Buying a greeting
card for someone's birthday, anniversary, or if they're
feeling under the weather is pretty straightforward. But
what if they're undergoing chemotherapy or struggling
with depression? ''Get Well Soon'' probably won't cut
it. Likewise, most cards lining the store shelves
don't work on occasions as someone leaving an abusive
spouse, undergoing drug rehab, or declaring their
sexual orientation.
Hallmark Cards Inc., which has built its $4.2
billion empire on sentiments for life's happier times,
is releasing a new line of cards that will speak to
those and other situations that the company says have
either been ignored by greeting card companies or received
only a smattering of attention from niche players.
For illness: ''Cancer is a villain who doesn't
play fair...but it can't dim your spirit, and it can't
silence prayer.''
For eating disorders: ''All I want is for you to
be healthy--healthy and happy with yourself.
Please take it one day at a time until you are.''
For depression: ''When the world gets heavy,
remember, I'm here to help carry it with you.''
The 176-card collection, called Journeys, went
on sale Thursday at Hallmark's 3,800 Gold Crown
stores. Cynthia Musick, the editorial director who
oversaw Journeys, said the cards' writing provides more
personal messages of support, encouragement, and hope, for
which the company's research showed there was a demand.
Theresa Steffens, an assistant product manager
at Hallmark, said a majority of online and focus group
respondents said they couldn't find what they were
looking for when needing an encouragement card. ''Either
the consumer said they were walking away from the display or
they were just unhappy with the card that they
purchased, so we saw this as a huge opportunity,''
Steffens said.
Customers said they wanted cards dealing with
more real-life situations. ''They said, 'I don't know
what to say during a difficult time, so I don't say
anything at all,''' Steffens said. "So again there's an
opportunity there to help them talk through these tough
situations that they're dealing with and to foster
that communication.''
The $7 billion greeting card industry already
brims with tiny niche players who make and sell cards
dealing with such things as serious illness or
thanking caregivers, said Barbara Miller, a spokeswoman for
the Washington, D.C.-based Greeting Card Association.
But she said none of them have the ability to reach
customers searching for those types of cards across
the country. ''My guess is, it's a breakthrough for a large
company like a Hallmark,'' she said.
The new line includes cards tackling cancer
diagnoses, quitting smoking, caring for an aged
parent, miscarriage, anniversaries of loss, loved ones
in the military, and traumatic loss, such as someone dying
in an accident or homicide. Others are more happy and
even humorous, celebrating a year being cancer-free,
nearing the end of chemotherapy or general
encouragement for teenagers. There are even a few birthday
cards encouraging the recipient to celebrate even
though they've had a rough year.
No topics were off-limits, said company
spokeswoman Rachel Bolton, noting two cards that could
be sent to gay people who have disclosed their
sexuality. The cards don't directly refer to homosexuality,
only extolling the person to ''Be You'' or ''This is
who I am'' or featuring a rainbow, a symbol of gay pride.
Bolton said the writing is general enough for
other uses, however, with one focus group member
saying they would send it to a friend starting a new
job. ''Our findings determined that people didn't want to be
labeled or identified,'' Bolton said. ''We want to be
inclusive and not exclusive.''
Steffens said Hallmark is limiting Journeys to
its Gold Crown stores because research showed those
customers devoted the most time to selecting a card
and Journeys invites a great deal of reading. But she
said the company may eventually target a smaller range of
the cards for hospital gift shops and some drug stores.
While Miller, with the Greeting Card
Association, said the greeting card market is largely
stable these days, Steffens said the Journeys line
could help Hallmark move the needle a little bit, especially
with customers who haven't bought cards because they
couldn't find what they needed. ''We're aware
[Journeys] won't be as successful dollar-wise as
[humor-related line] Shoebox because they're more
specific,'' Steffens said. ''We're prepared for that.
We believe it hits a completely different market.''
(David Twiddy, AP)