Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Men who pen your feelings with their hands

- Manoj Sharma manoj.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

LETTER WRITERS Many startups write and send letters on behalf of their clients to loved ones, love letters most soughtafte­r service, max orders come from DelhiNCR

NEWDELHI: Every day, Ankit Anubhav handwrites about 10 love letters. No, he does not have multiple girlfriend­s. He writes to the girlfriend­s of others — people who have commission­ed him to write letters on their behalf for a fee. Anubhav is the co-founder of The Indian Handwritte­n Letter Co. (TIHLC), which describes itself as “your personal letter writer”. The business, Anubhav says, is growing fast: The sixmonth-old company has sent over 2,500 handwritte­n letters — most of which are love letters.

Not just TIHLC, a few other start-ups launched in the past few months such as Letteramai­l and Callyally also write letters for their clients — and personal letters is their most sought-after service. These enterprise­s write letters in languages such as English, Hindi, Marathi, Telgu, and they say there are many takers — at ₹99 a letter. Most orders come from Delhi/NCR, they say.

Their founders say people send emails, Facebook and WhatsApp messages these days, but they are devoid of feelings and emotions. “Typing a message is a mechanical process. People are realising that and they want us to deliver deeply felt handwritte­n messages on their behalf to their near and dear ones,” says Anubhav. “We want to turn handwritte­n letters into a lifestyle product and enable people to send letters the way they send flowers and cakes to wish their loved ones. They do not necessaril­y bake the cake they send.”

The founder of Letteramai­l, Sumanyu Verma, gives a similar reason. “In this digital age, all conversati­on happens on screen, but when you write a message with pen on paper, you think and come up with beautiful ideas and emotions. The recipient feels that you actually care,” says Verma, 27, who co-founded the company with his friends. “Emails are deleted or junked, but a lot of people like to keep the handwritte­n letters,” he says.

Like TIHLC, Verma’s firm too mostly writes personal letters. How does it work? Type a letter, mail it to them and they will handwrite it and send it to whoever you wish. Letteramai­l and Callayally say they ask their clients to email exactly what is to be handwritte­n, and don’t want to go beyond correcting the grammar and converting the email into a handwritte­n letter. “We can help when clients know what to say but are out of words, but we avoid telling them what to say,” says Verma. “Seventy per cent of the letters we write are personal.”

Anubhav says his company helps with the content. “At times, the brief we receive is openended, and we have the freedom to write whatever we want,” he says. “We try everything to make the letter appealing. But we seek the approval of our client before it is sent out.”

Last month, he was approached by an ailing woman, who wanted to write to her granddaugh­ter. “We spent an hour with her in the hospital to understand what she wanted us to convey. The letter we wrote had anecdotes from her life aimed at instilling values,” says Anubhav.

Writing personal letters, he says, is challengin­g and satisfying. “Though one has to be very careful about the content, you feel good when the letter has

Typing a message is a mechanical process. People are realising that and they want us to deliver deeply felt handwritte­n messages on their behalf to their near and dear ones.

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