If you send an email by mistake, should you admit your error?
Many of us have had the experience of sending an email or a text and inadvertently including someone we ought not to have included as a recipient. Perhaps a glib comment was made about a colleague or a boss who ends up receiving the message. Or a job application ends up in your manager’s inbox by mistake.
Few of us have likely sent an email threatening action against a person or an organization before we meant to send it. Nevertheless, such things happen.
When discovered, what should an errant emailer do?
Coming clean on the mistake and owning the error is the most honest response. But that doesn’t mean there won’t be repercussions.
If it’s an email about a colleague or a friend, some serious repair of the relationship might be in order. If it’s a particularly derogatory comment about a boss, the lift might be a bit heavier and, as a friend who is an expert in crisis management tells me, that email sender would be wise to start looking for a new job.
In politics, my crisis friend tells me, the tendency is often not to come clean, but to try to find ways to use a creative vocabulary to lessen the blow. That might include asking the recipient why they didn’t check with you to see if you were serious in the words you used. Or if the email included something that suggested you were so agitated you were likely to embark on a rule-breaking spree, to respond to queries with something as ambiguous as: “I try never to break the law.”
In 1923, humorist Will Rogers is reported to have said: “If you ever injected truth into politics you have no politics.”
My crisis friend tells me that few in politics want to admit errors because they don’t want to end up relegated to political Siberia because it’s so cold, although he used more colorful language.
It might be viewed as naïve to believe that owning your mistakes and admitting to errors after you’ve made them is the right thing to do. Some errors get corrected before any harm can be done. There’s no reason to go around alerting people to every mistake you’ve ever made on the way to a successful outcome, particularly if those errors hurt no one and were not done with harmful intent. We all make mistakes.
But when you do discover an error or someone else does, I believe the right thing is to have the integrity to acknowledge the error. Granted, this might result in a blow to a career or a friendship, but lying to cover your actions – while a time-tested maneuver – shows little moral courage. On a practical level, it’s the lies we tell to cover up that often result in the most self-damage.
A year after he made the comment above, Will Rogers said: “They ought to pass a rule in this country in any investigations if a man can’t tell the truth the first time he shouldn’t be allowed to try again.”
That’s a law unlikely to be considered. What we can control, however, are our own actions and whether we choose to do the right thing when things go awry.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a senior lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need to have answered? Send them to jeffreyseglin@gmail.com.
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