Survival Guide For Business Memos and Email
Survival Guide For Business Memos and Email
Survival Guide For Business Memos and Email
for
Business Memos and Email
in situations where you are writing several emails back in forth in a short
time span.
You should also omit email salutations when you are writing an email that
is being sent to a mass email distribution list (e.g. a company-wide email).
When you are writing to a smaller group (e.g. a team), you could use a
less formal salutation (Hi team.) If the email is going to 2-3 people, you
could use their names in the salutation line (Hi Tim, Nancy, and Wang.)
In memo writing, you do not sign your name at the bottom of the
document. This is unnecessary because your name and title already
appear at the top of the page in the Information Field. Formal signature
blocks are for business letters and emails. Only letters will carry your
actual signature signed in ink, as this carries legal significance.
In an email, you can sign your name with just your first name (at the end
of your message), as it will be followed below by your first name, last
name, and other identifying details in your automatically generated email
signature block.
3. Multi-page memos
Most memos are one page in length or shorter. However, in the rare
instance that your memo goes beyond one page, do not manipulate the
font size, typeface, or margins to artificially force your memo onto one
page. If you can, revise the content of the memo to one page. However, if
there is a need for substantial secondary/supporting detail in your memo
and you feel the memo needs to be more than one page, go to two pages
and be sure to paginate the second page (put the page number at the top
of the page).
From line:
Date line:
Subject or Re line:
--There is no definitive order for the To, cc, bcc, From, Date, and Subject lines,
but the Subject line must always come last. The cc and bcc lines are optional and
are only included when a secondary audiences are being copied on the message
in some form (either publicly or privately/secretly).
--Use balanced white space and tabs to maximize a memos readability. There
must be at least one line of blank space between each section of the Information
Field. One line of blank space between each section is the convention norm, as it
provides balanced white space on the page and improves the memos
readability.
--Use job titles for the audience and sender in formal situations (i.e. when sender
is writing in his/her official capacity).
--Align job titles on the line directly below the names instead of on the same line
as the names. Putting the titles below the names shortens each line, thereby
improving readability. Follow the format demonstrated in the three memo
examples at the end of this Survival Guide (pp. 15-17) for arranging names and
titles in a readable way.
--The cc (copied to) line can either go in the information field below the To line
(see page 16 of this Survival Guide) or it can go below the end of the memo
message, itself (p. 15 of this Survival Guide). If you put your cc line at the bottom
of your memo, there should be one or two blank lines between that cc line and
the last line of the memo.
Do not cc people frivolously. That is, dont just automatically and unnecessarily
send copies to people (even if they were ccd on a message you are responding
to). People will be annoyed with you if you send them messages they dont need
or they are not interested in.
The bcc (blind carbon copied) line is used when you do not want the primary
audience or other secondary audiences to know that other people are receiving
copies or when you are sending an email to a large number of people, but do not
want the recipients to know who else received the message (e.g. for privacy of
email addresses). For instance, if you send an email to a client and bcc your
boss, this means that your boss will get a copy of the email (and her copy will be
marked bcc), but the client will think that the email went only to him/her. There
will be no bcc notation on this copy.
Use the bcc line very sparingly, as transparency is extremely important for RQ
and some readers may become upset if they learn that you have been sending
messages to them while secretly sending copies to others. If you use a bcc line
in a memo, put it below the cc (with 1-2 blank lines in between) or in the place of
the cc if the memo has no cc line.
--Use clear notation for dates. There are only two ways to write the date in
business correspondence:
January 15, 2016
or
15 January 2016
Do not use numerical abbreviations like 01/15/04, as this can create confusion.
Use cardinal numbers (May 5) instead of ordinal numbers (May 5th).
--Make your subject lines as descriptive and as concise as possible. This applies
to both memos and emails.
--Highlight your memo or letter subject lines using one of the following: bold print,
capital letters, or underline. Using bold print to highlight subject lines is the most
common convention. Do not use italics to highlight a subject line, however. Italics
actually take letters and put them on an angle, making italicized words more
difficult to read quickly.
NOTE:
Email subject lines are not highlighted unless your organization has an internal
system for flagging messages with priority colours or flags. The subject line
content should be descriptive enough to help the reader prioritize it.
Use an informal table (see p. 17) when a bullet list will be insufficient to relay the
information in a concise, readable way. Such a table will use headings
(highlighted), columns, and white space to improve readability.
In contrast, a formal table will use horizontal and vertical lines to visually
separate rows and columns. Such tables will be labeled, numbered, and formally
introduced in the text. It is uncommon to find formal tables in the body of a
memo, email, or letter, as formal tables are chosen to present a large amount of
detail. A large table will undermine the coherence of short documents like
memos, emails, and letters. They are more commonly found in reports,
proposals, business plans, etc.
Use an informal table when you have 5 or fewer rows of information. Use a
formal table when you have more than 5 rows.
--Do not put negative points in a list, as it will create resistance in your audience.
Also, avoid putting persuasive points in a list, as you cannot layer much
complexity.
--The only list items that might have punctuation at the line endings would be
complete sentences, but the punctuation is optional even then (see above list).
However, if your bullet points are sentence-length, the list item may not satisfy
Criteria #3 above.
--Avoid the use of highlighting within the text of your memo, email, or letter, as
such highlighting can cause a reader to skim a message and to take points outof-context, leading to misunderstanding or miscommunication.
Your Conclusions:
--Provide direct contact numbers whenever you can in case the reader needs to
follow-up with questions or concerns.
--Whenever possible, end on a positive, forward-looking note.
--Depending on the circumstances, you might request follow-up action, set
deadlines, etc., unless the deadline was already specified in the introduction due
to urgency.
--If you are attaching / enclosing any other documents with your memo, include
an enclosure notation at the bottom of your memo. Leave one or two blank lines
between the end of your memo and the enclosure notation. If you are including a
cc line at the bottom of your memo, position the enclosure line below the cc line,
leaving 1-2 blank lines between them.
You can use the words enclosure and attachment interchangeably for your
enclosure notation. Also, your enclosure notation can indicate the number of
enclosures or even specify what is enclosed.
Examples of acceptable enclosure/ attachment notations include the following:
Enclosure
Attachment
Enclosures
Attachments
Enclosures (2)
Attachments (3)
Enclosure: 2016 Budget Estimates
Attachment: Professional Development Reimbursement Form
Do not use attachments or enclosures when the information can easily be
included in the actual email, memo, or letter. An attachment or enclosure is just
one more potential barrier between your message and the audiences
understanding of that message. If you have a significant amount of extra
information to provide, other documents, or forms that must accompany an email,
memo, or letter, enclosures or attachments are both appropriate and useful.
Email Etiquette:
1. Use a positive, courteous, and respectful tone. Whenever possible, be
proactive and constructive.
2. Reply to emails within 24-48 hrs, If you are replying to a request for
information or action and it is impossible to comply within that time frame,
then within 24-48 hrs respond and give them a status update or adjust
their expectations (i.e. What deadline can you reasonably hit?).
3. Use Plain English to make your message as accessible as possible to the
reader.
4. Do not send messages that convey anger or that publicly criticize
someone. For example, dont send a disciplinary message to a member of
your team and cc it to the rest of the team. See Email Best Practices
Points 11 and 12.
5. Dont use emoticons. They are unprofessional and can create confusion.
6. Show respect for your audiences time (see Email Best Practices Point 8).
7. If you do forward a message or email string to someone, add some brief
context or a concise summary to the beginning of the message so that
your reader has the option of not reading the entire message or string
unless they need a granular level of detail.
8. Dont automatically include the previous message when you reply to
someone. A well-written email can summarize a previous message or
context so that the reply email can be more concise and uncluttered.
9. Be respectful of privacy, confidentiality, and copyrights.
10. Begin a new message (rather than replying to an old one) when beginning
a new topic.
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(Giving Information)
MEMO
To:
Casey Dorin
Executive Director
Undergraduate Program
From:
Kevin Stewart
Coordinator
Beedie Writing Mentorship Program
Date:
Re:
________________________________________________________________
The recruitment drive for 2014-01 is now complete and training is underway. We
have selected four new mentors for the term. All of the candidates have
exceptional language and writing skills and will have an immediate and positive
impact on the team. We will have a total of eleven mentors working this term as a
result of the new selections.
Training began last week and will continue daily until the program officially begins
for the term on January 26, 2014.
I have enclosed here the projected estimates for volunteer hours for this
semester.
If you have any questions about the program or you would like to observe one of
the training sessions, call me at extension 5410.
cc:
Mary Watson
Student Services Manager
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(Giving Information)
MEMO
To:
Krista Wong
Human Resources Manager
cc:
Nick Price
Human Resources Coordinator
bcc:
Ami Sidhu
CFO
From:
Bob Singh
Human Resources Specialist
Date:
Re:
____________________
As you requested at last weeks team meeting, I contacted the SFU Segal School
of Business to gather information about their leadership program and to gauge
SFUs interest in partnering with us to offer an intensive weekend leadership
retreat for our senior managers.
I spoke to Darren Marks, Executive Director of Segals Executive Education
Program. He is interested in meeting to discuss this idea further.
I have reviewed all of the information we have regarding our previous education
partners and I have compiled a chart comparing costs, availability, and training
approaches to help inform your decision. I have enclosed the chart here and I
can send you an electronic version if you need one.
Please let me know if you would like to meet to discuss the chart or any other
aspect of the research I have completed. I leave for the Montreal conference on
March 18, but I am available to meet anytime before then.
If you decide to further explore a partnership with SFU, let me know and I will
arrange a meeting with Darren Marks.
Enclosure: University Comparison Chart
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MEMO
To:
Andrew Gemino
Associate Dean
Undergraduate Program
From:
Kevin Stewart
Chair
CIAC Subgroup
Date:
Re:
________________________________________________________________
We have moved into Phase 2 of our consultation process. The interim report has
been distributed to all stakeholders and faculty meetings have been arranged
using the times you had available in your calendar.
The consultation meeting schedule is as follows:
Date
Faculty Member
Campus
Room Location
January 21
January 26
February 4
February 8
Jane Willows
Pete Wong
Betty Bashir
Darren Wilkie
Segal
Segal
Burnaby
Surrey
SGL 3211
SGL 2422
WMC 2243
SUR 5010
I will have the final report ready for review by February 21.
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