Salutations for Women other than Mrs. Ms. or Miss.

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I am wondering how you handle or if you have a policy for how to handle women who have a title other than Mrs. Ms. or Miss.  Such as Dr., Professor, Ph.D and the like.  I am particularly interested in how you list the addressee/salutations if they have a spouse, i.e. Mary Smith, Ph.D is married to John Smith.  Thank you,

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  • JoAnn Strommen
    JoAnn Strommen ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Kristen Sorensen:

    I am wondering how you handle or if you have a policy for how to handle women who have a title other than Mrs. Ms. or Miss.  Such as Dr., Professor, Ph.D and the like.  I am particularly interested in how you list the addressee/salutations if they have a spouse, i.e. Mary Smith, Ph.D is married to John Smith.  Thank you,

    As 98% of our correspondence uses informal addressee/salutations (John & Mary Smith) we don't have many issues to deal with.  If we know that the constituent prefers their professional title over Mr./Mrs/etc we put Dr./The Honorable or desired title in as Title 1 and it is used when we do formal format. So in your example, we would use Mr. & Dr. John Smith. Or Dr. Mary Smith if correspondence just to her.  I know we have a couple dozen that pull in that format. 

    Basically it's the same as for men - if preference is known we use it. If I don't know their preference but know they have title of "Dr." I enter "Dr." as title 1 on their record.

    For use of Ph.D./DDS/CPA/etc that we consider this a suffix vs. title.  We put professional suffix in Suffix 2 field.  Use Suffix 1 field for Sr/Jr etc.

    Just one of doing it...

  • Kristen Sorensen:

    I am wondering how you handle or if you have a policy for how to handle women who have a title other than Mrs. Ms. or Miss.  Such as Dr., Professor, Ph.D and the like.  I am particularly interested in how you list the addressee/salutations if they have a spouse, i.e. Mary Smith, Ph.D is married to John Smith.  Thank you,

     We have a lot of situations where one or both partners are a Dr. or Professor.

    For formal addressees, such as for envelopes:

    If both are Dr.'s we would use Drs. John and Mary Smith

    If both are Professors, we would use The Professors Smith or The Professors John and Mary Smith

    If he is the Dr. or Professor, we would use Dr. and Mrs. John Smith

    If she is the Dr. or Professor, we would use Dr. Mary Smith and Mr. John Smith.

     Of course, sometimes we know their preference and that would override our standard entry.

     

    I hope this helped!

  • Allison Mcintyre:

     We have a lot of situations where one or both partners are a Dr. or Professor.

    For formal addressees, such as for envelopes:

    If both are Dr.'s we would use Drs. John and Mary Smith

    If both are Professors, we would use The Professors Smith or The Professors John and Mary Smith

    If he is the Dr. or Professor, we would use Dr. and Mrs. John Smith

    If she is the Dr. or Professor, we would use Dr. Mary Smith and Mr. John Smith.

     Of course, sometimes we know their preference and that would override our standard entry.

     

    I hope this helped!

    We do the same as Allison. Many times the last names will be different. As for the salutation when she is the Dr./Professor/etc. we use Dr. and Mr. Smith
  • Kristen Sorensen:

    I am wondering how you handle or if you have a policy for how to handle women who have a title other than Mrs. Ms. or Miss.  Such as Dr., Professor, Ph.D and the like.  I am particularly interested in how you list the addressee/salutations if they have a spouse, i.e. Mary Smith, Ph.D is married to John Smith.  Thank you,

     Hey all.

     

    Using preference, or what is the 'proper' format -- think Emily Post etiquette is the way to go.  If unsure, always go to etiquette. 

    http://www.formsofaddress.info/former.html

     http://www.emilypost.com/forms-of-address/titles/777-official-forms-of-address#Other Professionals

     

     

     

  • Christine Cooke:

     Hey all.

     

    Using preference, or what is the 'proper' format -- think Emily Post etiquette is the way to go.  If unsure, always go to etiquette. 

    http://www.formsofaddress.info/former.html

     http://www.emilypost.com/forms-of-address/titles/777-official-forms-of-address#Other Professionals

     

     

     

     Thank you!

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