Mar 11, 2018 07:17
6 yrs ago
1 viewer *
English term
A banner to celebrate a company\'s moving to a new office
English
Marketing
Business/Commerce (general)
I need to write an English banner for AAA Company to celebrate its moving.
I am thinking about:
1) Office Warming Celebration For XXX
2) Congratulations on XXX's move to new premises (though I think it's too long as a banner)
But I believe there'll be some better versions. Thanks in advance for your help!
I am thinking about:
1) Office Warming Celebration For XXX
2) Congratulations on XXX's move to new premises (though I think it's too long as a banner)
But I believe there'll be some better versions. Thanks in advance for your help!
Responses
5 +2 | Congratulations to Company XXX on Relocating to New Premises | Morad Seif |
4 +1 | Welcome XXX to your new office/premises! OR Congratulations XXX on your relocation/move! | Yvonne Gallagher |
References
Ref. | Taña Dalglish |
Responses
+2
16 mins
Selected
Congratulations to Company XXX on Relocating to New Premises
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Note added at 18 mins (2018-03-11 07:36:20 GMT)
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To put in another way:
"Company XXX": Congratulations on Relocating to New Premises
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Note added at 18 mins (2018-03-11 07:36:20 GMT)
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To put in another way:
"Company XXX": Congratulations on Relocating to New Premises
Peer comment(s):
agree |
acetran
4 days
|
Thank you so much.
|
|
agree |
Reza Mohammadnia
4 days
|
Thank you so much.
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
+1
3 hrs
Welcome XXX to your new office/premises! OR Congratulations XXX on your relocation/move!
I think "welcome" would be far more common in English in these circumstances.
You can use caps
Welcome XXX to your New Office/Premises!
You could also use the option "Congratulations XXX on your Relocation/Move" or even "Congratulations XXX on your new office/premises"
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Note added at 3 hrs (2018-03-11 10:58:53 GMT)
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Just seen Björn's comment and it seems strange to me as well that a banner is being hung from a building. That's why I was thinking "welcome" would be more common as the company is moving in.
You can use caps
Welcome XXX to your New Office/Premises!
You could also use the option "Congratulations XXX on your Relocation/Move" or even "Congratulations XXX on your new office/premises"
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Note added at 3 hrs (2018-03-11 10:58:53 GMT)
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Just seen Björn's comment and it seems strange to me as well that a banner is being hung from a building. That's why I was thinking "welcome" would be more common as the company is moving in.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Björn Vrooman
: My agreement wouldn't have moved the needle in this case, but I will post-grade regardless. I agree with you and Terry that "Welcome" would be a more apt solution (also regarding word length; it's a banner). But with no real context and asker feedback...
18 days
|
another asker gone onto my "don't bother answering list"...can't give context when asked and can't be bothered grading either...
|
Reference comments
5 hrs
Reference:
Ref.
Like Björn, I am confused. I have never seen notifications of moving in any medium using the word "congratulations".
See: https://www.esigns.com/templates/wemovedsigns/
We need more information.
https://www.thk.com/?q=sg/node/2854
Notice of Office Relocation
See: https://www.esigns.com/templates/wemovedsigns/
We need more information.
https://www.thk.com/?q=sg/node/2854
Notice of Office Relocation
Peer comments on this reference comment:
agree |
acetran
3 days 21 hrs
|
Thanks.
|
|
agree |
Björn Vrooman
: These are good examples, in line with what I posted in the discussion box. Sadly, the asker didn't reply before the question was closed.
18 days
|
Thank you Björn.
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Discussion
"New Year, New Office!":
http://www.mtm-inc.net/new-year-new-office/
If the exclamation mark isn't good enough, you also have:
"Come see our new office!"
http://www.vicyakima.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/VIC-News...
Or:
"Excited to present..."
http://glossretouching.com/gloss-la-has-a-new-office/
...or similar.
I don't quite understand "Congratulations on..." Maybe I'm missing something. I thought the company was celebrating, not someone else congratuling them on the move?
Best
Thanks for your question. It's hung from a building. Sorry I don't know who is intended to see it or any other info.