Video biz is dream come true

Published: Saturday, April 25, 2009 10:47 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

Ten years ago, Matt and Jenny Baker were young marrieds barely into their 20s, just stepping onto the ladder of life, liberty and the pursuit of bill-paying.

He had a master's degree in technology and was selling timeshares; she was working as an office manager at a rental car company. Their first child, Alex, was 1 year old.

And they wondered: How do we live the dream?

Their definition of the dream was this: an occupation that they both enjoyed, that they could contribute to equally, that they could do out of their home, that would give them the freedom to take time off when they wanted, and, oh yeah, pay the aforementioned bills.

Matt was good at selling timeshares because he's yet to meet the person he doesn't want to talk to. Jenny was good at office management because she's yet to meet the office she couldn't manage. She could run a small country.

On some level they intuitively understood that their whole would be much greater than the sum of their individual parts.

One day either Matt or Jenny — maybe it was simultaneous — came up with the idea of combining their God-given gifts and … shooting wedding videos.

Story continues below

There were a few businesses that shot weddings — recorded the big day on film, edited it down and produced a keepsake documentary. But they typically cost several thousand dollars and priced most couples out of the picture.

Matt and Jenny decided they'd try to capitalize on the new technology and do it at a price people like them — "young couples who couldn't afford it" — could afford.

For about $5,000 they bought a video camera, a computer and editing equipment and shot their first wedding for a favorite but very cheap uncle of theirs for free.

I know this because I was the uncle.

If it turned out badly, no one could ask for their money back.

It turned out the opposite of badly. Kerri and I got married. Matt and Jenny got started. "Happily Ever After Video" was born.

For the next couple of years, neither Matt nor Jenny quit their day jobs, but they kept shooting weddings on the side, getting more bookings as word of their business spread.

Finally, they quit everything else, stopped commuting, transformed a guest room in the basement into an editing bay and turned their home in Sandy into world headquarters of Happily Ever After Video.

Recent comments

They did my daughter's wedding and they are AWESOME. Great to work...

Shauna Petersen | Aug. 10, 2009 at 6:48 p.m.

A good price deserves good business. I've seen a lot with your same...

T-mugg | April 26, 2009 at 8:10 p.m.

It cant be beat to stay at home and be successful, thats the...

Rick | April 26, 2009 at 5:52 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

watch out for next year for sure, the negatives are just closet (and...

And something else, I generally follow players from the state schools when...

I could care less that Max Hall said what he did. The feeling is mutual BYU...

BYU is champion of the state

Dear Max, probably could have done without that comment. Probably would've...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

As a Utah fan, let me first say congratulations to Max Hall, the Cougars, and...

Geno's and Pat's are good.. but, they are mostly for tourists, the real...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

(You even got a middle initial... how's that for 'ya Max) It's nice to see...

Air Up There, The

Even today, I still cannot get enough of this movie or Charles Gitonga Maina....

Cougars beat Utes in overtime

...disappointed with Max Hall's comments that he hates everything about UofU....

Over the last few days I read comments of people complaining about tasteless...

Advertisements