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Business Email Writing in English: Templates, Tone and Common Mistakes

Business Email Writing in English: Templates, Tone and Common Mistakes

Business Email Writing in English: Templates, Tone and Common Mistakes

Write clear, professional emails in English across every business situation - from requests to complaints to follow-ups.

By Direct English Live  |  13 min read  |  Updated May 2026

Professional writing business email in English

Business email writing is one of the most important professional skills in international commerce. Yet many professionals lose credibility not because they lack vocabulary - but because their emails have the wrong tone, the wrong structure, or the wrong register for the situation. Effective business email writing goes beyond grammar: it requires understanding audience, purpose, and context.

This guide covers every major email type with ready-to-use templates, the rules of register, and the specific mistakes most common among Arabic and French speakers writing in English. Whether you are new to business email writing or refining an established style, these frameworks apply across industries and seniority levels.

Understanding Email Register in Business Email Writing: Formal, Semi-Formal, Informal

Register is the level of formality in your language. In business email writing, choosing the wrong register is one of the most damaging mistakes - it signals poor professional judgment even when your grammar is correct. Every piece of business email writing you produce should begin with a clear decision about the appropriate register.

Register When to Use Greeting Closing
Formal First contact, legal/HR matters, external clients, complaints Dear Mr/Ms [Last Name] Yours sincerely
Semi-formal Regular colleagues, known clients, most professional email Dear [First Name] Best regards / Kind regards
Informal Close teammates, internal chats elevated to email Hi [Name] Best / Cheers / Thanks

When in doubt, use semi-formal. It is appropriate for 80% of professional email situations and avoids the risk of being either too cold or too casual. This is the single most consistent principle across all business email writing guides and corporate communication standards.

Business Email Writing: Subject Lines That Get Read

Effective business email writing starts before the body of the email - it starts with the subject line. A subject line should be specific, short (under 60 characters), and indicate the required action or content type. Strong subject lines are a hallmark of professional business email writing.

Situation Weak Subject Strong Subject
Meeting request Meeting Request: 30-min call re. Q3 targets - week of 12 May
Sending a report Report Q1 Sales Report - Final Version for Review
Follow-up Follow up Follow-up: Proposal from 3 April - Next Steps
Complaint Problem Delivery Delay - Order #4821 - Action Required
Introduction Introduction Intro: [Your Name], [Role] at [Company]

Business Email Writing Templates for Common Situations

The templates below cover the most common business email writing scenarios professionals face in international organisations. Each one follows the structure principles taught in Direct English Live's business email writing workshops.

Template 1: Professional Introduction Email

Template 2: Meeting Request

Template 3: Sending a Document with Context

Template 4: Polite Follow-Up Email

Template 5: Handling a Complaint Professionally

Business Email Writing: Useful Phrases by Purpose

Good business email writing relies on a repertoire of standard phrases that signal professionalism and clarity. The phrases below are drawn from real international business correspondence and are appropriate across most industries.

Opening Lines

  • "I am writing with regard to..."
  • "I am writing to follow up on our conversation of [date]..."
  • "Thank you for your email of [date]."
  • "I hope this message finds you well." (use sparingly)
  • "Further to our meeting on [date], I wanted to..."

Making Requests

  • "I would be grateful if you could..."
  • "Could you please..."
  • "I would appreciate it if..."
  • "Would it be possible to..."
  • "Please could you confirm by [date]."

Closing Lines

  • "I look forward to hearing from you."
  • "Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions."
  • "I welcome any feedback you may have."
  • "Thank you for your time and consideration."

Common Business Email Writing Mistakes by Arabic and French Speakers

Business email writing in English differs from Arabic and French conventions in several important ways. The following mistakes appear repeatedly in business email writing from professionals whose first language is Arabic or French.

Mistake 1 - Over-formal or over-long opening

Weak: "I hope this email finds you in the best of health and that you and your family are well. I am reaching out to you today in the hope that..."

Fix: "I am writing to request information about your training programmes."

Mistake 2 - "Please find attached" with no context

Weak: "Dear Sir, Please find attached. Regards."

Fix: State what the attachment is, why you're sending it, and what action is needed.

Mistake 3 - Mixing register

Weak: "Dear Mr Smith, Hope you're doing great! Kindly revert with the necessary details at your earliest convenience."

Fix: Choose one register (semi-formal is best here) and stay consistent throughout.

Mistake 4 - Burying the request at the end

Weak: Three paragraphs of context, then "So could you perhaps let me know by next week?"

Fix: State the required action in the opening or at least by the second paragraph, not last.

Mistake 5 - "Revert" instead of "reply"

"Please revert" is not standard in British or American business English. Use "Please reply," "Please respond," or "Please let me know."

Fix: Replace all instances of "revert" with "reply" or "respond."

Business Email Writing Quality Checklist

Before sending any professional email, use this business email writing checklist to verify your message meets professional standards. The CIPD's guidance on effective learning and development methods supports structured business email writing training as part of a wider professional communication programme.

# Check Why It Matters
1 Subject line is specific and concise Determines whether the email is opened
2 Greeting matches the register Sets the professional tone immediately
3 Purpose is clear in the first 2 sentences Busy readers scan; don't make them search
4 Required action is explicit (what + by when) Avoids ambiguity and chasing emails
5 Attachments are mentioned before the closing Avoids the embarrassment of forgetting them
6 Closing matches the register Professionalism extends to the last line
7 Full signature is included Makes it easy to contact you by other means

Business Email Writing Practice for Your Team

Direct English Live offers corporate business email writing workshops that use your team's real communication scenarios as practice material. Our business email writing programmes are delivered online, in-company, and blended, and are suitable for all professional levels.

Book a Corporate English Demo

Business Email Writing: Frequently Asked Questions

What is the correct format for a formal business email in English?
A formal business email should include: a clear subject line, a formal greeting (Dear Mr/Ms [Last Name]), a direct opening sentence, a concise body, a clear call to action or next step, a formal closing (Yours sincerely / Best regards), and your full name and title in the signature.
When should I use "Dear Sir/Madam" versus a person's name?
Use "Dear Sir/Madam" only when you genuinely do not know the recipient's name or gender. If you have a name, always use it. "Dear Mr Ahmed" or "Dear Dr El Fassi" is more professional and more likely to receive a response than a generic greeting.
What is the difference between "Best regards" and "Yours sincerely"?
"Yours sincerely" is formal and traditionally used when you know the recipient's name. "Best regards" is semi-formal and widely used in modern professional correspondence. "Kind regards" is a slightly warmer alternative. Avoid "Yours faithfully" unless writing in a very traditional context to an unknown recipient.
How long should a professional business email be?
Most professional emails should be 3-5 short paragraphs. The first paragraph states the purpose, the middle provides necessary detail, and the final paragraph states the expected action or outcome. Emails longer than 300 words usually indicate the wrong format - consider a report, memo, or meeting instead.
What are the most common English email mistakes made by Arabic and French speakers?
Common business email writing mistakes include: overly long and formal openings (translating Arabic courtesy conventions directly), using "please find attached" as the entire email body without context, mixing formal and informal register in the same email, incorrect article use, and overly indirect requests that obscure what action is needed. Structured business email writing training helps address all of these issues systematically.
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