Archive for the ‘Contests’ Category.

Name Our Blog Contest Reminder

 

There are only 4 days left for our “Name Our Blog Contest.” So far, we’ve received over 130 entries from people across the country. We’ve got some very creative customers and fans out there!

Remember the person who submits the winning entry will win a $250 gift certificate for Giftsin24.com. We will continue to accept entries until September 15th, 2009, at which time our marketing team will deliberate until the best name is chosen from entries received.  The submitter of that entry will receive a $250 Giftsin24.com gift certificate and worldwide acclaim on our blog!

To those of you who have already contributed, thank you for your creativity and enthusiasm. For those of you yet to participate, there’s still time! Simply comment on the Name Our Blog Contest blog and be sure to enter your email address in the appropriate field so we can contact you if you win.

Name Our Blog Contest

 

Blog. It’s such a funny word. Doesn’t really evoke much emotion or excitement, does it? No, I didn’t think so.

That’s why we want to name our blog, and we’d like your help. Through September 15, 2009, Giftsin24.com will be accepting blog title suggestions. The winning blog title will receive a $250 Giftsin24.com gift certificate for use on any Giftsin24.com products.

We’re looking for a name that’s hip, catchy, and relevant – something that will grab our readers’ attention and make them want to read more. We’ve been working at this for quite a while and haven’t come up with the ‘right’ title yet. We’re hoping for your sake and ours that you’ll come up with THE ONE!

Rules:

1. Submit all entries into the comments so that everyone can see them. Be sure to enter your email address correctly (it will be kept private) to ensure our ability to contact you, should you win.

2. Suggest as many names as you want.

3. The name should be:

  • Hip,
  • Concise,
  • Catchy and
  • Relevant (something at least remotely suggesting personalized gifts and stationery)

Prize:  Out of the suggestions we receive by September 15, 2009, our illustrious team of marketing experts will pick the winning blog title, announce the winner, and bestow upon him/her the glorious prize of a $250 Giftsin24.com gift certificate.

To submit your idea, just comment on this blog post. I look forward to reading your creative ideas!

The Winner of the National Card and Letter Writing Month Essay Writing Contest

Short, Sweet, and Worth Holding Onto

Giftsin24.com and Samara O’Shea are pleased to announce the winner of their National Card and Letter Writing Month Essay Contest.

Don Blankenship was a bit of a trouble maker in his youth. Looking back, he’ll willingly admit that he was hungry for attention, but I’m sure at the time he would have said no such thing. It’s safe to assume that he was not the type of teenager who would have been moved by a letter from his grandmother. Why then, all these years later, does he still hold  tightly to a simple missive she wrote to him in honor of his graduating from high school? It was his thorough explanation of his relationship with his grandmother’s letter that moved us. His story is a great reminder of the power of retrospect. It is a gift to look back at a situation and see it with new eyes. It’s how we uncover ourselves. We are pleased to share with you Don’s winning essay and his grandmother’s letter.

$150 gift card for Giftsin24.comjournal-writing-bookletter-writing-book

Letter from a Poignant Pen

By Don Blankenship

At the time, it didn’t seem like much, a handwritten note scribbled on rose colored stationary. Gripped with the excitement of my impending high school graduation, I nonchalantly tucked it into a shoe box in my closet. When things died down, I would make the time to send the obligatory thank-you note. After all, my grandmother would understand. She knew how I had worked for this moment, and she would want me to take the time to revel in my success. Her closing lines had summarized this fact so succinctly: “Remember to stop and enjoy the view, but never dally too long, there are other mountains to climb. You, dear one, are among the best of mountaineers.”

Characteristic of her lighthearted sense of humor, she had made a reference to my West Virginia heritage.  In the Mountain State, I had grown-up surrounded by my large immediate family: two brothers, two sisters, and myself. My parents worked diligently to meet our necessities, and as the family’s self proclaimed teenage rebel, I hadn’t made their lives easy. I was constantly skipping school, falling in with the wrong crowd, and testing any authority figure that would muster the courage to produce a challenge. My younger years were driven by vain attempts for attention-a product of intense sibling rivalry. I craved the spotlight and was less than reticent in securing its glow.

My grandmother, who lived several hours away in Northern Ohio, had sensed this longing. Although our relationship had consisted of a few stolen moments during school breaks and on holidays, somehow, she had a special way of making me feel important. At times, it seemed as if I was the only person in her world. My success and happiness took precedent above her personal indulgences. Freely she offered devotion, and as a young egotist, I satiated myself in her attention. Of course, a milestone such as my graduation would warrant a written response. While the letter wasn’t particularly lengthy, I could almost feel the emotion emanate from its pages.

I never got around to writing that thank you letter. Grandma died that summer of cardiovascular disease; however, the letter she wrote is no longer relegated to the recesses of my closet. It sits neatly folded in a decorative glass jar on my nightstand. When the obstacles seem too multiple to bear or my heart is filled with bliss over life’s numerous joys, I remove the letter and savor its wisdom. It comforted me with the death of a close aunt, and I chuckled as I read it the day I graduated from college. Somewhere located in those few scrawled lines her spirit lives, continuing to reach out with so much consideration left to give.

Dear Grandson,

Congratulations on your graduation. I knew you could do it! Unfortunately, I cannot be there to watch you walk across the stage, but know that I am rooting for you. You have made me very proud.

It seems that only yesterday you were a baby, and now you are crossing one of life’s major milestones. Education is the stepping stone on the path to greatness, and you are well on your way. Remember to stop and enjoy the view, but never dally too long, there are mountains to climb. You, dear one, are among the best of mountaineers.

With much love,

Nana

National Card and Letter Writing Month Essay Writing Contest at the Giftsin24 Blog

5/15/2009 Update:

Giftsin24.com and Samara O’Shea are pleased to announce the winner of their National Card and Letter Writing Month Essay Contest. We are pleased to share with you Don Blankenship’s winning essay and his grandmother’s letter.

From April 1st to May 1st 2009

Win a $150 Gift Certificate and 2 Books on Letter Writing & Keeping a Journal

Hi this is Samara O’Shea. I’ve written two books proclaiming my love of writing. If I told you that you had the power to make someone’s day, would you do it? I’m telling you: You have that power. There is a very simple act that takes a little bit of time and the best of intentions, and it’s guaranteed to put a smile on the recipient’s face. Write a letter! I kid you not. Even in today’s world of fast food and faster communication, a letter is still worth its weight in gold. It is proof positive that someone cares about you enough to sit down (rather than text on the go) and thoughtfully say thank you, I miss you, I love you, get well, or let’s get together. Imagine receiving a handwritten letter amidst all the junk mail and bills that usually clutter your mailbox. It’s a breath of fresh air. I count it among life’s greatest pleasures-right next to an afternoon at the spa.    Continue reading ‘National Card and Letter Writing Month Essay Writing Contest at the Giftsin24 Blog’ »