Current:Home > StocksAre you ready for your close-up? Hallmark cards now come with video greetings -EverVision Finance
Are you ready for your close-up? Hallmark cards now come with video greetings
View
Date:2025-04-11 16:37:41
Hallmark is famous for putting its customers' feelings into words, but the message inside the company's new video greeting cards comes straight from the sender. The service lets users upload personal videos made by family members, friends or anyone else they choose to invite, then Hallmark edits them together with music and graphics.
"It just makes for something that's unforgettable," says Krista Masilionis, Hallmark's global innovation director. "We've been around for 110 years. I want us to be around for another 110 more, so we've got to be there as the way people are connecting changes, and digital is how they're doing it."
The Greeting Card Association says the tradition of exchanging messages of goodwill goes back to ancient civilization. These days, more consumers are getting accustomed to connecting on camera, especially since the start of COVID-19. Banking on that trend, Hallmark is the biggest brand yet to start packaging video greetings for a price – $4.99 for the digital-only version that can be shared by text or email. For a dollar more, the sender can choose a traditional paper card that arrives by mail with a code inside for the recipient to scan with a smartphone to watch the greeting. Either way, the final product expires in six months but can be downloaded for keeps.
Digital greetings catch on during the pandemic
The industry term for these greetings is "digital expressions," and a handful of smaller companies beat Hallmark to this still-emerging market. Tribute says it was the first, starting in 2015. Its prices range from $29 for a DIY version to $100 for the full-service "concierge" option, which includes all the editing, plus perks like email reminders for contributors if the sender sets a deadline.
In Tribute's first five years in business, it sold about a million montages. That number spiked to 5 million and counting after the pandemic started. "There's been this absolute, you know, shift in consumer behavior over the past two years in the pandemic, where people are now all of the sudden comfortable, for better or worse, on video," says CEO Andrew Horn.
Some more than others, if procrastination is any indication. Tribute's data shows that 80% of people invited to submit videos don't submit them until the day they're due, or even after. "It does tend to take more effort," Horn acknowledges. "But now people are also starting to see that, like many things in life, some of the most rewarding things that we do are those that are challenging, and so people are embracing that challenge because they're seeing that the impact is actually profound and legitimate."
Horn adds that Tribute tries to frame its requests for videos as invitations. The potential for some video invitees to feel obligated to participate troubles Bernie Hogan, a sociologist and senior research fellow at Oxford University's Internet Institute. "What's bad is when that is an inorganic process — when that process is fostered or focused by social pressure or social convention."
The final product might not reflect the amount of time and effort each video took to make, Hogan adds, from choosing the right background and deciding what to say, to recording multiple takes. "The more it's boxed by somebody else's parameters, the less it feels sincere and the more it feels like a performance," he says. "You don't want a practice that leads to resentment."
Manners for social media might still be a work in progress, but some old-school standards apply, says author and etiquette expert Lizzie Post, who is a co-president of the Emily Post Institute and a great-great-granddaughter of its namesake. When sending a video greeting, Post says the person organizing the effort should make it optional for contributors and take the pressure off.
"Really encouraging people to not feel like they have to go over the top, to not even feel like they need to put on makeup or do their hair or something like that," she says. "Frankly I think sometimes the ums, uhs, or the starts or the 'Squirrel!' moments that someone might have on camera are actually so much more exactly who they are."
As for people who choose to take part, Post warns that when making videos, always assume they could go public and don't rush the recording. She adds one tip from personal experience: Doing too many takes can take the fun out.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- A Tree Grows in Birmingham
- Electric bus maker Proterra files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
- Storm-damaged eastern US communities clear downed trees and race to restore power
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Jay-Z's Made in America 2023 festival canceled due to 'severe circumstances'
- As a writer slowly loses his sight, he embraces other kinds of perception
- Campbell Soup shells out $2.7B for popular pasta sauces in deal with Sovos Brands
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Khloe Kardashian Shares Photo of Daughter True and Nephew Psalm in Casts After Injuring Arms
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- White House holds first-ever summit on the ransomware crisis plaguing the nation’s public schools
- Mattel announces limited-edition 'Weird Barbie' doll, other products inspired by movie
- In Mexico, accusations of ‘communism’ and ‘fascism’ mark school textbook debate
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- COVID-19 hospitalizations in the US are on the rise again, but not like before
- University of Georgia fires staffer injured in fatal crash who filed lawsuit
- Teen sisters have been missing from Michigan since June. The FBI is joining the search.
Recommendation
Average rate on 30
The 2023 MTV Video Music Awards Nominations Are Finally Here
Revitalizing a ‘lost art’: How young Sikhs are reconnecting with music, changing religious practice
Stranger Things Star Noah Schnapp Shares College Dorm Essentials for the Best School Year Yet
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Beauty on a Budget: The Best Rated Drugstore Concealers You Can Find on Amazon for $10 or Less
Amazon nations seek common voice on climate change, urge action from industrialized world
5 white nationalists sue Seattle man for allegedly leaking their identities