A song by America's rock band Creed appears in the "Scorpion King" soundtrack
Songs by American metal band Underoath appear in their album "Defining the Big Line"
Shady record artist related to Southern rap / hipper, Yelawolf's song "People who may be interested"
"People who are likely to attract attention" are somewhat similar to your favorite old sweatshirt. It is easy, it covers many sins, it did. But in a business environment, does it harm you more than you? For your sweatshirt, this answer is hard to say "yes", and it is more detailed for "people who may be worried." "If the final reader is a person who has a specific role or position, please continue digging to find the person's name.Things may be incomprehensible. There are usually normal situations here when using.
If you are writing a letter that is not unique to your organization, especially someone else, please select "people who might be interested". Ideally, before you write a letter, you will do your research so that it is directed to a specific person. You can use "interested people" only after finding the problem you are trying to solve and working hard to confirm that certain names can not be used. In a formal letter, you can use a comma or colon after the name. At that time, it was a strict colon, but it was more formal than a soft and relaxed comma. Most business expressions agree that today's comma is good. If you want to add some military seriousness to your letter please use a colon
In some letters, "stakeholder" may mean somewhat lazy by the sender. To be honest, I really do not know who is paying attention to your email or letter. Please note that it is not a concern for those who may be interested. You are very smart. You can easily get the whole Internet (including LinkedIn). If you know that you are writing directly to someone (recruiter manager etc.), do homework and find related people. Yes, your letter may be handed over to others, but those people will find you first found the right person.