What Executive Presence Looks Like in Email
Executive presence in person is well-studied: posture, voice, eye contact, composure under pressure. Executive presence in email is less discussed but equally important — because most senior leadership communication happens in writing.
Read emails from the most respected leaders in your organization. You'll notice patterns: they're shorter. They're more decisive. They use fewer qualifiers. They ask questions that cut to the core. They acknowledge uncertainty without performing it. And their tone stays consistent regardless of the situation — calm when things are good, calm when things are on fire.
Executive presence in email isn't about seniority. It's about communication patterns anyone can adopt. The patterns below are reverse-engineered from thousands of leadership communications.
The Patterns
Brevity with substance. Executive emails rarely exceed five sentences for routine communication. But each sentence carries weight. 'Approved. Please proceed with timeline as discussed. Flag me if the vendor estimate comes in above $50K.' Three sentences. Clear decision, clear authority, clear escalation threshold.
Decisive language. 'I think we should probably consider...' becomes 'Let's do X.' 'It might be worth exploring...' becomes 'Explore this and report back by Friday.' The tentative language that feels safe at junior levels reads as indecisive at senior levels.
Strategic questions over tactical instructions. Instead of 'Update the dashboard to show Q3 numbers,' write 'What's the clearest way to show the board our Q3 trajectory?' The question elevates the task from execution to strategy and gives the recipient ownership of the solution.
Emotional steadiness. The same tone whether delivering good news or bad news. Exclamation points are rare. Urgency is conveyed through content, not punctuation. The message 'We missed the target by 20%. Here's what I'm doing about it.' carries more authority than 'We need to FIX this ASAP!!!'
Developing These Patterns
Before sending your next 10 emails, apply the executive filter: Can I cut this email in half? (Almost always yes.) Can I replace a qualifier with a decision? ('I think maybe we should' → 'Let's') Can I replace an instruction with a question that elevates the conversation?
Read your sent folder from last week. Highlight every instance of 'just,' 'sorry,' 'I think,' 'maybe,' 'probably,' and 'does that make sense?' These are presence-reducers. Not every instance needs to go — but awareness of frequency is the first step.
The fastest shortcut: find the leader in your organization whose written communication you most admire. Study their emails. Not just what they say — how they structure it, what they include, what they leave out. Then adapt their patterns to your voice.
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