Corporate gifting is a subtle art: too modest, it goes unnoticed; too ostentatious, it causes discomfort. Spring offers an ideal occasion to reconnect with your most important clients through gestures that combine refinement, originality and relevance.
Understanding the Art of Business Gifting
A successful corporate gift fulfils three conditions: it must be memorable, relevant and impeccable. Memorable because it stands out from the ordinary. Relevant because it demonstrates knowledge of the recipient. Impeccable because it respects the codes and boundaries of the professional world.
Our Exceptional Ideas
The Sensory Experience
Offer an exclusive tasting box curated by a sommelier: a selection of rare Japanese teas, hand-roasted micro-lot coffees, or exceptional honey from altitude hives. Each product is accompanied by a calligraphed tasting card and presented in a noble wood case.
The Artisan Object
A signed artisan object: a scented candle crafted by a renowned perfumer (Cire Trudon, Astier de Villatte), a handmade leather notebook, or a Montblanc pen engraved with initials. These objects combine daily utility with enduring prestige.
Nature Sublimated
An exceptional bonsai or a miniature centennial olive tree, delivered in a signed artisan pot with a personalised care guide. A living gift that grows with the professional relationship — a powerful and elegant metaphor.
"The best business gift is one the recipient would never have thought to buy for themselves, yet is delighted to receive. It is in this space of cultivated surprise that the art of corporate gifting resides."
Mistakes to Avoid
- The generic gift — an identical hamper for all your contacts signals a lack of personal investment
- The overly personal gift — avoid perfumes, clothing or jewellery from the intimate sphere
- The promotional gift — an object branded with your logo is not a gift, it is advertising
- The gift without a note — a present without a handwritten card loses 80% of its emotional impact
