1. Sales Letters
Sales letters usually have a strong statement in the beginning to capture the interest of the reader. They give details of the benefits and also provide contact details, which will ensure that the reader acts upon. The purpose of the letter is getting the reader to act on details mentioned in the letter.
2
Order Letters
When orders for goods or services are placed to manufacturers, retailers, or wholesalers by consumers or other businesses, they write order letters. This letter has all the details of the products – name, model numbers, quantity and expected price. The payment of the delivery is also sometimes included along with the letter.
3
Complaint Letters
To get your complaint be satisfied, the words and tone used in the letter become the deciding factor. It is important to be direct but tactful and using professional tone makes the company to take notice.
4
Adjustment Letters
These are usually sent in response to complaint letters and if it is in favor of the customer, the letter should include a forthright admission to that effect and extend a sincere apology. If not, the tone of the letter should be factual and make the customer know that you understand the complaint.
5
Inquiry Letters
Inquiry letters are meant just to do what its name suggest – get information from the recipient of the letter by asking question. The letter needs to be clear regarding the information required and should list down all the queries. The sender should provide his contact information so that the reader can respond easily.
6
Follow-Up Letters
These types of letters are usually sent after there has been some initial communication. These letters are generally a combination of thank-you note and a sales letter. It could be the sales department thanking the customer, a businessman's follow-up action after a meeting, a job-seeker asking for the status of the application, etc.
7
Recommendation Letters
When someone is applying for a job, the prospective employers usually ask for letter of recommendation from previous employer or teachers. These types of letters describe the relationship with the job seeker and their opinion as well.
8
Acknowledgment Letters
As the name suggests, acknowledgement letters are to communicate the receipt of a prior communication or something else. The letter, however, does not confirm whether any action has been taken or not.
9
Resignation Letters
When an employee is planning to leave the current job, the letter sent to the direct manager informing about the decision is called resignation letter. It gives notice and sometimes the reason for leaving is also mentioned.
10
Application and Cover Letters
The application or cover letter is very important, as the employer will decide based on the contents of the letter
It is important to mention details of previous experience, skill sets and any other information which would be required for achieving your goal.
Cover letters are brief and concise as compared to application letters. Cover letter should highlight the resume being sent along and should focus on the person who is going to receive the letter.
11
Request Letters
In various business set-ups, lots of things need help from other parties or groups, namely – services, materials, assistance, etc.
12
Appreciation Letters
When someone’s work needs to be appreciated, an appreciation letter is written. Usually seniors write the letter to appreciate the work done by juniors. An organization can also send an appreciation letter to other organization or clients for the work done or for doing good business with them.
13
Apology Letters
Among all types of letters, apology letters are a humble way for asking forgiveness for your mistake and also stating how you plan to rectify the same. Usually, the apology letter is written to someone