I'm a US native speaker, and I'm retired.
By "memos," I mean written communications that are older and more formal than texting. I am thinking of things like written interoffice memos--on paper or in email. They are in an everyday register, neither informal nor formal, and appropriate when used peer-to-peer, peer-to-supervisor, and supervisor-to-peer. Anything used in memos is also used in modern electronic media like texting and social media.
<em>ASAP </em>is used in memos. It is also spoken, but only occasionally, and not by me. When spoken, it is pronounced aloud as a word, "ay-sap."
<em>FYI</em>, is used only in writing, in memos. I have never heard it spoken.
<em>BTW, IMHO, IMO, BRB </em>are used only in modern online social media (texting and online forums). Others in the same category include <em>YMMV, IIRC, AFAIK</em> ("Your mileage may vary," "If I recall correctly," "As far as I know.")
<em>ETA </em>is used In writing, and in speaking. <em>ETA</em> is pronounced as an initialism, "ee-tee-ay."
I think <em>ASAP</em> and <em>ETA</em> began in the military and go back at least to the Second World War, if not farther.