💡 Learn

Slack & Teams Etiquette — Tone in Short Messages

10 min
B1

Free

The tone problem

Short messages are dangerous. "OK." reads differently from "OK!" which reads differently from "OK 👍". In French workplace culture, brevity is efficiency. In English remote culture, brevity can feel cold, passive-aggressive, or angry — even when you didn't mean it.

Messages that sound colder than you think

"OK." → sounds passive-aggressive or annoyed
Better: "OK, sounds good!" or "Got it 👍"
A full stop after a single word in chat reads as blunt. Add a word or emoji to warm it up.
"Fine." → sounds annoyed or resigned
Better: "Sure, that works!" or "Works for me"
"Fine" in chat almost always reads negatively. In French, "bien" is neutral. In English chat, "fine" isn't.
"Can you do this?" → sounds like an order
Better: "Would you be able to take a look at this?" or "Could you handle this when you get a chance?"
In chat, direct requests need more softening than in person because there's no smile or tone to soften them.

Useful Slack/Teams phrases

"Heads up —"Petit avertissement —
Casual warning before sharing something. "Heads up — the client changed the deadline."
"FYI"Pour info
"FYI — the meeting room changed to B3." No response expected. Just informing.
"No rush, but..."Pas urgent, mais...
"No rush, but could you review this when you get a chance?" Removes pressure while still asking.
"Looping in @name"Je mets @nom dans la boucle
"Looping in @Sarah for visibility." = Adding someone so they can see the conversation.
"Let's take this offline"Discutons-en en dehors de ce canal
The discussion is getting too long for group chat. Move to a DM or call. Not rude — efficient.

Emoji rules

In English remote work culture, emojis are professional. 👍 = acknowledged. 🙏 = thank you. 🎉 = congratulations. They replace the facial expressions you'd use in person. French professionals often avoid emojis as unprofessional — in English remote teams, zero emojis makes you seem cold.

Common mistake

"@channel Can someone do this urgently?" — never @channel for non-emergencies. Use @here (only people currently online) or better: tag the specific person. Also: don't send "Hi" and then wait for a response before asking your question. Send everything in one message: "Hi Sarah — quick question: [question]. No rush!"

Quick Login/Register

Login / Register

To access practice units, courses or to book a session you need to login/register first. No credit card, only a phone number.