These two sentences are identical in meaning.
The Above phrase/sentence is correct.
Use this phrase when specifying your preferred modes of contact.
Explanation provided by a GrammarChecker.io Language expert.
Some examples from the web:
This is also correct usage
You can use this phrase in a professional context when requesting that a colleague contact you.
Explanation provided by a GrammarChecker.io English expert.
Some examples from the web:
Yes; "contact me via/by email/e-mail" sounds most likely to me.
"Through e-mail" is sometimes heard in more general statements, with the sense "by means of e-mail":
1. "Through e-mail, I've kept in touch with many people I would never have written a letter to."
2. "Through e-mail, we can contact people immediately without having to speak to them."
✅ I've just read through Fowlers and Longman style guides. Via means "by way of", and it is usually only used when concerning routes: London to New York via Finland. Sometimes via is loosely used to mean "by means of"; however, you're usually better to use "through" or "by" when you are writing about a means of transport or a method of communication. I, personally, would recommend using the word "by". I would also, in general, be careful when using the word "through", because it can be ambiguous. The example given in the Longman style guide is "send a message through the milkman" [italics included in the original quote]; however to me, that sounds like cruel torture, because I have a literal image of someone pushing an envelope through the milkman's chest.