The world of Emily Post etiquette advice is at your fingertips. Please, search or browse our comprehensive online etiquette articles.
Emily Post training and services are available for groups, businesses, and individuals. Choose from trainer training, seminars, live and pre-recorded webinars, self-paced eLearning courses, and consultation services to best meet your etiquette training needs. Every live session is customized for the client and built from our extensive menu of training topics.
Find the right Emily Post book, game, or learning tool for you. We have the perfect wedding, graduation, or housewarming gift for someone special in your life.
The Awesome Etiquette podcast is a weekly Q&A show where hosts, (cousins, and co-presidents of the Emily Post Institute,) Lizzie Post and Dan Post Senning answer audience questions, tackle etiquette topics in detail and salute good etiquette witnessed by the Awesome Etiquette audience.
The Emily Post Institute Inc. is a fifth generation family business that has been promoting etiquette based on consideration, respect and honesty since Emily Post wrote her first book ETIQUETTE in 1922. Today we offer a wide range of books, online resources, training programs for all ages and topics, a weekly podcast and a selection of greeting cards and paper products.
Get a signed copy of our latest book, Emily Post's Etiquette - The Centennial Edition, for yourself or to give as a gift, and support Vermont's independent bookstore Bridgeside Books.
Join our Substack newsletter for more from Emily Post.
There are two different ways of asking someone out on a date. The first is simply to indicate that you’d like to hang out: “We should get together sometime.” This is a good lead-in for getting someone’s number in order to call him or her up for a date—“Is it okay if I call you?” The second way to ask someone out is to do it directly: “Would you like to have dinner with me Friday night?”
When you call to ask someone out, always have a plan in mind, even if it’s a spur-of-the-moment suggestion to go grab a coffee. If it’s someone you’re really interested in, try to have a real invitation ready, including a specific activity (tailored to the other person’s interests, if possible) and time frame.
A good “ask” would go something like this:
Elise: "Hi, Tom. How's it going?"
Tom: "I'm great. How 'bout you?"
Elise: "I'm good, too. Listen, I was wondering if you'd like to go to dinner at that new Thai restaurant on Saturday. I know you've been wanting to try it ever since it opened."
Regardless of whether Tom says yes or no, Elise has just executed a terrific ask. In two sentences, showing both consideration and confidence, she’s suggested a date and a place and indicated that she had considered Tom’s interests and tastes. Whether they’re just friends, she’s asking him out on a first date, or they’ve been dating for some time, she did it right.
If the ask results in a “Yeah, sure,” this is the time to establish where and when you’re going to meet. Later, after Elise makes the dinner reservation, she’ll need to call Tom back and fill him in on other details, such as appropriate attire and whether she plans to take him to a movie or some other entertainment before or after dinner. Elise can also send him the details by email, but a phone call is more personal—and isn’t that what dating is all about? Besides, with email, if the other person doesn’t check their inbox frequently, your message could go unread for some time.
An “ask” that is too vague or open-ended comes across as a lack of confidence and consideration. Here’s what not to say:
Elise: "Hey, Tom, what's going on?"
Tom: "Not much. You?"
Elise: "Oh, the usual. Um, so, do you want to go to dinner or something sometime?"
Tom: "Um... sure." (It's such a vague offer, it's hard for him to respond with much enthusiasm.)
Elise: "Great! Where do you want to go?"
Tom: "I don't know. Where do you like to eat?" (He's surprised that she doesn't even have a place in mind—and so, being unsure himself, he throws the question back at her.)
Elise: "Anything's good with me. What are you in the mood for?"
Meanwhile, Tom is wondering how he’s supposed to get excited about a rendezvous he hasn’t actually been asked out on yet! It’s been about two minutes now, and our girl still hasn’t pinned down a date and time, let alone a place. By now, it’s pretty obvious she hasn’t thought of any agenda that would encourage Tom to want to go out to eat with her. In fact, she’s basically put the ball in his court by expecting him to plan out their entire date. Not a great start!