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Recommendation letters are often referred to in a number of
different ways including: letters of recommendation, reference
letters, letters of reference, commendation letters, and
sometimes even, performance evaluation letters.
This terminology can be quite confusing, especially when these
terms are often used interchangeably, sometimes to mean the same
thing, sometimes to mean something different.
Below are some definitions that should clear up any confusion,
followed by some tips and strategies on how best to deal with
recommendation letters.
LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION
Employment-Related Also called a recommendation letter, it is an
employment- related letter that is specifically requested by the
person the letter is being written about. Such a letter is
normally positive in nature, and written by someone who knows
the subject well enough to comment on the skills, abilities, and
specific work attributes of that person.
Typically, an employment-related recommendation letter conveys
one person's view of the work performance and general workplace
demeanor of a person that has worked under their direct
supervision. The requestor of the letter normally requires it
when applying for a promotion or a new job.
These letters are usually addressed to a specific person to whom
the requestor has been asked to submit the letter.
Graduate School Related Another situation where recommendation
letters are a common requirement is for entry into post-graduate
programs at a college or university. Graduate programs often
require two or more letters of recommendation as part of the
program admission requirements.
Normally these graduate program recommendation letters are
written at the request of the program applicant by poeple who
are familiar with their academic career to-date, and their
future education and career aspirations. These people could
include: school faculty members, administrators, academic
supervisors, and/or employers.
These letters are always addressed to a specific person and are
normally included as part of the program admission application.
LETTERS OF REFERENCE
These are more general letters that are often requested by
employees when they leave the employ of an organization.
Normally factual in nature, they are usually addressed, "to whom
it may concern" and provide basic information such as: work
history, dates of employment, positions held, academic
credentials, etc.
Reference letters sometimes contain a general statement (as long
as a positive one can be made), about the employee's work record
with the company that they are leaving. Employees often submit
these letters with job applications in the hope that the letter
will reflect favorably on their chances for the new position.
Character reference letters are sometimes required by employers
when hiring individuals to perform personal or residential
services such as child care, domestic services, etc. These
letters are usually drafted by a former employer and deal with
such characteristics as honesty, dependability and work
ethic/performance.
COMMENDATION LETTERS
These are unsolicited letters, which typically commend an
employee to their supervisor for something outstanding or
noteworthy that the employee has done. Normally, these are
written by co-workers, or managers from another area of the
organization who were suitably impressed while supervising the
person on a short-term project.
EVALUATION LETTERS
These are usually detailed assessments of an employee's work
performance as part of an organization's regular employee review
process. Typically, they are written by the employee's
supervisor and are attached to the individual's performance
appraisal and placed on their personnel file.
RECOMMENDATION LETTER TIPS AND STRATEGIES
The following tips apply primarily to the writing of
recommendation letters and reference letters as defined above.
(This list is summarized from "Instant Home Writing Kit").
1. Write It Only If You Want To If you are asked by someone to
write a letter of recommendation about them, you don't have to
say "yes" automatically. If it is someone you respect for their
work, and you have mostly positive things to say about them, by
all means write the letter. There is no point saying "yes" and
then writing a letter that says nothing good about the person,
or worse still, concocting a misleading positive assessment of
someone.
2. If You Must Refuse, Do It Right Up Front On the other hand,
if someone asks you to write a letter of reference for them, and
you know you will be hard-pressed to keep the overall letter
positive, say "no" right up front. No point in hesitating and
leading them on to believe that the answer might be "yes". A
gentle but firm "no" will usually get the message across to the
person. Explain that you don't think that you are the best (or
most qualified) person to do it.
3. Suggest Someone Else If you feel you should refuse, for
whatever reason, it may be helpful for you to suggest someone
else who you think might have a more positive and/or accurate
assessment of the person. They may also be in a better position
to do the assessment. Usually there are a number of possible
candidates, and you may not in fact be the best person.
4. Write It As You See It Writing a less than honest
recommendation letter does no one a favor in the end. It is
likely to backfire on you, the person being recommended, and the
new employer. Also, many employers and head-hunting agencies
check references. How would you like to be called up and have to
mislead people due to questionable things you may have written
in a reference letter?
5. Be Honest, Fair, and Balanced Honesty is always the best
policy when it comes to writing recommendation letters. At the
same time, try to be fair and balanced in your approach. If in
your estimation, a person has five strengths and one glaring
weakness, but that weakness really bothers you, make sure you
don't over- emphasize the weak point in the letter, based on
your personal bias. Just mention it as a weakness and move on.
6. Balanced Is Best An overall balanced approach is likely the
best one for a letter of recommendation. Even if your letter
generally raves about how excellent the person is, some balance
on the other side of the ledger will make it more credible.
After all, nobody's perfect. There must be some area where the
person being recommended needs to improve. A bit of constructive
criticism never hurts.
To see a fully-formatted "real-life template" of a letter of
recommendation, click on the following link:
www.writinghelp-central.com/recommendation-letter.html
Shaun Fawcett is webmaster of writinghelp-central.com and author
of the new eBook "Instant Home Writing Kit". His FREE e-mail
COURSE "Tips and Tricks For Writing Success", offers valuable
tips on home/business writing. Sign-up for FREE at:
http://www.instanthomewritingkit.com/free-course.html
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