![]() Generally, you can just say “I will” to show you agree to the terms. When someone has provided us with information, and we relay it back to them to show that we’ve understood, we reconfirm it. Repeating it helps us to show that we’ve understood our assignment. We usually include the information we receive right after this phrase. “I have received and understood” works well to start an email to your boss. If you have anything else you need from me, please let me know. I’ll be sure to contact you as soon as I’ve completed this. You could ask them if they need help with anything else, or you could give them a rough time frame of when to expect your work. The last thing we want to do is annoy them, so they don’t trust us with tasks again.Īlways elaborate if you’re going to write “Noted.” If you don’t have anything to elaborate on, it’s probably best not to reply to your boss. We should still make sure to elaborate further if we’re going to use this form.Īgain, we don’t want to clog our boss’s email up. It’s another blunt one, but this time it’s only one word. ![]() Let me know if there’s anything else I can do for you before I finalize these instructions. I have already started to work on this project, so it should be done by Friday. If you’re going to use this one, make sure you elaborate just a bit more. Therefore, “received with thanks” as the only phrase in the email is a bit of a waste of time. The more emails you send, the more annoying they can be. If your boss receives a lot of emails during a working day, it’s probably not a smart idea to email them with every little response, acknowledgment, or query you have. Remember, email inboxes can be very busy. Some people don’t like using it because it feels like a wasted email. It works well professionally because it gets right to the point. “Received with thanks” is a more blunt phrase we can use. I’ll get back to you if I have any questions when I start working on it.
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