Her Majesty reportedly receives up to 300 letters per day – or more than 60,000 a year – and she famously sends people bespoke notes for their 100th birthday.
We're getting hand cramp just thinking about it.
The successful applicant must have administrative experience and ‘excellent’ written communication skills, and must also be able to handle a large volume of correspondence.
Based at Buckingham Palace, it is a 37.5-hour week and it pays £23,500 a year.
This is what the role entails: ‘Thousands of letters addressed to the Royal Household are received each year.
‘Working as part of the correspondence unit, your challenge will be to ensure that each and every one receives a timely and well composed response.'
‘Every day you will respond to letters sent by the public in answer to various and often unique queries as well as general messages of good wishes.'
‘Recording and monitoring all correspondence, you’ll be proud of the number of letters you respond to, which will drive you to deliver consistently high standards.
‘In this way, you will help to support the important work of the Royal Household.’
The job advert, which closes on December 5, also stresses that above all, candidates will have to enjoy working collaboratively with a team and be ‘eager to expand upon your experience in a truly unique environment’.
Other opportunities listed on the Royal Household website include a helpdesk manager, assistant staff restaurant manager and a warden at the Palace of Holyroodhouse.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Using topography data, researchers have found clear evidence of a 3.5 billion-year-old shoreline around 900 meters thick, which covered thousands of square kilometers 📏
The findings point to a ‘higher potential’ for life on Mars than previously thought 📈👽
Jessikah Inaba, 23, qualified last week after studying for five years at the University of Law in London.
She managed to complete her studies after translating all her learning materials into braille with the help of her friends and tutors to fill in the gaps.
Jess, from Camden, has now joined the Bar 5 years since starting her studies in 2017. She said:
🗣 'It’s been crazy, I still can’t really believe I’ve done it.'
🗣️'Brixton has turned into a commuter space – it used to feel like a community but it no longer feels like it’s designed for families.'
Brixton has long been known for its large Afro-Caribbean population, which developed after much of the Windrush generation settled there from the late 1940s onwards 🗺
BREAKING: A man has attacked a migrant centre with petrol bombs before killing himself. trib.al/MLrBc1k
According to witnesses, the man threw petrol bombs with fireworks attached at a new British immigration border force centre in the southern English port of Dover and then killed himself.
Police arrived minutes afterwards and cordoned off the area. Fire crews were also in attendance.
Football clubs need to be ‘shining a light’ on their black pioneering players, with more research done to ensure players’ stories aren’t lost forever 💡⚽️
Arthur Wharton, the first black professional footballer, and Luther Blissett, the first black player to score a hat-trick for England, are some of the ex-players that have been widely celebrated in recent weeks 👏
Clubs have found new ways of highlighting the cultural contributions made by their sporting icons 🏆
On October 7, Plymouth Argyle erected a statue of pioneering black footballer Jack Leslie.