Read our Email Usage Policy advice guides for employers, or contact us for further HR, Health & Safety and Employment law advice.
Corporate emails are powerful tools which allow employers and employees to carry out daily tasks. When creating employment policies, it’s very important to have an email usage policy.
As an employer, you must develop a policy that outlines your company's email etiquette and preferred communication protocols.
Failure to have email policies can cause employers to face significant financial and reputational costs.
In this guide, we'll discuss email usage policies, how to create one for your business, and examples of appropriate and inappropriate use of company email.
Claim your free advice call
Find the safest and easiest way to resolve your workplace issue
An email usage policy is a set of clear guidelines a company develops to ensure employees use their email in line with business rules.
The policy usually varies depending on each company. But there are general terms that are typically common for most companies.
Why do you need a company email policy?
The benefits of a corporate email usage policy include protecting your company’s brand and reducing the risk of data breaches.
The following are three solid reasons why businesses should adopt an email policy:
Protecting company reputation
Any email sent by employees through business means may end up in the public domain, causing reputational harm.
Sensitive information, gossip, and insulting or discriminatory messages are some examples of this.
A holistic policy for corporate email accounts helps employers protect their company's reputation and technological property.
Improving information security
The majority of cyber-attacks on company computers begin with phishing attempts, and the human factor plays a crucial role here. A large number of these phishing attacks are aimed at small businesses.
Having email policies is critical for promoting positive and effective communication. A policy serves to raise awareness while also protecting the company from liability, data loss, and downtime.
Email policies that require the use of anti-malware programs are more beneficial. These types of policies make it difficult for hackers to find access points to the company's confidential data.
Reducing liability and improving regulatory compliance
No employer wants to face the financial and reputational costs of a lawsuit involving data abuse.
Email policies that are clearly defined can help you manage in your business.
These can include highly confidential data such as Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and intellectual property.
What is the appropriate use of company email?
Employees are free to use their corporate email for work-related purposes. For example, they can use it to:
Contact current or prospective customers and partners.
Get in touch with a service provider.
Log in to any purchased software that they have legitimate access to.
Connect to people they meet at corporate events for business purposes.
Subscribe to online services that will help them in their professional development.
Additionally, employees can use their corporate email for select personal reasons. These are:
Signing up for professional meetups or courses.
Sending emails to friends and families as long as they don't include spam or confidential information.
Downloading e-books, manuals and content for their personal use as long as it's safe and appropriate.
What is inappropriate use of company email?
Employees are officially representing their company when they communicate through their business email address. This makes it their obligation to ensure compliance with their company's email and internet usage policy while sending and receiving emails.
When employees use their corporate email, they shouldn't be opening attachments from unknown senders. Also, they shouldn't be sending offensive or inappropriate emails to anyone.
This means that they must not:
Send out unsolicited emails to people.
Sign up for competitor's services or other websites without authority.
Sign up for illegal, unreliable, or suspect websites and platforms.
Send out unauthorised marketing content (or solicitation emails).
Send out insulting or discriminatory messages to people. These can be about age, race, political and religious beliefs, national origin, or disability.
Purposefully spam anyone's email, including other employees in their company.
How to create an email usage policy
Establishing email policies and informing your staff is crucial. Add these policies to your employee handbook, contracts, and procedures.
As an employer, make sure you keep the following considerations in mind when creating an email policy for your company:
Create a separate email account for each employee
Each of your employees should have their own email address that contains their name and the domain name of your company.
Make sure that corporate emails are protected by strong passwords of at least eight characters.
Develop security measures
Make sure your email server is encrypted and that you're using secure connections.
Always have your anti-malware programs updated and use them to check incoming and outgoing emails for security issues.
Every sixty days, remind your employees to change their email password.
Set limits for personal use
Allow your employees to only use company emails for personal use after work hours or during breaks.
You might also want to limit the amount of their attachments when they send personal emails.
Create personalised email signatures
Your company's email signature should contain company logos and key information.
This includes the company's name, official place, registration number, and other legal information.
A clear and memorable email signature can improve your employees' professional images in the industry.
Add a disclaimer to email signatures
Adding a disclaimer limits the legal liability of your company.
Beware that they may be ineffective and have little legal authority because recipients will likely notice them after reading the email.
Notify employees on how emails are monitored
The policy should inform employees that all corporate email will be monitored by human resources or the IT department.
Employers should encourage employees to sign the email policy. This shows that they've read it and consent to the use of email monitoring software.
Clarify disciplinary action for breaching policies
Have an appropriate disciplinary process in place to handle breaches. It should be applied fairly and consistently throughout your company. Only if the policy is properly implemented and enforced will it give legal protection.
Make sure managers are aware of the policy's terms and provide a point of contact for employees who have questions.
How to deal with email policy breaches at work
If you find any of your employees in breach of this policy, then you should take against them. You can dismiss an employee immediately in cases of serious breaches of this policy that amount to .
You can consider terminating their employment contract for the following reasons:
Sending confidential data or publicising company secrets without authorisation.
Using corporate email to violate the law.
Sending out offensive or inappropriate emails to colleagues, customers, or business associates about gender, colour, age, sexual orientation or religious beliefs.
Get expert advice on email usage policy from Peninsula
Corporate email policies are essential for all businesses. This is to stop people from misusing information through company email addresses. Regardless of the number of employees, you need a detailed policy outlining your email etiquette.
Employers who don't have email policies may face high expenses in terms of money and reputation.
Peninsula offers 24/7 advice for contracts and documentation services which are available 365 days a year. Our team of experts can help you create policies, handbooks, and legal documents for your company.
Want to find out more? Contact us on 0800 028 2420 and book a free consultation with an HR consultant today.
Created by experts, powered by
HR and H&S advice to the next level!
Our enhanced AI solution...
What is an Email Policy?
HR Policies & Documentation
Peninsula Group, HR and Health & Safety Experts
(Last updated )
Please Note: This content is accurate on the date of publishing
FAQs
Got a question? Check whether we’ve already answered it for you…
HR management outsourcing is when a team of experts manage your HR by looking after your contracts, policies, and procedures.
These are the HR essentials every business needs. Without them, your staff could bring successful claims against you, you could lose thousands in legal fines, and even face prosecution. Never underestimate the benefits of HR support for a small business.
We have years of experience in providing HR for SMEs and HR management outsourcing. Contact us to see how we can support you, including HR advice for small businesses - as well as medium and large companies.
Good human resource management is having round the clock support when you need it the most.
Whenever there’s a staff challenge or an important legal update, you just pick up the phone and get the help you need – no matter the time or place.
The main benefits of HR outsourcing are:
- Cost saving: Reduces the expenses for such things are hiring, training and employing an in-house HR team.
- Time saving: Saves time for staff members away from HR tasks.
- Improves expertise and compliance: Provides ongoing advice and support to ensure complete and total compliance.
- Reduces risk: Reduces the risk of any payroll and compliance failures.
Outsourcing HR is cheaper than hiring internal staff and saves you money overall when it comes to your HR service. Plus, you avoid making mistakes that could cost you heavily in claims and legal fines down the line. Every business should consider HR support as a way to avoid claims.
Peninsula is one of the leading HR outsourcing services in the UK, and by working with us you get access to our HR advisory service. Contact us for your outsourced SME HR today.
The key functions of HR outsourcing services are:
- Payroll and benefits: Helps a business to manage employee wages, tax processing, and employee enrolment.
- Recruitment and onboarding: Helps with job descriptions, sourcing new candidates, interviewing, and ensuring a smooth onboarding process.
- Compliance with employment law: Helps to ensure compliance with ever-changing employment legislation.
- Employee relations: Helps to manage grievance and disciplinary procedures, and any ongoing support that's required.
- HR admin: Helps to handle and manage daily tasks, such as employee records, sorting employment contracts, and processing any leave requests.
- Training and development: Helps to create and deliver staff training programs to improve employees' skills.