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Heartfelt New Job Wording for Sister
When you're writing a heartfelt new job card to sister, the tone has to do two jobs at once — fit the moment and fit the relationship. Here are 10 wording ideas that thread that needle.
A new-job card is one of the most underused cards in the deck. It costs almost nothing to send and lands at exactly the moment someone is feeling a little nervous and a lot hopeful. The good ones name the move specifically — the company, the role, the leap — and end with a small vote of confidence rather than a generic "good luck."
10 Heartfelt Messages for Sister
Congratulations on the new role. Whatever they're paying you, it isn't enough — but the fact that they noticed what the rest of us have known all along is a good sign.
Few people get to start something that fits them. You've earned this one. Wishing you the kind of first ninety days that remind you why you took the leap.
I know what it took to get here — the late nights, the second-guessing, the patient saying-yes to the right things. Congratulations. They're lucky to have you.
A new job is a small leap of faith on both sides. They picked well. Here's to a chapter that surprises you in good ways.
Sending you every good wish for the new role. May the work be challenging, the people be kind, and the coffee be drinkable.
Congratulations on the new chapter. Whatever the first day brings, remember why they wanted you in the room.
The right opportunity at the right time is rare. This one looks like both. Wishing you the best as you settle in.
It takes courage to start over, even when the move is up. I'm proud of you. Onward.
Here's to the new desk, the new badge, and the new team that's about to find out how lucky they are.
Wishing you a soft landing and a strong start. You've got this.
Personalizing this further
Name the move specifically — the company, the title, the team. "Congrats on the senior PM role at Stripe" lands harder than "congrats on the new job." If they were nervous about the change, acknowledge the courage it took. End with a small, sincere line of confidence — "they're lucky to have you" — rather than a generic "good luck."
A heartfelt card to sister rarely fails when you anchor it to one specific moment between you. Skip the universal lines; reach for the one only you could write.
What to avoid
Don't compare the new job to the old one in a way that disparages either. Skip salary jokes, bro-y "crushing it" energy, or warnings about the new boss. Don't ask when they'll be promoted again — they just got there.