hi, at wok at the moment i am having to send off a few standard letters. Depending on who they are going to i either name the person, put dear sirs, or dea colleague. I often forget to check the end and change it according to the salutation. 1) is there a phrase to end that would be ok for all of the above salutations? 2) do you think people eally care anymore about faithfully/sincerely? it feels so bogus seeing as i am neither faithful to nor sincere about the people i'm writing to (and seeing as the modern way is either "lol smiley face" or "laters dude")
it is professional to use yours sincerely. I've just looked at letters from my insurers, the AA and lloyds tsb and they all use sincerely because they have addressed me by name.
If I were to receive an 'official' letter I would expect the correct salutation.
(Excel - I remember it that it 'Dear Sir sounds stupid with sincerely (so therefore it must be faithfully)', probably won't help but thought I would mention it.).
It depends how formal the letters are, it does still matter in many circles. If it's not too official I'd go with kind regards (although personally I only use that in e-mails!).
i know which it should be, but as i say, because i just pull the standard letter off the intranet, i don't always remember to change it, so really need one that covers all
Agree with Peter P - Dear Sir -yours faithfully
Dear |Mr Whatever -your sincerely
Better not subscribe to this new thingie of dear Jane/John - trust me it is not professional.