Thank you sharing your thoughts. The decision to use emojis was deemed permissible for the following reasons:
- They can help people more quickly clarify the email's subject and a tone we're trying to set.
- We wanted all email recipients to understand that this wasn't some urgent request, but a friendly request to take a survey (that would truly help us).
- As the email was sent to a subset of the Teams private beta group, we deemed it more permissible to employ the use of emojis than we would in a larger announcement.
Speaking more broadly, Stack Overflow uses little bits of fun like this throughout many of its communications. Examples are images like these on our 404 error pages:
…or used videos like this to announce a brand change…
We used emojis to get the email recipients attention and hopefully interest them to help us out by taking a survey (which would be very helpful to us!). This email received a very high open (80%+) and click-through rate (60%+).
The idea that people would react poorly to the emojis didn't even cross my mind. It was a small attempt to insert some light-heartedness into a rather dull, boring request; to be "business up front, party in the back" with our email subject lines.
Note: This has been edited from the original. No new information was added beyond updating the email's success rate. The edits made were in the framing of the post, re-writing the sarcastic tone I had originally taken. While I did it in jest, some correctly pointed out that the tone I took could be seen as demeaning and passive-aggressive. That isn't my intention. Only to dryly make a point. However, that isn't needed. So I apologize to DJDavid and any others who took offense. I pray you can forgive the transgression. Thank you.