Alright, let’s
stop this right now! We DO need cards in English, too! You always see us
posting across our social sites asking for people to make cards in other
languages and highlighting the languages that we’re missing, but to tell the
truth, the only hospitals/homes that don’t want cards in English are the Ronald
McDonald House in Quebec, Brazil and Portugal and Haiti’s Hope for Children. Also,
Dr. Sonrisas wants cards in Spanish. All other locations want cards in English.
Well, okay, Children’s Hospital and Clinics of Minnesota asked us to specialize
in getting them cards in Somali and Spanish, but they will still accept cards
in English.
In this post we
want to highlight why we’re consistently pleading for cards in other languages
and apologize if it seems like we’re not expressing our thankfulness for the
cards in English. Once again, since some of the behind the scenes people have
business degrees, we’ll have to use some business terms to attempt to explain
everything. The first thing we can think of is Supply and Demand.
Holiday cards remaining from last year, #bestnightmare.
So far in
2019, we’re very far ahead of where we started in 2018. We just hope it keeps
going.
We’ve been
partnering with more locations and sending more cards, but those locations have
been wanting a different breakout of cards. For example, our new location in
Maine requested cards in English and Somali. One of our new partners in Illinois,
Maryville Academy, requested that about 85% of their cards are in Spanish. Then
there are other breakouts like one hospital that wants 75% of cards in Spanish,
three want 50% Spanish and another requested a 25% Spanish composition. Then
there are several of our lasting partners who have requested languages across Europe,
Asia, and Africa. That’s why we created this special slide for the PowerPoint
that’s supposed to play in the background during events.
Now we know
that as we grow in the United States and strive to reach our goal of getting
all the cities on the map, we’ll need a LOT more cards.
With that in
mind, we’ll likely need cards in even more languages based on the diversity
within the USA, as well as our growth outside of this country. Therefore, we’ll
consistently appreciate the cards in English – especially if they’re on lasting
card stock rather than flimsy construction paper but based on the MARKET CONDITIONS and our current
supply and demand, we’ll have to consistently request cards in other languages.
Here’s a list of some of the languages we need the most:
- English
- Spanish
- Romanian
- Arabic
- Somali
- Russian
- French
- Portuguese
- Creole
- Chinese
- Vietnamese
- Polish
- Korean
- Kinyarwandi
This prior post has some ideas in other languages - https://cardzforkidz.blogspot.com/2013/12/nope-im-all-set.html.
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