How to Get Parents to Actually Read Your Emails — Communication Hacks for Team Managers

As a team manager, you probably send a lot of emails. Rosters, schedules, paperwork deadlines, reminders — it adds up quickly. But here’s the frustrating truth: many of those emails don’t get read. Parents are busy, their inboxes are overflowing, and your carefully worded message can easily get lost.

The good news? A few simple communication hacks can drastically increase the chances that your emails get opened — and acted on.


1. Keep It Short and Clear

Long emails get skimmed (or ignored). Parents want the point quickly.

  • Put the important detail — the what and when — in the first two lines.
  • Use bullet points for anything parents need to do.

2. Write a Subject Line That Stands Out

Subject lines are the first (and sometimes only) thing parents see.
Instead of: “Important Reminder”
Try: “Action Needed: Medical Form Due Friday”

Clear beats clever every time.


3. Don’t Rely on Just One Email

Even the most carefully crafted email can get buried.

  • Send reminders a few days later.
  • Use multiple channels when possible — text, team app, or group chat.

4. Time Your Emails Wisely

Parents are more likely to read emails in the morning or evening, not during the middle of a hectic workday.
Experiment with send times and see what works best for your group.


5. Make It Easy to Take Action

If you need parents to upload a form or complete a task, don’t bury the link three paragraphs down.

  • Put the link front and center.
  • Highlight the deadline.
  • Eliminate extra steps whenever possible.

The Bottom Line
Parents aren’t ignoring you on purpose — they’re just busy. By keeping your emails short, clear, and well-timed, you’ll cut through the noise and get faster responses.

That’s also why we built Benchlocker: so instead of endless email reminders, parents log in, see exactly what they owe, and get automatic notifications until it’s done.

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