The thinking of The National Stationery Show is stationary.

I love the stationery industry and I realize now more than ever that invitation retailers and manufacturers have a big fight ahead of them. I also realize how much I care about this industry. This year’s show was an indication to me that my role is shifting as more of retailer advocate than anything else. At least that is how I was naturally postured in my open discussions with CEO’s of independently owned major brands such as Inscribe, Birchcraft, Checkerboard and Envelopments. I was also very vocal at a conference on Saturday talking about the future of the Stationery Industry and a meeting of the Invitation Stationery Alliance.

At both meetings a focal point was how retailers should embrace technology, become more invested in the efficiency of digital printing and look to align with major online retailers like tinyprints.com. I agree that retailers should embrace technology but in a different way. I believe their biggest focus should be to use technology to bring in traffic to their stores whether it is designing a web site that speaks so loudly that a bride will pick the phone to call or to take a drive to visit. Perhaps another way to embrace technology is to have computers in the store so customers can look at images or type wording themselves and have a feeling of being “hands on.” Any retailer knows that there is nothing more “hands on” than the tactile experience of seeing and feeling live samples and having an invitation professional make sure every detail is perfect. However, the new generation is addicted to online connectivity so we have to go with the “current” and have more electronic devices present in our stores.

One of the major points I brought out to anyone who would listen is that stationery brick and mortar retailers and their manufacturers need to unite collectively to make sure that the retail environment has online presence in any search for stationery a consumer makes. My major concern continues to be the continuing lowering of the bar on what constitutes a quality invitation. More and more people that buy online that are left to their own “devices” to select an invitation. They are left without the excitement and the passion that retailers convey as well as the options to customize an invitation that is uniquely theirs. The end result is that the average amount of money spent on invitations will continue to decrease which can having a crippling effect on retailers and manufacturers alike. So who wants to step to the plate and help me????

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One Comment

  1. Posted May 25, 2010 at 10:55 am | Permalink

    Hi Brian,

    I just read your latest blog, and I definitely agree with you. It’s a constant battle! As I may have mentioned, when customers come to me for addressing, I cringe when I see the invitations they bring in (frequently from Wedding Divas, or maybe they made it themselves through Paper Source). They are always surprised to see the albums I have on my shelves, and they look at my invitation displays and sometimes say they wish they had come to me first. Recently a woman who moved here from New York called me about invitations for her daughter’s wedding, looking for the highest possible discount. I told her she could look online and find them for 30% discount. She then told me she wanted the personal attention that someone like me would give her, but with a high discount! I did emphasize the importance of going to someone with expertise in invitations, and that mine was worth a lot. I also explained that I could help her customize the invitation to make it personal for her daughter. I don’t know if she’ll call back or if she’ll go with the least expensive thing she finds. I could tell from her conversation that money really shouldn’t have been her primary concern.

    I’m already changing how I do things. I put my laptop on a table in my studio, with a large monitor attached to it, and whenever possible, I use it with my customers. They really do like that! It’s especially helpful if they are considering a Checkerboard invitation, because I can design it on line (hint, hint) and they see it immediately.

    As you know, I’m not a brick and mortar store, I’m happy to help you in any way that I can. Please keep me up to date on what you’re doing, because I think your ideas are critical to the future of our industry.

    Best regards,

    Lynne
    Lettering by Lynne

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