Email has changed the way
that we communicate and in
many ways has replaced other
forms of communication, such
as phone calls or
handwritten letters. This
technological tool is fast,
cheap, and efficient.
However, because it is a
fast and relatively informal
means of communication, many
elected officials or
representatives view it as less
credible than other methods.
If you use email to
communicate with your
elected official or
representative, you should do so
in the context of an ongoing
relationship in which you
use other methods as the
foundation of your
communication.
To craft an email message
with impact, follow these
steps:
Identify
yourself. In the
subject line of the
message, state that you
are a constituent (For
example: Subject:
Message from a
constituent on xyz issue).
Most elected officials
or representatives have
their staff sort and
respond to their email,
and this strategy will
increase the likelihood
that your letter is
read.
State your
request concisely.
View your message as
different from an
electronic letter.
Again, email is less
formal and much more
brief than traditional
written communication.
Craft your message
accordingly: keep it
tight and short.
Provide personal
examples and local
context. Use similar
principles as those in
letter-writing, but in a
tighter format. If you
are sending a generic
email written by a group
of which you’re a part,
insert personal examples
in the message.
Strength in
numbers. Persuade a
like-minded friend,
family member, or
colleague to send an
email as well. Again,
quantity is critical.
elected officials or
representatives pay
attention to issues when
they believe that many
of their constituents
care about that issue.
One email is not
convincing.
Report your
email. If the email
is initiated by an
organization, ask if
they want you to report
your email. Some groups
can monitor responses
electronically without
your having to report,
but most want you to let
them know. If you
persuaded a friend, let
them know that that
friend will be reporting
as well. Make sure that
your friend follows
through.
Follow up.
Again, because the
impact of email varies
widely from elected
official or
representative
to elected official or
representative, be sure
that you are using other
methods to communicate
with your elected
official or
representative.
Follow your email with a
phone call, handwritten
letter, or visit.
Communicate more
than once. As with
all other forms of
communicating with your
elected official or
representative, view your
email as part of an
ongoing relationship.
Keep in touch and tuned
into your elected
official or
representative and
his or her position on
the issue.