Trends
After spending several years concentrating on personal fulfillment and
“cocooning,” Americans are now focusing outward, seeking to connect,
enhance and nurture their relationships with others.
Friendship cards, encouragement cards and other everyday non-occasion cards
are proving popular in meeting this need, and continue to show the greatest sales
growth of all card categories. The desire to reach-out with greeting cards appears
to be strongest with Baby Boomers and Generation Xers, who are likely to view
family and friends as the most important priorities in their lives.
Greeting cards featuring high-style looks, inventive designs, unusual paper
stocks and eye-catching embellishments are gaining favor with consumers who are
seeking “something special” in their card-giving. This has led to
the creation of more handcrafted cards, cards that are intricately designed or
innovatively engineered, and cards incorporating ribbons, feathers, glitter, beads,
etc. Despite their higher cost, the designer-fashion flare and artistic uniqueness
of these cards continues to win the favor of many card purchasers.
Generation after generation, people have been saving greeting cards to
remind them of the special relationships and events in their lives. Rather than
tuck their keepsake cards in a dresser drawer or cedar chest, many consumers are
now formally organizing and preserving their greeting card collections to enjoy
time and again. “Scrapbooking” with greeting cards has become an especially
fashionable way to document and share memories of special occasions. Similarly,
many retailers now sell decorative boxes and files designed specifically for storing
keepsake cards. They often include special pages or dividers for jotting down
notes and dates.
E-mail and other electronic methods of communicating have given Americans
a convenient and inexpensive way to keep in contact with friends and acquaintances.
Interestingly, the increased use of electronic forms of communications seems to
be bolstering rather than reducing sales of traditional greeting cards.
Some sociologists believe this is because the Internet has allowed people to
increase the number of relationships they are able to maintain, which they then
subsequently strengthen by sending traditional greeting cards. Others believe
E-greetings are a form of communication that both senders and recipients recognize
as transient and treat accordingly. As such, they turn to traditional greeting
cards to establish an emotional connection that can be saved and cherished.
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