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My dad is an executive for wal-mart. He makes millions and we are very well off. Now i am only 22 and over the years i hear nothing but bad thing's about wal-mart anymore, we just recently had ...
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kayandal
When writing a letter to a CEO of a company how do I address them if I don't know if they are male or female?
I'm writing to CEO's of companies. Some time the names are so that I can't tell if they are male or female.How would I address them?
Possibly go to the company's website and do a little research on the gender..... as a last resort you could use first name, last name (???)
sealove
I usually open my letters with 'To whom this may concern" when I don't know who the letter is going to.
Chris
The correct way to address this if you cannot determine the persons gender is to address them by their full name.
Dear Pat Smith. That way you are correctly addressing them but not implying gender.
Roger S
Chances are the CEO is not the person that would open and read the letter in the first instance anyway - a persoanl assistant or secretary would open it.
You might be better off calling the company and finding out who would be the best person to address it to depending on your subject - such as the HR manager. If you get to talk to them first, when they actually receive the letter your name will be familiar and they are less likely to throw it away. (A cold call letter is like non-internet spam).
If you still want to send to the CEO, call the company and ask the receptionist, they should be able to tell you. Or search on the internet to find out. Dear Sir or Madam does not grab the readers attention very well. As a manager I generally don't take much notice of letter headers such. A little effort can go a long way.
Mike
Dear Chief Executive Officer,
Mr. P
"DEAR CEO"
miss_blue_47
You could contact the company and find out. Politeness costs nothing. End your letter "Yours sincerely". If there is no name given, just a department, then you can write "Dear Sir/Madam" and end your letter "Yours faithfully".
Feeling Mutual
Take the time to look up their full name on their company web site or their Secretary of States web site, and find out and you will get a better response!