Your friend Ravina has sought admission in a new school in Kerala because of his father's transfer to that place. But you came to know through his email that she misses his previous school, teachers and old friends and doesn't feel adjusted to new place and people. Write an email advising her to keep patience, be friendly try to meets with other students and devote time to studies so that she may feel comfortable.
Answers
1. Make a good first impression
We all know first impressions matter. That fleeting glance from across a crowded room (or, yes, inside a crowded inbox) can be the difference between the start of something beautiful and something that’s ignored or forgotten. If what you see doesn’t make you pause for a moment, that relationship has stalled before it started.
3. Know what you want (and what you DON’T need to say)
Your reader does not want to wade through the waffle it takes you to think your way to your point. They don’t have time. But you know that, of course: you don’t either.
So always plan what to say (and what not to) based on what you already know about your reader. Think carefully about what they already know (or don’t know) about what you’re saying, and how invested they are in it. This means you can put in exactly what they’ll need to understand and act on your message.
This is much kinder than forcing them into a back-and-forth exchange where they have to painfully attempt to extract the more crucial details. Or making them have to hunt through old files or email chains to find them. Doing these things tends to be about as much fun as untangling last year’s Christmas lights, so don’t underestimate the effect of saving them this job: you’re making their life much easier. This should inspire them to feel distinctly fond of you.
4. Be creative
Most people like an unexpected gift. Especially something thoughtful and a bit unusual. Similarly, a somewhat left-field approach to email-writing can really pay off – especially in customer service. You may remember the case of Chris King, the customer-service manager at UK grocery chain Sainsbury’s. He replied to a letter from a little girl who suggested that tiger bread should really be called giraffe bread – which, of course, it now is (at Sainsbury’s, at least). And, having sent a sweet, unusual and perfectly judged reply, Chris King has earned a place in history, while Sainsbury’s also got some great PR coverage.
Hope this helps you and mark as brainliest if it helped!!