At 8:47 AM on a Tuesday, Maya sat at her desk and looked at the 154 emails she hadn't read yet. Half of them didn't matter. Twenty-four were not clear. Some of them were passive-aggressive. And somewhere in that pile of texts was a critical message from her boss that said, "Please review." Maya realized she'd have to spend the next hour just figuring out her email as her stress level rose. You're not the only one who has ever felt overwhelmed by email. A report from the Radicati Group states that the average worker receives 21 emails every day. Although inboxes are designed to help people get things done, they often become sources of stress, distraction, and misunderstanding. The good news is that professional email etiquette can change all of that. Email can once again be what it was meant to be—a quick, precise, and useful way to talk to people, with a few smart habits and well-thought-out moves. Why Are Proper Email Writing Skills More Important than...