106-years-young Hallmark is evolving with the collaborative economy
April 28, 2016 | Kat Hungerford
The collaborative economy is everywhere.
You may have heard it by another name — like the sharing, on-demand, access, peer, freelance or gig economy. You’ve definitely heard of its national headliners Uber and Airbnb, but it also has a local presence with firms like PopBookings, Farmobile and MachineryLink.
Since first showing up on radars eight years ago, the collaborative economy has grown to a $15 billion powerhouse, said Crowd Companies founder Jeremiah Owyang during a Thursday presentation at Hallmark. Within the next ten years, he said revenue is forecasted to swell to $335 billion.
Crowd Companies members — among them Kansas City-headquartered Hallmark — are Fortune 1000 enterprises that know the collaborative economy is here to stay. They have realized the need and opportunity for innovation within this comparatively young economy, said Mary Putman, Hallmark’s vice president of digital innovation strategy.
“Jeremiah is a thought leader who works with brands to help solve business problems,” Putman said. “We wanted to learn from him and other brands that are also trying to figure out how to best provide value in this new paradigm.”
The collaborative economy is an economic model where common technologies enable people to get what they need directly from each other, Owyang said. Its peer-to-peer nature has created a new kind of brand loyalty, he added.
“The trust level that we had before was a company’s logo — like here at Hallmark, it’s the crown,” Owyang said. “But a different trust market has emerged. It’s the five-star rating.”
Recognising these kinds of changes, established corporations are finding new and innovative ways to bring the collaborative economy into their business models. Auto makers like BMW, Daimler and Audi have launched car-sharing services. Whole Foods teamed up with Instacart to let consumers shop their stores from home. And Hallmark is working with local craftsmen via its Crafters & Co. brand to bring new products into its stores, Putman said.
Corporate innovation and adaptation like this isn’t easy, Owyang points out.
“You have to give props to big companies for opening up to the crowd,” he said. “There’s always this risk and reward when working with people who are not directly your employees.”
Hallmark is also working on additional collaborative economy innovations. As brick-and-mortar stores switch their focuses to better survive ecommerce competition, Hallmark hopes to partner with sharing economy companies to meet consumer demands.
“We want to use the crowd to provide even better products and save people time,” Putnam said. “For example, by using Postmates or Uber Rush to deliver products (directly to consumers).”
But the collaborative economy isn’t the final stage of economic evolution, according to Owyang. Big companies can expect to have to continually innovate to stay with fast-paced times.
“Unfortunately, some people in the (collaborative economy) crowd are going to be supplanted or replaced by robots,” he said. “The autonomous economy is the next phase, and it’s on the horizon and coming fast.”
Owyang defines the autonomous economy as a future state when intelligent technology systems operate without humans to enable new business models in an efficient society. Think self-driving vehicles, drone delivery and AI customer service. We will first be capable of realizing this new economy in 2022, he says, although full integration will take much longer.
Hallmark isn’t worried about its place in such a future, according to Putman. In fact, brands like Hallmark that facilitate connections between people can expect to thrive in such an environment, she added.
“The automated economy is an emerging space that offers opportunity and will be full of change, but one thing never changes and that is the desire for people to stay connected with and do meaningful gestures for those they care about most,” Putman said. “As people have more time in an automated world, Hallmark can help them with these underlying human needs.”
Below is Owyang’s record of the major businesses operating in within the collaborative economy.
Featured Business
2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
1 Million Cups presenters have shot at $10K
One of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s most popular programs, 1 Million Cups, will soon be offering entrepreneurs more than its typical morning refreshments. Program leaders announced Wednesday that it’s launching the “One in a Million” competition, in which former presenters in the program could snag $10,000. Now in more than 70 cities worldwide, 1…
DivvyHQ raises $1.8M for marketing tech
Kansas City-based DivvyHQ is ready to hit the gas after its latest investment round that will more than double its team. The marketing tech firm recently closed on a $1.8 million Series A round to boost its staff headcount and marketing outreach. Investors in the round include Dallas-based venture capital firm DAN Fund, Dundee Venture…
Mental health startup Start Talking goes mobile, scores $150K in tax credits
Depression affects about one out of every 10 Americans, including at one time Start Talking founder Mark Nolte. While a rough time in his life, Nolte’s struggle with depression in 2010 eventually led him to launch a venture that’s more easily connecting people with the help they need. Lenexa-based Start Talking offers patients a psychotherapy…

