How To Write A Letter (UK Style)
There's a right way and a wrong way.
We,
involved in home business, will always find a time when we need
to write a business letter, but just how do you write one
correctly?
Firstly, keep them clear, simple and direct and do not use
words that you are unfamiliar with. Create a tone that is
courteous and business like without being pompous. Avoid slang
and use your spell checker on your computer or check in a
dictionary with any spellings that you are unsure of.
If possible type the letter rather than write it freehand.
Leave wide balanced margins with a line of space between each
paragraph. Do not try to cram everything onto one sheet of
paper.
Unless you have headed paper, set out your address and
telephone number at the top right hand of the page with the
date underneath. On the left and slightly lower than your
address, put the formal name of the person to whom you are
writing, his position or job title and the name and address of
his organisation (the same information should be written on the
envelope). Underneath, add any reference number from previous
correspondence.
If you know the persons surname but not the first name or
initials, put the company name and address first, with For the
personal attention of Mr. Smith, underneath.http://www.workinghoursmagazine.co.uk/images/Write a letter.jpg" align="right" border="0" hspace="0" />
Use the same formula if you want to write to the holder of a
particular position but do not know his name, for example, the
head of a company against which you have a complaint: For the
personal attention of the managing director.
Make sure that your name, in the style by which you prefer to
be addressed formally, appears somewhere in the letter. Type or
write it in block capitols above your address or under your
signature if it is not on a printed letterhead.
Start & Finish: When writing to someone whose name you
know, it is usual to include the name in the greeting at the
beginning of the letter: Dear Mr. Black or Dear Mrs. Black. All
business letters that have a name in the greeting should close
Yours sincerely , on a line by itself in the right hand half of
the page, above the signature.
In letters where you do not know the persons name, use an
appropriate impersonal greeting, for example: Dear Sir or Dear
Madam. Letters with any impersonal greeting should end with the
phrase Yours faithfully, before the signature.
If you are not sure of the correct title or professional
qualification a person has, check with their letterhead or
business card or even call their secretary to ask the correct
way to address the person.
If you are writing to a company or organisation but not to a
particular individual within it, begin your letter Dear Sirs
unless it is obvious that it is an all female group, of course
such as the WI, in which case Dear Ladies should be used.
If writing to the holder of a particular position, such as the
managing director of a company, whose name and sex you do not
know, begin Dear Sir or Madam.
If you are not sure whether a woman should be greeted as Mrs or
Miss the style Ms is accepted by most people or use Dear Madam,
which is correct for a women of any age.
Where the name does not give any clue to the sex of a person,
for example: Pat Smith or M.A. Kingsley and you know nothing
about the person, use the name without any prefix for the
address and at the top of the letter. A greeting repeating the
name in full, Dear Pat Smith is best to avoid giving
offence.
When writing to a man, put Mr before his full name in the
address or Esq after, but not both. Use Mr in the greeting.
As a courtesy, you should include your name in the way that you
prefer to be addressed formally, but it is considered incorrect
for a man to style himself Esq or for people to put Mr, Mrs,
Miss or Ms before their own names.
Show which is appropriate after your surname, in brackets.