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AI Analyzer

Email Tone Analyzer

Paste any email and instantly get a tone breakdown — before you accidentally send the wrong vibe.

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Quick tone checks

  • "As per my last email" can read as passive-aggressive — rephrase to be direct
  • Exclamation marks in professional emails can undermine authority
  • Vague language ("somewhat," "kind of") signals uncertainty — be direct
  • Starting with "I" makes the email about you, not the recipient

Why email tone matters more than you think

Text strips out all nonverbal cues — tone of voice, facial expressions, body language. The reader fills in these gaps based on word choice, sentence structure, and punctuation. A message you wrote as neutral can be read as cold, passive-aggressive, or even hostile.

Research from Carleton University found that people are able to correctly identify sarcasm in email only 56% of the time — barely better than chance. Getting tone right isn't just politeness; it's professional communication clarity.

Common tone problems in professional email

Passive-aggressive phrasing: "As per my last email," "Going forward," "For future reference." These signal frustration without addressing it directly.

Overuse of hedging: "I just wanted to," "I was thinking maybe," "If you get a chance." These undermine authority and make requests unclear.

Missing warmth: Pure information-dumping with no greeting or acknowledgment can come across as cold or demanding.

Aggressive urgency: "ASAP," "immediately," "as soon as possible" in every request creates a pressured, reactive atmosphere.

Frequently asked questions

What's the best tone for a professional email?
Clear, direct, and warm. You want the reader to understand exactly what you're asking, feel respected, and experience no ambiguity about next steps. Avoid formality for its own sake — "I hope this email finds you well" adds noise, not warmth.
How do I make an email sound less aggressive?
Replace demands with requests. Add context for deadlines ("I need this by Friday because the client call is Monday" vs. "I need this by Friday"). Acknowledge the recipient's perspective. Remove all-caps emphasis. Read aloud before sending.
Should work emails be formal or casual?
Match your organisation's culture and the relationship with the recipient. A first email to a new client should be professional-warm. Internal Slack-style messaging can be more casual. The key is consistency — don't oscillate between extremely formal and extremely casual with the same person.

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