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Greeting
Card Tango: How to Impress, Not Stress, During the
Holidays
When it
comes to holiday greeting cards, to send or not to send is often the
question. Once you have decided in the affirmative, you then have to
determine who to include on your list, what kind of card to choose
and how to address the envelope.
There are
lots of reasons for sending those holiday cards. You might want to
enhance your current business relationships, attract new customers,
remind old clients that you exist or show appreciation to those who
have faithfully supported you during the year. What is obviously a
well-meaning gesture can actually offend the people you want to
impress when it is not done properly.
The first
place to start is with a good quality card to show that you value
your clients and colleagues. Skimping on your selection can be
interpreted in a number of ways. Your recipients might take it as a
sign that business has not been good or that they aren't worth a
little extra investment on your part.
Make sure
your list is up-to-date with correct names and current
addresses. If you do this on a regular basis, it does not
become a dreaded holiday chore. As you gain new clients and
contacts throughout the year, take a few minutes to add them to your
database and mark them for your greeting card group. This way you
won't overlook anyone or embarrass yourself by sending the card to
the old address.
Sign each
card personally. Even if you have preprinted information on the card
such as your name - which is an impressive detail -you need to add
your handwritten signature. The most elegant cards should still have
your personal signature and a short handwritten message or greeting.
Sound like a lot of trouble? If the business or the
relationship is worth it, so is the extra effort. This is your chance
to connect on a personal level with your clients and
colleagues.
Take the
time to handwrite the address as well. If you are ready to
throw up your hands at this point and forget the whole project, then
have someone else address the envelopes for you. Whatever you do,
don't use computer-generated labels. They are impersonal and make
your holiday wishes look like a mass mailing. You may save time and
even money, but lose a client or a business associate in the
process.
You may
mail your greeting to the home if you know the business person
socially. Be sure to include the spouse's name in this instance.
The card is not sent to both husband and wife at the business address
unless they both work there.
Whether
you are addressing the envelope to an individual or a couple, titles
should always be used. It's "Mr. John Doe," not
"John Doe," or "Mr. and Mrs. John Doe, rather that
"John and Mary Doe."
Be
sensitive to the religious and cultural traditions of the
people to whom you are sending your cards. Find out whether
they observe Christmas, Hanukah or Kwanzaa and make sure your message
is appropriate for each individual. If you decide to go with one card
and a single message for all, choose a generic one that will not
offend. "Season's Greetings" and "Happy Holidays"
are both safe bets.
Mail your
greetings in time to arrive for the designated holiday. If you find
yourself addressing the envelopes on Super Bowl Sunday, keep the
cards until next year and send out a high-quality note thanking
people for their business during the previous year instead.
The best way to avoid the last minute greeting rush is to have all
your envelopes addressed before Thanksgiving. Then during December
you can leisurely write a short message - one or two lines are all
that is necessary on each card, sign your name and have them in the
mail with a minimum of hassle.
You now
have all the time in the world for the shopping, baking, decorating
and celebrating that accompany the holiday season.
Additional Tips for Addressing Envelopes
If you
are about to address your holiday greeting cards or the invitations
to the company party and you are confused about the correct way to do
it, you are not alone. There are situations that we have not had to
consider before. There are more women with professional titles,
increased numbers of women who retain their maiden name after
marriage, and couples choosing alternative living arrangements.
The simple act of addressing an envelope has become quite
complicated. Here are a few tips to cover the majority of those
demanding dilemmas.
Always
write titles on the envelope. The card or invitation goes to
"Mr. John Smith," not "John Smith." It is
addressed to "Mr. and Mrs. John Smith," instead of
"John and Mary Smith."
When you
address a couple, use titles, rather than professional
initials. It's "Dr. and Mrs. John Smith," not
"John Smith, M.D. and Mrs. Smith."
If both
the husband and the wife are doctors, you write, "The Doctors
Smith." However, if they use different last names, you
address the envelope to "Dr. John Smith and Dr. Mary
Brown." The husband's name is placed first.
If the
wife is a doctor and the husband is not, you send your invitation to
"Mr. John Smith and Dr. Mary Smith."
Try to
get it all on one line. When the husband has an unusually long name,
the wife's title and name are indented and written on the second
line:
The
Honorable Jonathon Richardson Staniskowsky and Mrs.
Staniskowsky
When a
couple is not married and share a mutual address, their names are
written on separate lines alphabetically and not connected by the
word "and."
Ms. Mary
Brown Mr. John Smith
When the
woman outranks her husband, her name is written first. It's
"Major Mary Smith and Lieutenant John Smith."
Note: The man's name is always written first unless the
wife outranks him or if the couple is unmarried and her last name
precedes his alphabetically. So much for "Ladies
first."
© Lydia
Ramsey. All rights in all media reserved.

About the
Author
Lydia Ramsey is a business etiquette expert, professional speaker, corporate trainer and author of MANNERS THAT SELL - ADDING THE POLISH THAT BUILDS PROFITS. She has been quoted or featured in The New York Times, Investors' Business Daily, Entrepreneur, Inc., Real Simple and Woman's Day. For
more information about her programs, products and services visit her web site at http://www.mannersthatsell.com
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