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Robots are handwriting notes for Maine businesses from freeamfva's blog

Robots are handwriting notes for Maine businesses

In a business world where streaming services, social media and online markets have supplanted in-person interactions, handwritten note cards are making a comeback but in a modern way.To get more news about Robot Subscription, you can visit glprobotics.com official website.

Many are being written by robots.

The robot-written cards that mimic human handwriting let businesses send more personalized messages to lots of customers at the same time, and far more quickly and accurately than if they were penned by hand. Several Maine businesses using the company Handwrytten said the notes stand out to clients who receive them, helping retain customers and gaining new ones.

It’s a really nice way to break through the clutter and make an individual connection with someone that’s going to be much more meaningful,” Alden Millar, digital director at Portland-based marketing company Space Pilot Digital, said.

Millar’s company uses the Handwrytten service on behalf of its clients, to help them develop and grow social media presence. He looks for social media influencers who have posted about a client’s product and mails a box of products to them, along with a robot-written card. The card arriving at their office stands out among all the web traffic they get.

His company has about 100 notes per month sent for each of its 15 clients. Millar estimates that having the robot print them saves about 10 hours per client per month over handwriting them. He can choose different writing styles depending on what each client prefers. The cards average $3.75 each plus postage.

Handwrytten, a company based in Arizona, has a warehouse full of 175 robots that scribble out letters to business associates, birthday cards to parents and holiday cards to friends.

The robots write each card individually, based on wording from the customer, and mail it. They use a Pilot pen and try to mimic the look and feel of human handwriting. Millar and others using the service can either choose from 23 handwriting styles the company offers or submit their own handwriting style, which the robotic system analyzes and replicates. Users can design their own card online or choose from more than 100 the company offers.



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