly, given the strength of feeling about the subject, only 25 percent of Brits admit to adding kisses at the end of work emails. 

The top ten biggest work email mistakes are:

Putting kisses (xx) at the end of work emails     44%
Sending without proof reading first        32%
Getting the name wrong of the person youโ€™re emailing   29%
Using slang like OMG                      25%
Sending an email that just says โ€˜thanksโ€™ 21%
Using too many exclamation marks   20%
Sending an email you’ve written in anger16%

The study also found that 29 percent of British workers think using smiley faces and emojis in work correspondence is a massive no, and 20 percent hate the use of exclamation marks.

A quarter think using slang and abbreviations such as OMG should be banned, while 16 percent of office workers think you should avoid sending an email in anger.

In fact, the study found that 36 percent of office workers have sent angry emails, only to have regretted them once they had calmed down.

The study also revealed that itโ€™s not just the content of work emails that causes problems, but the sheer volume too, with the average Brit having 651 emails in their inbox.

More than four in 10 Brits say they are unable to cope with the number of work emails they receive, with 30 percent are unable to sleep at night because of worries about the contents of their inbox.