Chapter 7, The Appearance and Design of Business Message
Chapter 7, The Appearance and Design of Business Message
MESSAGE DESIGN
CHAPTER 7
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
Learning Objectives
For example, if you send your resume enclosed with a covering letter,
will communicate something about you even before your receiver reads
a word of it.
The many type of styles and formats of modern processing systems and printers
can enhance the appearance of your message and create a positive impression.
• Appropriate stationery
• Correct Letter Parts
• Layouts
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
Stationery & Envelopes
Quality, Size Colour
Good company stationery is most often at least 25% cotton content, and white,
cream, or light gray in colour.
Letterhead
Letterheads usually occupy no more than 2 inches at the top page.
It includes the firms name, address, telephone numbers, fax numbers, email
address, URL address, name of department, branch office sending the
correspondence.
This information may be printed engraved or embossed but most of the time it is
simply printed.
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
Envelopes
Return address should be printed or typed like the letterhead style usually on
the top left side of the envelope or on the back side of envalope.
The address of the receiver should preferably be typed on the central portion
having equal distance from all the sides of the envelope.
Addresses should always be typed in block form, with all lines aligned on the
left. Information in the address should be listed in the following order:
1. Name and title of receiver
2. Name of department
3. Name of organization
4. PO Box No. (If applicable)
5. City
6. Country (If letter being sent abroad)
7. Telephone no. (In case of sending message via courier)
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
Standard Parts of the Letter
Most Business Letters have following parts:
1. Heading-Letterhead and Date
2. Inside Address
i. Courtesy Title and Name
ii. Executive or Professional Title
1. Salutation
2. Body
3. Complimentary Close
4. Signature Area
5. Reference Section
Heading- LETTERS FOR LIVING
Letterhead 472 South 4th
San Romano, Texas 40023-1300
You are reading example of modified-block form of business letter. This is form is
characterized by all parts of the letter except the date, complimentary close, and signature
section beginning at the left margin.
In this example, the date and complimentary close both begin at the horizontal center of the
Body page. (The date could also be placed so that is ends at the right hand margin. Likewise, the
complimentary close could start to the right center so that longest line in the signature areas
ends at the right hand margin.) Company and business titles are typed on fourth line below
the complimentary close. The signer’s title may be typed on the line below his or her name;
or of it is long, it can be split and typed on two lines.
This letter uses mixed punctuation, which means that there is a colon at the end of the
salutation and comma after the complimentary close. No punctuation is used after the date
or after any line in the inside address, except after an abbreviation, such as “Inc.”
Complimentary
Close Sincerely,
Reference EEL:mo
Initials
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
Optional Parts of the Letter
When appropriate, any of these optional parts can be included:
1. Attention Line
2. Subject Line
3. Enclosure Notation
4. Copy Notation
5. File or Account Number Notation and Mailing Notation
6. Post Script
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
1. Heading-Letterhead & Date
A heading shows where the letter comes from, and if it is letterhead
stationery, it is usually at the top center of the letter.
Usually the date is typewritten two to six lines below the last line of the
letterhead-at the left margin, centered, begun at the center, or placed so it
ends with the right margin.
Current trend suggest Ms. as the courtesy title for all business or professional
women regardless of their marital status unless they have a professional title
that takes the precedence.
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
3. Salutation
The salutation is typed on the second line below the inside address, two lines
above the body and even with left margin.
Examples of traditional and comparatively recent salutations are:
Dear Mr. [ Ms., Mrs., Miss.] Doe- When the first line of an inside address is the name
of an individual
Dear John [or Mary or nickname]-When you’d address the individual this way in
person and when it is appropriate for you to do so.
Dear Koo Hong Chuan,-Most often used in East Asia; family name is first then given
name, then comma.
Dear Manager [ or Executive, Human Resource Director, Admission Director, or an
appropriate variation]-When first line is a position within an organization and you
have no name.
Dear Ladies and Gentleman [or Member of …., Committee Members, Professional
Women, etc]-When you are addressing a company, group, or a department and you
don’t know the a specific person to contact.
Dear Customer [or Homeowner, Executive, Student, Occupant, Member of ….]-For
messages that omit the inside address such as sales letters or announcements.
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
4. Body
Generally the body of all the letters should be typed single-spaced,
with double spacing between the paragraphs, before and after the
salutation, and before the complimentary close.
When the body of the letter is two or more pages, each page
beyond the first is headed by the addressee's name, page number,
and date. This information is typed at the top of the sheet with the
same margins as the first page.
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
5. Complimentary Close
The most popular complimentary close are the following:
Your initials as the composer of the message along with the last line
of the signature area (your name or the title) or one or two lines
below that. Here some examples:
When the writer does not know an individual’s name but wants the message go to
a particular title (sales adjustment manager) or department manager (personnel)
When writer knows only the person’s surname and therefore does not want to use
that name in salutation.
When writer expects that the addressee travels often and wants the letter to be
attended to promptly by whoever takes care of the addressee’s business.
Placement of the attention line is usually between the inside address and
salutation, with blank line before and after it. It may be flush with the left
margin, indented with paragraphs, or centered.
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
2. Subject Line
The subject line helps tell the reader at a glance what your letter is
about.
The subject line may include or omit the word subject.
Enclosure: Resume
Photocopy of Passport
Photocopy of National Identity Card
Photocopy of Post Graduate Qualification
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
4. Copy Notation
When persons other than the addressee will receive a copy of your
message, you note the by writing “c”, “pc,” “copy” or “cc” followed by
the names of these persons just below the reference initials or the
enclosure notation.
When you do not want the addressee to know that other persons are
getting a copy of letter, type “bc” (blind copy) or “bpc” (blind
photocopy) and the recipients’ names on the copies only
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
1. Postscript
To emphasize a point already in your letter or to include a brief
personal message unrelated to letter, a postscript, typed or
handwritten (with or without “P.S.,” “PS” or “PS:”) may be added
below everything else typed on the page.
The Appearance and Design of Business
Message
Letter Layout
Open and mixed punctuation are the two forms most used in
American business letters.
In open punctuation, no line of any letter part (except the body) has
any punctuation at the end unless an abbreviation requires a period.
It is often less expensive to bring together people located at distant geographical sites by
arranging a teleconference rather than have them physically come together. There are
three ways you can make this kind of arrangements:
1. Audio: audio conferencing uses telephone lines to set up a group conference. Everyone
in group is able to speak to everyone else.
2. Video: Video conferencing uses closed-circuit television, in which every participant can
see, hear, and talk to others. This form of communication is gaining popularity because
of improvement in technology and decreasing costs.
END OF
CHAPTER 7