Saturday, 24 March 2012

Business Cards

Business Cards
   - memory and convenience
   - bearing business information about a company or individual


What's in it?
1.) Giver's name
2.) Company Affiliation (usually with a logo)

3.) Contact Informaton (street addresses, telepone no.(s), fax no.)
4.) Email address/website
5.) Include also a Telex, Bank account, and tax code

Business Card Size and Setup 


The standard dimensions for a printed business card are 3.5 x 2 inches. Many printed designs include bleed. The "bleed area" is an extroa 1/8 inch of space for design elements or backgrounds that extend beyond the finished size of your piece. A business card design with bleed is printed slightly oversized and then cut down to size, giving the appearance that the printing "bleeds" off the edge of the card, rather than having white borders.



business card size template


FEASIBILITY STUDY/BUSINESS PROPOSAL

                    "Is it Possible"

Preliminary study- undertaken determine and document a project viability
Preliminary analysis- of an existing system to see if it is upgrading all or a  part

(7) TYPES OF FEASIBILITY STUDY:

   1. cultural
   2. legal
   3. Marketing Economics
   4. Schedule
   5. Fund Raising
   6. Bankable
   7. IT

(4) Steps of BES:

   A) Determining
       1.) general question to answer
       2.) specific question to answer
   B) Constructing a framework to answer those question
   C) Determining the data needed
   D) Determining the steps and followed by implementing the BES

Friday, 2 March 2012

Kinds of Interviews

                                                    3 TYPES OF INTERVIEWS

1. STRUCTURED - ( uses close and  open ended question) formal.
2. UNSTRUCTURED -  not absurd (casual )
3. STRESS - ( situation questions )


                                                      3 TYPES OF JOBS
1. CONSERVATION - ( executive ) responsibilities and confidence.
2. CULTURAL - semi formal (main stay wardrobe)
3. SERVICE - ( responsible / approachable )

                           EMPLOYMENT COMMUNICATION INCLUDES

1. RESUME ( summary of qualification )
2. APPLICATION LETTER ( a companionship letter )
3. FOLLOWUP LETTER ( thank you letter )


  • they give employers something to look up before they fill out there application 
  • the make you look professional i ready to work
  • they allow you to control the presentation of your skills

                                  CONTENTS OF APPLICATION LETTER

  • reference of source about the job opening
  • qualification for the job and working experience
  • enclosure of supporting documents that will a test for your qualification
  • contact no. and residence address
                                    TYPES OF APPLICATION LETTER

1. SOLICITED - is written an answer to an advertisement
2. UNSOLICITED - is written to a company in the hope that there might be have job vacances or job opening

                                    CURRICULAR VITAE contents

1. Complete contact info.
2.C
10. Character re fences
11. Professional licences
12. related extra curricular achievement
                                         4 TYPES OF INTERVIEWS

  1. screen er - verifies factual info.
  2. professional recruiter
  3. recent graduate 
  4. hiring manager

                                           CV CATEGORIES
1. Complete contact info.
 2.Recent colored photo (2x2 size) which is placed at the right hand corner of the top page.

3. Brief biography w/ personal details 
4. Professional career or research objectives 
5. Education attainments
6. scholastic achievement 
7. Work experiences
8. Skills
9. Professional membership

10. character re fences


                                   TIPS ON WRITING CV



  1. employers should know what you are qualify for.
  2. using job titles and skills heading effectively
  3. Sell achievement not skills or duties
  4. Writing a career adjectives 
  5. How to formulate a career objectives statement
  6. how to deal with gaps and employment
  7. The use of the keywords in CV and resume
  8. Information to exclude


Monday, 13 February 2012

Do letters have heads?

2 Types of Heading
  1.      Modern Heading
  2.      Conventional Heading

Some examples of formal complementary clauses:


truly yours,
respectfully yours,

Monday, 16 January 2012

Letters Everywhere Part 3

Letter Block styles

Full-block Style


Semi-Block style

   



<- 1 1/4 inch margin ->





1 1/2 inch margin



Company Logo or Letterhead







6-10 spaces
   



<- 1 1/4 inch margin ->
March 15, 2001





2-4 spaces
Mr. John Smith, Director of Operations
SomeGroup Group
SomeStreet Drive
Sometown, VA 12345



2 spaces
Dear Mr. Smith :



2 spaces
     Thank you for your inquiry about Semi-Block format for letters. What follows is a quick summary of the format and the conventions it uses.     Semi-block format or style is frequently called modified semi-block because it is a slightly less formal modification of full block format. This letter style places the date line in alignment with, or slightly to the right of dead center. Another option for placing the date line in semi-block is flush right. Similar to full block, semi-block places the inside address, salutation and any end notations flush with the left margin. However, unlike full block, each body paragraph of semi-block is indented five spaces. The complimentary close and signature block are aligned under the date.
     This page illustrates the spacing and layout of semi-block format. Both full block and semi-block formats generally contain all of the necessary parts of a letter.



2 spaces
Sincerely yours ,





4 spaces
Dr. Sheila Carter-Tod
English Instructor



2 spaces
SCT/jm



2 spaces
Enclosure





1 1/2 inch margin


Sunday, 15 January 2012

Letters Everywhere part 2

TYPES OF PUNCTUATION

Open Punctuation

In an open punctuation style letter there is...
  •  No punctuation at end of lines in the inside address
  •  No punctuation following salutation and complementary closing.

Close Punctuation

Closed punctuation has punctuation after the salutation and closing, in the address and after abbreviations

The President of the United States,
Washington, D.C.

Dear Mr. Bush:

Sincerely yours
,

I suppose that 'mixed' punctuation is a middle way between these, and I also suppose that there is considerable difference of opinion as to whether and which punctuations are used where.


Mix Punctuation

features (This is usually the standard used in the USA)

* No punctuation at the end of lines in the inside address
* A colon follows the salutation
* A comma follows the complimentary closing

Letters Everywhere Part 1

Parts of the letter


  1. Letter Head
  2. Dateline
  3. Inside Address
  4. Salutation
  5. Body of the Letter
  6. Signature
  7. Complementary Clause
  8. Notation






There are 3 kinds of letter

  • Business Letter
  • Personal Letter
  • Social Letter


Business Letter
         we used this kind of letter when writing:
  1. To give one's opinions to public officials
  2. To place an order with a store
  3. To apply for a job
  4. To seek admission to a college
this is the format of a business letter
from: http://jobsearchtech.about.com/library/graphics/block-letter-parts.gif

Personal Letter

personal letter is a type of letter which provides communication between a small number of people, usually two. There are many types of personal letters and they are written for a wide variety of reasons:
  • One person wishes to attain information from an individual or a business.
  • One person wishes to tell somebody about themselves, as in pen pals.
  • One person wishes to present to an individual or a business a social note, such as a thank-you or a congratulations.
  • One person wishes to communicate with an acquaintance - friend or family, for example in order to maintain and reinforce the bond between them.
Surviving personal letters are often an important source of information about the lives of historical figures.


sample format of a personal letter:





















from:http://www.goodletterwriting.co.uk/letter-writing-images/personal-letter-example.png


Social Letter

The Social Letters which are written to relations and intimate friends should be written in an easy, conversational style. The Social letters are really of the nature of friendly chat: and, being as a rule unpremeditated and spontaneous compositions, they are informal and free-and-easy as compared with essays. Just as in friendly talks, as in friendly letters, we can touch on many subjects and in any order we like. And we can use colloquial expressions which would in formal essays be quite out of place. But this does not mean that we can be careless and slovenly in dashing off our letters. For, it is insulting to ask a friend to decipher a badly written, ill-composed and confusing scrawl.

The Social Letters which are written to relations and intimate friends should be written in an easy, conversational style.So, it must for us to take care and preserve some order in expressing our thoughts. Above all, it must be remembered that, however free-and-easy may be our style, we are as much bound by the rules of spelling, punctuation, grammar and idiom in writing a letter as we are in writing the most formal letter.

The Social Letters which are written to relations and intimate friends should be written in an easy, conversational style.Such ungrammatical expressions as “an advice, those sort of things and he met my brother and I” are not permissible both in a friendly letter and in a business letter. Mistakes in spelling, punctuation and grammar at once stamp a letter-writer as uneducated.

Forms of address: 

In Social Letters to relations and intimate friends, use the proper form of address.

The proper form of address is the name (without title) of the person to whom you are writing, prefixed by such qualifying terms as Dear, My Dear, Dearest etc…

For examples:

Dear Father,

Dear Mother,

Dear Brother,

Dearest Sister,

Dear Edward,

My Dear Bill,

But if you are writing to an ordinary person who is much older than you are, or of superior rank, it is respectful to use a prefix like Mr., Mrs., Ms. Etc…The Social-letters which are written to relations and intimate friends should be written in an easy, conversational style.


here is a sample format of a Social letter:


"SPELLING"



Rule # 1:
              When you apply a prefix, do not drop any letters, either from the prefix or from the root word.
Do not add any.

Examples:
               Dis + Satisfied = Dissatisfied
               Un + Named   = Unnamed
               Im  + Perfect   = Imperfect