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Business Term

Closing Remarks

Closing Remarks uses remarks that conclude and prompt next actions to signal purpose and key points clearly, reducing misunderstandings for readers.

Updated: 04/27/2026
What it means

Closing Remarks is the concept of designing remarks that conclude and prompt next actions appropriately in business documents or email so the reader can understand the message with minimal friction. By tailoring tone and structure to the audience and objective, information sharing and decisions become smoother. It is not only about format; word choice, ordering, and visual cues like headings or bullets help preserve clarity. Clear phrasing guides the reader toward the intended action.

When it helps

When Closing Remarks is well-crafted, recipients grasp intent quickly and respond or decide faster. Adapting wording to the audience reduces confusion and follow-up questions, lowering communication cost. Unclear phrasing obscures urgency or action, so decisions stall or drift without a shared understanding.

  • When Closing Remarks is well-crafted, recipients grasp intent quickly and respond or decide faster.
  • Adapting wording to the audience reduces confusion and follow-up questions, lowering communication cost.
  • Unclear phrasing obscures urgency or action, so decisions stall or drift without a shared understanding.
How to use it
  • Confirm audience, purpose, and desired action before drafting.
  • Prefer concise wording that still conveys the essential point.
  • Provide necessary context, then state the conclusion explicitly.
  • Match honorifics and tone to the relationship and formality needed.
  • Review from the reader's perspective to catch ambiguity before sending.
Example

Example: A status email to a client revises the Closing Remarks. The subject line states the outcome, the addressee list includes all decision makers, and the opening summarizes context in two lines. The main body lists options and impacts in bullets, then the closing requests a response by Friday. Consistent tone and proper honorifics help maintain trust while driving a clear decision.

Common mistakes
  • Following a template alone is not enough; content must fit the goal.
  • Politeness does not justify length when brevity is required.
  • Reusable phrases still need adjustment for audience and situation.
Sources
SourcesKindLink
Business Communication for Success (Open Textbook Library)Open
Next step
Move into the learning flow to build the topic from fundamentals in a more structured way.
Trust
Quality
Reviewed
Updated
04/27/2026
COI
None
Sources
1