Selasa, 15 Januari 2013

TUGAS SOFTSKILL PERTAMA - FORMAL LETTER



FORMAL LETTER

1.      Letterhead (heading)
A letterhead is the heading at the top of a sheet of a letter paper. That heading usually consists of a name and an address, and a logo or corporate design, and sometimes a background pattern.

2.      Date
A date contains the day, the month and the year when the letter was written.

British style : dd/mm/yyyy
Example : 20th November 2011

American Style : mm/dd/yyyy
Example : December 20th, 2012

3.      Inside Address
An inside address contains a place of recipients, where the recipients live. An address is a collection of information, presented in a mostly fixed format, used for describing the location of a building, apartment, or other structure or a plot of land, generally using political boundaries and street names as references, along with other identifiers such as house or apartment numbers. Some addresses also contain special codes to aid routing of mail and packages, such as a ZIP code or post code.
               Example : 
Example
Format
Mr. I.M. A. Payne
ARAMARK Ltd.
30 Commercial Rd.
Fratton
PORTSMOUTH
Hampshire
PO1 1AA
Name
Company Name
Street
City Area/District
City/Town/Village
County
Postal Code


4.      Salutation
A salutation is a greeting used in a letter or other written communication, such as an email. Salutations can be formal or informal. The most common form of salutation in a letter is Dear followed by the recipient's given name or title.
Example :  Dear Sir / Madam
                   To Whom It May Concern

-         If you know the person's name:
Dear Ms / Miss / Mrs / Mr / Dr + surname
Example : Dear Mr Miller
You can also write the person's full name. In this case, leave out the title (Mr/Mrs). This way of writing the salutation is very handy if you don't know the gender of the person.
Example : Dear Chris Miller
-         If you don't know the person's name:
There are several possibilities to address people that you don't know by name:
salutation
when to use
Dear Sir / Dear Sirs
male addressee (esp. in British English)
Gentlemen
male addressee (esp. in American English)
Dear Madam
female addressee (esp. in British English)
Ladies
female addressee (esp. in American English)
Dear Sir or Madam
gender unknown (esp. in British English)
Ladies and Gentlemen
gender unknown (esp. in American English)
To whom it may concern
gender unknown (esp. in American English)
Business partners often call each other by their first names. In this case, write the salutation as follows:
Example : Dear Sue
-         Punctuation
In British English, don't use any punctuation mark or use a comma.
Example : Dear Mr Miller or Dear Mr Miller,
In American English, use a colon:
Example : Dear Mr. Miller:

5.      Body of the Letter
A body of a letter is the part between the greeting and the closing. It contains the message of the letter. It is the reason for writing the letter and contains the main ideas that the writer wants to convey to the recipient.

6.      Complimentary Close
A complimentary close is an expression used to say farewell, especially a word or phrase used to end a letter or message, or the act of saying parting words, whether brief, or extensive. A complimentary close shows your respect and appreciation for the person who is considering the request in your letter.

British Style
Example : "Yours faithfully", "Yours truly", "Yours sincerely"

American Style
Example : "Sincerely yours"

7.      Signature
A signature is a handwritten (and often stylized) depiction of someone's name, nickname, or even a simple handwritten that a person writes on documents as a proof of identity and intent.

8.      Reference
If the recipient specifically requests information, such as a job reference or invoice number, type it on one or two lines, immediately below the date. If you're replying to a letter, refer to it here. For example,
·         Re: Job # 625-01
·         Re: Your letter dated 1/1/200x.
9.      Enclosure
Enclosure tells the reader to look in the envelope for more. Type the singular for only one enclosure, plural for more. If you don't enclose anything, skip it. Common styles are below.
·         Enclosure
·         Enclosures: 3
·         Enclosures (3)
10.  Subject
Type the gist of your letter in all uppercase characters, either flush left or centered. Be concise on one line. If you type a reference, consider if you really need this line. While it's not really necessary for most employment-related letters, examples are below.
·         SUBJECT:  RESIGNATION
·         LETTER OF REFERENCE
·         JOB INQUIRY
11.  Carbon Copy Notation
cc: Stands for courtesy copies (formerly carbon copies). List the names of people to whom you distribute copies, in alphabetical order. If addresses would be useful to the recipient of the letter, include them. If you don't copy your letter to anyone, skip it.
Carbon copying, abbreviated cc or c.c., is the technique of using carbon paper to produce one or more copies simultaneously during the creation of paper documents. With the advent of email, the term has also come to refer to simultaneously sending copies of an electronic message to secondary recipients.
Before invention of the photocopier, carbon paper was used to create duplicates of documents by placing it between the original document and a blank piece of paper so that an image of the original was transfered to the blank piece of paper as a document was written or typed. A notation was placed at the bottom of the original document indicating for whom a "carbon copy" was created. This notation was typed, for example, as follows:
cc: John Smith
Even with the advent of photocopiers, this traditional notation has carried on, but in recent years some have begun to refer to this notation as a "courtesy copy" notation or even recommend the use of a single "c" to indicate a "copy" is being created to send to someone else. Some reference guides even explain that "cc" also means "copies," in the same way that "pp" means "pages." Regardless of the method used to generate a dupicate of a document, "cc" is still the most commonly used method to indicate copies are being made.

12.  Postcript
A postscript, abbreviated PS or P.S., is writing added after the main body of a letter (or other body of writing). The term comes from the Latin post scriptum, an expression meaning "written after"(which may be interpreted in the sense of "that which comes after the writing").
A postscript may be a sentence, a paragraph, or occasionally many paragraphs added to, often hastily and incidentally, after the signature of a letter or (sometimes) the main body of an essay or book. In a book or essay, a more carefully composed addition (e.g., for a second edition) is called an afterword. An afterword, not usually called a postscript, is written in response to critical remarks on the first edition. The word "postscript" has, poetically, been used to refer to any sort of addendum to some main work, even if it is not attached to a main work. Sometimes, when additional points are made after the first postscript, abbreviations such as PPS (post-post-scriptum, or postquam-post-scriptum) and PPPS (post-post-post-scriptum, and so on, ad infinitum) are used, though only PPS has somewhat common usage.

Sumber :

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letterhead


englishplus.com/grammar/00000152.htm


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_copy


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postscript



Nama   : Nugroho N.A
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Kelas   : 4KB02

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