A letter is a handwritten or printed message that is sent to others for conveying a certain message.
Types of letter
1. Formal letter
2. Informal letter
2. What is a letter?
A letter is a handwritten or printed message that is sent to others for
conveying a certain message.
It is a written conversation between two parties and is usually sent via
post or mail.
3. Objectives of letter writing
A letter is usually written for the following purposes:
To convey a message
To bridge communication gap between two people
To create awareness or to inform someone
To express our feelings
4. Origin of Letter writing
Letters date back to the time when ancient Egyptians wrote to the dead
asking for help.
People separated by distance had only one way of communication back
when paper and pen were the only means.
6. 1. Informal Letters
Informal letters are also known as personal letters.
These letters are usually written to family, friends or relatives.
These letters may or may not have a concrete reason of writing.
They are just written to share an experience or to enquire about someone’s how
about.
7. Informal letters
In these letters include:
Personal letters
letters to family
letters to relatives
love letters
Social letters
Letters to friends
social invitations
congratulatory/apology letters
letters of condolence/sympathy, thank you letters
8. 2. Formal Letters
These letters are written to discuss business, apply for services, make requests,
file/register complaints etc.
These letters are short and to the point.
The formulation of formal letters, letters of application, official letters and letters
to the Editor.
9. Other types of letters:
1. Appreciation letter
2. application letter
3. complaint letter
4. order letter
5. apology letter
6. Acknowledge letter etc
10. Acknowledgment Letter
Whenever you receive business documents, the letter that you send immediately
after the receipt is called an acknowledgement letter. It includes:
Acknowledgement of Payment Letter
Acknowledgement of Sales Letter
Acknowledgement of Documents Letter
Acknowledgement of Order Letter
Acknowledgement of Change in Date Letter
11. Application Letter
The Application letter is written when you:
request for something
ask permission for something
apply for something
An application Includes:
Job Application Letters
Scholarship Application Letter
Application for Leave of Absence/in Advance
Application for a Seat in the Hostel
Application Letter Seeking Permission
12. Cover Letter
A cover letter is a short document letter that is sent with a resume or a CV.
A cover letter provides additional information about your skills and experience.
It includes:
No Experience Cover Letter
Data Analyst Cover Letter
Software Engineer Cover Letter etc
13. Complaint Letter
A complaint letter is written to the authorities to complain about or against
something or someone.
It includes:
Late Delivery Complaint Letter
Pricing Complaint Letter
Police Complaint Letter (e.g. FIR)
Product Defect Complaint Letter
Employee’s complaint letter
14. Appointment Letter
An appointment letter is a document that is written by the employer requesting
the selected candidates to join in a specific position in their company.
It Includes:
Job Appointment Letter
Contract Job Appointment Letter
Part-time Appointment Letter
15. Format of a Letter
A letter is Composed of various elements that may change depending upon the
nature of the letter.
The main elements of a letter are given below:
Senders’ address
Date
Receivers’ address
Subject
Salutation
Content-Specific, to the point
Concluding lines
Complimentary closure
Signature along with designation or title
16.
17. Senders’ Address
Senders’ address is the mailing address of the sender.
It is a very important part of both, formal and informal letters.
Senders’ address contains:
the designation of the sender
the name of the organization
building numbers - street/area
state/town
name of the country
18. Note Designation of the sender, name of the organization and reference number
are not included in the formation of sender’s address of informal letters for obvious
reasons.
Line 1 Designation of the sender (optional) (formal letters)
Line 2 Name of the organization (formal letters)
Line 3 Building number, street/area (formal letters)
Line 4 State/town (pin code-optional)
Line 5 Country (if corresponding internationally)
Line 6 Reference number (if applicable)
19. Formal letter
The Manager
ABC Pvt. Ltd
23, Wazirpur
New Delhi-110005
India
Ref no 229/3A/20XX
Informal letter
23, Wazirpur
New Delhi-110005
India
20. Date
Succeeding the space after the return address comes the date on which the letter
written/sent. One may opt any format out of the two stated below to record the
date in the letter.
DD/MM/YY : 24th August, 20XX
MM/DD/YY : August 24th, 20XX
21. Receivers’ Address
Receivers’ address is the corresponding address of the person to whom the letter
being sent.
It is placed after the date in formal letters.
If the letter is being addressed to someone whose title/post/name of the official
and name of the organization is known, then the sender must start with the
receivers’ designation and name of the organization followed by the building
numbers, street/area, state/town, pin code (optional) and country (if
internationally) as formatted tittle
22. Line 1 Name of the official/professional title
Line 2 Name of the organization
Line 3 Building number, street/area
Line 4 State/town (pin code-optional)
Line 5 Country (if corresponding internationally)
The Manager
Ecotech Pvt Ltd
19/B2 Pitampura
New Delhi – 110077
India
23. Subject
A Subject refers to the purpose of writing in short.
It helps the reader to deal with the aim of the letter you have written.
It should be clear.
It should be concise (not than 10 words).
24. Salutation
The salutation is a customary greeting to the recipient of the letter.
It varies from person to person.
It depends upon the relationship between the sender and the receiver.
It usually begins with the word ‘Dear’ followed by the title (Ms/Mrs/Mr/Dr).
Incase the gender and name of the recipient is not known you must address the
person as Dear Sir/Dear Madam.
25. Salutation for Informal and Formal
letters
(a) For Blood Relations
(older)
Respected
(b) For Blood Relations
(Youngers)
My dear, dear
(c) For Intimate Friends
and Relatives
Dear, My dear
(a) Editors, Post Masters,
police Officers
Sir/Madam
(b) Government Officials
etc
Sir/Madam
(c) Principals and head
of institutions
Respected Sir/Madam
(d) present or
Prospective Employer
Sir/Madam
(e) shopkeeper,
Businessmen, Manager
Sir/Madam
(f) Strangers and
Acquaintances
Dear Sir/Madam or
Dear Sir/Madam Ms
For Formal Letters
For Informal Letters
26. Body
The body is the most important part of the letter.
It includes the message the sender wants to convey.
The body of a personal letter can be long and detailed. It contains many feelings,
experiences, advices, news etc
The body of a formal letter is short, clear and logical.
There can be three sub-parts of the body of a formal letter:
an introductory paragraph
middle paragraph
a concluding paragraph
27. Concluding Line
(a) For friends
‘with best regards’,
‘with best wishes’
(b) for parents and
elders
‘with love and respect’,
‘with respect and
affectionate regards’
(c) For younger relatives
‘with love’, ‘Best wishes’,
‘with best wishes’
(d) For official letters
‘thanking you’, ‘with
best regards’
•It comes at the end of the body of the letter, always begin as a new paragraph. It is determined
by the writer’s relation with the addressee.
28. Complimentary closure
It is a polite way to end your letter with respect.
In formal letters:
If you start with ‘Dear Sir/Madam’ - end with ‘Yours faithfully’
If you start with ’Sir/Madam’ - end with ‘You sincerely’.
In informal letters:
you may close the letter with ‘Yours Lovingly’, ‘Your truly’, ‘Your affectionately’ so
on.
29. (a) For friends and
acquaintances
‘Your sincerely’,
‘Sincerely yours’
(b) for relatives and
friends
‘Yours affectionately’,
‘yours loving’ etc
(a) Principals,
Headmasters etc
‘yours obediently’
(b) Editors, Government
officials, Shopkeepers,
private firms etc
‘Yours faithfully’, ‘Your
truly’
(c) Strangers ‘Your faithfully’
(d) For employment
from one official to
another, complaints or
requests to officials
‘Your faithfully’
30. Signature Line
It is the last part of the letter where the sender signs off with his/her first
and last name.
The signature line may also included a second line in formal letters for
the title/post of the sender.
31. Key Points for a better Letter Writing
Selection of Correct Words:
Words are the writer’s tools and the writer need to put the right word and right
expression with precision. It should however be remembered that right words
become relevant only in the right context. For example an emotional or flowery
language has to be fully avoided in a business letter.
32. Key Points for a better Letter Writing
To the Point content:
Nothing more is harmful to good communication than confused state which may
result in not conveying the exact point.
Before writing a letter one should ne sure of what one wants to convey.
All the facts and methodically.
One should not be vague about one’s objective.
33. Key Points for a better Letter Writing
Conciseness: Formal letters must be concise. In formal letters specially one must
not write unnecessary sentences. To the point information or enquiry is
prerequisite of a business correspondence. Long illustrations and elaboration
must be avoided all costs.
34. Key Points for a better Letter Writing
Courtesy:
A letter reveals its writer’s personality and character.
One must remain totally professional while writing a letter.
Even while writing a complaint letter, care should be taken that it is couched in
polite and civilized language.
Good judgment determines what and how a point has to be conveyed.
35. Key Points for a better Letter Writing
Correct Use of Punctuation Marks:
Use of punctuation marks, use of capital letters, commas or colons is must to
make our writing effective.
Sometimes placement of comma or full stop at a wrong place may change the
meaning of the sentence can steal the effectiveness of a good letter.
Hence utmost attention should be paid to punctuation while writing.
36. Key Points for a better Letter Writing
Style:
The conversational style is the most suitable one for letter writing.
It is best to write in a simple, clear style maintaining a logical sequence of ideas.
Every sentence should grow out of the preceding one.
There should be no jumping from one idea to the another.
37. Elements of a Letter:
Informal Letters
Senders’ address
Date
Salutation
Content required can be long and detailed
Concluding line
Complimentary closure
Signature line
38. Formal Letters
Senders’ address
Date
Receivers’ address
Subject
Salutation
Content-Specific, to the point
Concluding lines
Complimentary closure
Signature along with designation or title
41. Acknowledgment
The subject material of the slides is derived from different internet resources.
The images are also takes from internet resources.
References:
https://www.google.com/search?q=letter+format&tbm=isch&chips=q:letter+format,g_1:busin
ess:n84M7KICP6s%3D&hl=en&ved=2ahUKEwi-7eOmovTpAhUU-4UKHQ2DA-
MQ4lYoAHoECAEQFA&biw=1519&bih=674#imgrc=blgewjlPjjXG4M
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pLSaH15W1kDEdsbYmPf0bA%3A1591668123788&source=hp&ei=m-
3eXpnkLdThgwfzv46QBA&q=types+of+letter&oq=types+of+letter&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQA
1CDDFjZJWCEK2gAcAB4AYABAIgBAJIBAJgBD6ABAaoBB2d3cy13aXo&sclient=psy-
ab&ved=0ahUKEwjZnffo0fPpAhXU8OAKHfOfA0IQ4dUDCAc&uact=5
https://lettersamples.net/l/types-of-letters-with-examples