Working from home has brought many unexpected changes to Australian office culture - including a growing obsession with whether emails sound 'friendly enough'.
A remote worker from Australia was left stunned last week after being called into a meeting with his boss - not about performance, deadlines, or missed work, but about punctuation.
The 29-year-old employee shared his experience on Reddit after a calendar invitation titled 'communication improvement discussion' appeared unexpectedly in his schedule.
Working remotely for the past year, he said most interaction with colleagues happened through Slack and email rather than face-to-face meetings. When the call began, he assumed the conversation would focus on a project update.
Instead, his boss began reviewing recent emails he had sent and explained that some colleagues felt his tone was coming across as 'a little blunt'.
The messages in question were straightforward requests such as: 'Hi, can you send the updated file when you get a chance?' and 'Just checking if there's an update on this'.
'At first I honestly thought he was joking. Those seem like completely normal work emails to me,' he wrote.
'I wasn't being sarcastic or annoyed or anything, I was just asking for updates. Apparently, a couple people interpreted them as passive aggressive. Which confused me because I genuinely had no idea they sounded that way,' he explained.
Working from home has brought many unexpected changes to Australian office culture - including a growing obsession with whether your emails sound 'friendly enough'
The boss offered a simple and surprisingly modern solution to the problem: adding more emojis and exclamation points in emails to make them sound 'friendlier'.
'It honestly feels kind of ridiculous,' the worker said, adding that he now second-guesses nearly every message he sends.
'I'll type something normal and then sit there thinking "does this sound rude somehow?" ... I didn't realise punctuation was such a big deal.'
The new rules of remote communication
The post quickly drew thousands of responses online, with many people saying the situation felt all too familiar.
As more workplaces rely on Slack, Teams, and email rather than face-to-face conversations, tone can be harder to read - and small details like punctuation are increasingly being scrutinised.
One commenter pointed out that at least the employee was told directly what needed to change.
'At least you were told exactly what he wants you to change instead of you having to guess,' they wrote.
A remote worker recently revealed he was left stunned after being called into a meeting with his boss - not about performance, deadlines, or missed work, but about punctuation
Another joked that the problem might soon swing the other way.
'Guaranteed this dude gets an email with subject "Professional communication improvement discussion" where the boss tells him using too many smiley faces isn't professional and recommends toning it down. Three months.'
Others shared their own strategies for avoiding accidental offence in a digital office.
One person said they add a cheerful sign-off to almost every message.
'I add a "Thanks!" to the end of basically every email and it stops anyone interpreting me as rude.'
Another suggested an even more enthusiastic solution: setting an upbeat email signature with phrases such as 'Thanks!', 'It's been a joy!' or 'It's been my pleasure!' to soften otherwise direct messages.
How Gen Z and remote work are reshaping office language
Workplace communication has never been static, but the shift to remote work has accelerated changes that were already underway, particularly as younger workers enter the workforce.
Emails that once followed rigid formal rules are now increasingly blending with the tone of messaging apps and social media. Emojis, exclamation marks, and conversational phrasing are becoming part of everyday office language.
For some workers, especially those who began their careers before Slack and Teams dominated the workplace, the change can feel strange. A short, efficient message once signalled professionalism. Today, the same message might be read as curt or annoyed.
At the same time, expectations vary wildly depending on workplace culture.
One commenter described experiencing the opposite problem while working internationally.
After moving from New Zealand to Germany, they said they were surprised by how direct workplace communication was.
'You don't need to bother with superfluous nonsense. You just clearly state your point,' they wrote.
But after later relocating to Turkey, they found themselves needing to soften their language again because people perceived the direct style as rude.
'It's a culture shock.'
The anxiety of the modern inbox
The story also highlights a new kind of workplace anxiety - the pressure to constantly manage tone in written communication.
Without body language, facial expressions, or vocal cues, a simple sentence can suddenly carry multiple interpretations.
Is 'Just checking in' helpful or impatient? Is a full stop too abrupt? Is an emoji friendly or unprofessional?
Whether the shift toward friendlier digital communication is a positive evolution or a source of confusion depends on who you ask.
But one thing is clear: in the era of remote work and email-first culture, the smallest details - even a smiley face - can feel much bigger to others.