I admit it. I made the whole thing up. A complete fabrication. Scrapbookers all over the Internet completely bought (and bought and bought...) into it. And yeah, I'm pretty proud of myself.
Sometimes it pays to be a guinea pig. I've always been a bit of an "early adopter" - finding out about new technologies and ideas, and trying them out at the beginning of their popularity (though I realize I'm no Connie Bensen - she's a Web 2.0 animal!)
This past February when I heard an interview with Publicity Hound Joan Stewart, I knew I had found another idea I just had to try.
She was talking about how niche holidays can help generate a lot of publicity for a brand or company. My marketing brain went nuts, and I couldn't wait to email my client/friend, Susan, at Triscape, makers of FxFoto. In fact, here's a snippet of the email I sent her on 2/8/07:
"I did some quick research and we can do this -- you
need to start and host Digital Scrapbooking Day. No one has "proclaimed" this day yet, so we can just pick a day and call it. It will be a day to create awareness of and celebrate the capabilities of digitally enhanced scrapbooking -- from editing your photos to printing out your journaling to finding inspiration online to creating fully digital layouts."
She responded back not two hours later, and we began to work. Deciding when to hold the event, what it would "officially" celebrate, who should be involved, who to contact, how to make it "official", etc. So many details.
Despite how it may have seemed from newsletters announcing website & blog events last week, it’s not that Digital Scrapbooking Day “caught on so quickly” - it really was a 9 month process. You really need at least that long to get widespread coverage, because all the various participants need time to plan. Print magazines need usually 3-6 months lead time to include content, sometimes more, if they want to work it into the editorial calendar. In the scrapbooking industry, local and online stores sometimes need about the same amount of time to work something in to their class calendars and newsletters. Blogs can be updated more quickly, but if the bloggers want to work up resources to produce something in conjunction with your news, they'll need some planning time too.
So yes, I "made up" Digital Scrapbooking Day, but there was a lot very real work involved, and I certainly can't take credit for all of it...