Guide · 4 min read
How to sound professional in a text (without sounding stiff).
Professional doesn't mean formal. It means clear, respectful, and easy to reply to. Here are seven rules that move a message from "bit much" to "exactly right" — with examples you can steal.
1. Lead with the ask, not the apology.
Piling on "sorry to bother you" before the request makes your message longer and signals low status. State what you need, then add context.
So sorry to bother you, I know you're super busy, but whenever you get a sec could you maybe look at the doc?
AfterWhen you get a moment, could you take a look at the doc? No rush — end of day is fine.
2. Cut filler: "just", "actually", "basically".
These words soften you into the background. Delete them and the sentence reads as confident, not rude.
3. Replace vague deadlines with a window.
"ASAP" sounds panicked. "End of day Thursday" sounds organized.
i need this asap
AfterCould you prioritize this? It needs to go out by 3pm — appreciate it.
4. Swap "can you" for "could you" when it's a favor.
"Could" frames the request as optional, which is accurate — and feels collaborative rather than assigned.
5. Use one greeting, not three.
"Hey! Hope you're well :) Quick one —" is three openings stacked. Pick one. "Hey — quick one:" does the same work in four words.
6. Close with a clear next step.
End with what happens next, or what you need from them. A message without a landing is easy to leave unanswered.
let me know what you think!!
AfterHappy to revise if anything's off — otherwise I'll send it Friday morning.
7. Match formality to the channel.
Slack to a teammate is not email to a client. Professional on Slack looks like lowercase, short, and punctuated. Professional in email looks like a subject line and a greeting. Same register, different dress code.
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