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Business Letters Cover Letters Resumes

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Presentation on theme: "Business Letters Cover Letters Resumes"— Presentation transcript:

1 Business Letters Cover Letters Resumes
Letter & Resume Unit: Business Letters Cover Letters Resumes

2 Business Letter Intro: Response Questions
Discuss several occasions for which you might need to write a business letter. Discuss how a business letter is different in form, style, and tone than a personal letter. Turn in when finished. Take out some paper to take notes regarding the first part of this unit This first part will be over business letters only. We will move on to cover letters and resumes later.

3 Writing Business Letters
Notes *Copy and place in binders.

4 Layout & Purpose of a Business Letter
A business letter is a formal way of communicating with someone about someone or something. Can be written in the following layouts: Informative – to inform or explain Persuasive – to argue for someone to do or believe something Motivational – to encourage someone to do or believe something Promotional – to promote, sell, or advertise an object or idea Can be used for the following purposes: to apply for a job to request information on someone or something to provide information about someone or something

5 Elements of a Business Letter
Style Use formal language, NOT slang – words like “cool” or excessive use of “like” are unacceptable. Do not use contractions – spell words out instead. Grammar and spelling must be correct. Use complete sentences (no run-on’s or fragments). Clarity Provide all of the information the reader will need Say it clearly and briefly. Tone Be polite (even if you’re writing a complaint letter). You are more likely to get results if you are polite and courteous. Remember, the recipient of the letter is probably someone you do not even know! Be respectful. Vocabulary Use appropriate vocabulary, and words you understand. Do not try and sound smarter through vocabulary, because you may be using it incorrectly. If you use a word or term that the recipient may not understand, you may need to define it for them.

6 Formatting a Business Letter
A business letter MUST follow this format: Heading Your address Date that the letter is written Inside Address Recipient’s title and address Salutation Ex) Dear ________ : ALWAYS use “Dear” and the colon at the end. Body Three brief paragraphs Closing Ex) Sincerely, Always end your salutation with a comma Signature Your name written in cursive – your signature Printed Name Underneath your signature, print or type your name clearly, in case they can’t read your signature.

7 Examples Handout 1 Handout 2
You will see the format you just wrote down applied to an actual business letter. Notice that NOTHING is indented – it is all flushed to the left-hand side! Notice the spaces between paragraphs and lines. Read the body paragraphs. Notice the topics of these three body paragraphs. Handout 2 You will see two actual business letters.

8 Business Letter Parts Practice
Write the following business letter parts next to the appropriate line or paragraph on the first letter of handout 2 (pg. number at the bottom reads 972). Heading Inside Address Salutation Body Paragraph #1 Body Paragraph #2 Body Paragraph #3 Closing Signature Printed name At the bottom, identify the layout AND purpose of the business letter according to the notes that you haven taken.

9 MORE PRACTICE On the back of handout 2 (pg. 973), complete the practice at the bottom. Respond to Miyamoto’s request by writing a business letter from Judy Realdata to S. K. Miyamoto. Your name should not be in this letter anywhere… you are writing the reply as if you are Judy. Complete this on your own sheet of notebook paper. When finished, turn handout 2 and your business letter. Please staple together, and make sure your name is on the top page.


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