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Within Business Cards
The end of the year is the one moment when a business relationship can quietly deepen or quietly fade, and the difference often comes down to whether someone felt genuinely acknowledged. A holiday card from a company lands differently than a discount email or a branded calendar — it signals that a person, not a marketing department, thought of the recipient. That specificity matters even more in a business context, where most communication is transactional by design. A handwritten note cuts through the professional noise in a way that a printed mailer simply cannot.
Cards From You handles the entire process: a real person writes your message in real ink on a physical card, seals it, and mails it to your clients, vendors, or team members anywhere in the United States. You can send one card or several hundred, personalize each message individually, and schedule delivery so cards arrive in the window between Thanksgiving and Christmas when recipients are actually paying attention. No bulk-printed signatures, no laser-etched "handwriting" fonts — just a card that looks and feels like someone sat down and wrote it, because someone did.
Aim to have cards delivered between December 9 and December 20. Sending before that window risks the card getting buried, while sending after risks it arriving when offices are closed or staff are out. If your clients observe Hanukkah, Christmas, or New Year's differently, scheduling delivery for early-to-mid December covers most bases without making assumptions.
Short is not only acceptable, it is usually better. Two to four sentences is the standard: acknowledge the year you shared, express genuine appreciation for the relationship, and wish them well going into the new year. Avoid referencing specific deals or revenue — the point is warmth, not a recap of Q4.
Each card can carry a fully individual message, which is the whole point of using a handwritten service over a print shop. You can reference a specific project, a person's name, or something unique to that client relationship — that level of personalization is what makes the card feel like it was actually meant for them.