How many of you have accidentally carbon copied a personal contact into a business email? How many of you have ever had to explain that your “pocket” called your best friend and left a voicemail of an entire business lunch? These are common occurrences that leave clients and companies defenseless when it comes to the very important issue of client confidentiality. For example, a former client of Brand Iron happened upon an email trail in which a former employee of Brand Iron called the client “a pain in my ass.” Needless to say, this wasn’t a breech of confidentiality, but a careless mistake none the less. It is safe to say that this employee no longer works here. Sloppy email etiquette is always to blame with some of the most notorious confidentiality mistakes.
Email: The Post-Postal Predicament
To avoid common email privacy pitfalls, it is important to look at your current email set up. It is easy to safeguard your email if you follow a few easy rules…
1. Turn Off Auto Populate
Most people do not realize that auto populate is one of the most commonly misused areas of email. This tool, while it may seem convenient, is very dangerous.
2. Apply an Email Disclaimer
We have all seen them. They are normally a little lengthy and we skip right over them. They normally look something like this…
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message. Thank you.
If you were to be sued for the contents of an email, it is not certain whether an email disclaimer could fully protect you from liability in a lawsuit, but it could certainly help in some situations. Particularly, “breach of confidentiality” can be avoided by a simple disclaimer that warns the receiver that the email is confidential and proprietary.
3. Implement a Company Email Policy
If you feel that your company is still exposed by employees that will not use the appropriate “email etiquette,” impose an email policy. According to a recent article by an affiliate of The Wall Street Journal, “Thirty-eight percent of companies said they employ staff to read or analyze outgoing email messages, and that jumps to 44% of companies with 20,000 or more employees.” This is just the tip of the email iceberg.
The article goes on to say that almost a third of companies have fired an employee in the last 12 months for violating the set email policies. Email is no longer being overlooked by the industry giants. This means that smaller companies should take notice and follow in these same traditions. Brand Iron values client confidentiality, and we strive to always check, double check, and check again when it comes to client emails. This is what creates the bond of trust between a client and its marketing firm, however, once the trust is lost, it is much harder to gain it back than taking the correct precautions from the start.
written by Nicole Salerno, Marketing Intern
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While everything in this post is true and correct, there is way more to email privacy. A great place to learn the intricacies of keeping your messages private is www.novo-ordo.com. They talk about all the technical aspects and what you can do now to keep third parties out of your email.
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