You are writing a letter asking for information. See Problem-Solving Cases on page 246 in the book. Problem 7 is Researching a Venue for a Company Retreat. choice), you've been given an important assignment from the VP of sales: to explore a possible venue for a weekend retreat for the sales staff. The boss is wondering whether a nearby state park, the Salt Fork State Park Lodge and Conference Center, might be a good choice (you can pick a different venue to explore). He'd llke to hold the retreat during the season (you decide which). He's thinking that, counting the 25 employees and their familles, about 75 people would attend. He'd anticipate having a welcome party on Friday evening, meetings for the staff during the day on Saturday, a dinner and some kind of entertainment on Saturday evening, and one last business meeting on Sunday morning. Are the Salt Fork facilities the approprlate size for this gathering? How long does it take to get there? Does the center have lir meeting room and technology you'd need? Would it offer sufficient leisure activities for the employees and their families. What would the price tag likely be? He leaves it to you to fligure out what else might be good to know. of course, you began your research by studying the center's website. But it doesn't provide answers to some of Page247 your questions, so you decide to emall the manager of the center, whose address is on the website. Craft a wellorganized email message to her to get the information you need, and ask her to mall you any conference-planning materials and price lists she has. Be sure to tell her what she needs to know about your event in order to give you helpful answers. You are writing a letter asking for information. See Problem-Solving Cases on page 246 in the book. Problem 7 is Researching a Venue for a Company Retreat. choice), you've been given an important assignment from the VP of sales: to explore a possible venue for a weekend retreat for the sales staff. The boss is wondering whether a nearby state park, the Salt Fork State Park Lodge and Conference Center, might be a good choice (you can pick a different venue to explore). He'd llke to hold the retreat during the season (you decide which). He's thinking that, counting the 25 employees and their familles, about 75 people would attend. He'd anticipate having a welcome party on Friday evening, meetings for the staff during the day on Saturday, a dinner and some kind of entertainment on Saturday evening, and one last business meeting on Sunday morning. Are the Salt Fork facilities the approprlate size for this gathering? How long does it take to get there? Does the center have lir meeting room and technology you'd need? Would it offer sufficient leisure activities for the employees and their families. What would the price tag likely be? He leaves it to you to fligure out what else might be good to know. of course, you began your research by studying the center's website. But it doesn't provide answers to some of Page247 your questions, so you decide to emall the manager of the center, whose address is on the website. Craft a wellorganized email message to her to get the information you need, and ask her to mall you any conference-planning materials and price lists she has. Be sure to tell her what she needs to know about your event in order to give you helpful answers