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To whom it may concern
Dear Principal, or To Whom It May Concern, or Dear Sir or Madam
Yes, the salutation "To Whom It May Concern" should have capitalized letters at the beginning of each word.
"Dear Sir or Madam" or "To whom it may concern" when you aren't sure of the recipient's name.
"Dear Sir or Madam" or "To whom it may concern" when you aren't sure of the recipient's name.
Colon
The phrase "to whom it may concern" is known as a salutation or a formal greeting used at the beginning of a letter or email when the recipient is unknown.
To Whom It May Concern:
Mr. or Ms. or you could say "to whom it may concern", this is commonly known as the proper way formally indicate who it is your writing to.
Sometimes business letters include the salutation "to whom it may concern". It is better to say "Dear" and then the addressee's name, followed by a colon.
Salutation in a letter is the initial greeting to your reader and should be addressed accordingly. Depending on who the letter is being addressed to, a salutation can began with Dear, Dear Sir or Madam, To Whom It May Concern, or Hello.
Sources vary on this. Acceptable capitalisation of this salutation include the following:To whom it may concernTo Whom it May ConcernTo Whom It May Concern