Writing a negative email and a persuasive memo

There are two separate assignments that need to be in two separate documents. I am attaching instructions, please contact me via email if there are any questions. I do not need any sources referenced as this assignment is business email and memo skills.
Memo-Assignment 2:
For this assignment, you will apply the three-step writing process to get a message to an audience via a business memo. Write a brief (one page) persuasive memo addressing the described audience. Make sure to include a subject line that will get your audience’s attention.
Use the situational analysis framework to help plan your message. Keep the needs of your audience in mind as you write, and do remember to proofread your message. Make sure you review the textbook material for the AIDA model and how to balance emotional and logical appeals.
Skill:
Requests for action-Persuasive memo Case:
Your new company, WorldConnect Language Services, started well and is going strong. However, to expand beyond your Memphis, Tennessee, home market, you need a one-time infusion of cash to open branch offices in other cities around the Southeast. At the Entrpeneur’s Launch Forum you attended yesterday, you learned about several angels, as they are called in the investment community—private individuals who invest money in small companies in exchange for a share of ownership. One such angel, Melinda Sparks, told the audience she is looking for investment opportunities outside of high technology, where angels often invest their money. She also indicated that she looks for entrepreneurs who know their industries and markets well, who are passionate about the value they bring to the marketplace, who are committed to growing their businesses, and who have a solid plan for how they will spend an investor’s money. Fortunately, you meet all of her criteria.
Your Task:
Draft a memo to Sparks, introducing yourself and your business and asking for a meeting at which you can present your business plan in more detail. Explain that your Memphis office was booked to capacity within two months of opening, thanks to the growing number of international business professionals looking for translators and interpreters. You’ve researched the entire Southeast region and identified at least 10 other cities that could support a language services office such as yours. Making up whatever other information you need, draft a four-paragraph message following the AIDA model (you can Google this if you are unaware of what it is), ending with a request for a meeting within the next four weeks.

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