Recipient Experience

The moment should feel personal the second it arrives.

QC is designed as an emotional journey: arrival, anticipation, reveal, and memory. The recipient experiences pacing, not noise.

Product informationUpdated April 2026

Arrival window

A private notification arrives at the scheduled time with enough context to signal that something meaningful is waiting.

Why it matters: The message lands when attention is available instead of disappearing into a crowded feed.

Example: A support note appears minutes before an important exam, not hours too early or after it is already over.

Anticipation and countdown

QC can hold a short countdown before the full reveal so the recipient pauses before opening the message.

Why it matters: That pacing creates focus. The moment feels intentional instead of dropped in abruptly.

Example: A calm "opens in 00:30" countdown adds tension without turning the experience into a gimmick.

Reveal sequence

Message text, visuals, and optional voice layers can appear in a controlled order instead of all at once.

Why it matters: The recipient experiences a composed emotional arc rather than a stack of content competing for attention.

Example: A photo appears first, then the message, then a voice layer that deepens the feeling.

After the moment

Delivered moments remain accessible in private history so they can be revisited later.

Why it matters: Important words stay easy to return to when they matter again, instead of getting buried or lost.

Example: An anniversary message can be reopened months later and still feel preserved.

Experience direction

The recipient flow should read like a quiet narrative, not a notification workflow. Motion, countdown, and reveal timing should support emotional clarity instead of chasing novelty.

  • Use gentle fade and slide transitions between stages.
  • Keep countdown motion calm and restrained, never abrupt.
  • Let media add atmosphere without overpowering the message itself.

Next step

See how QC’s core features support that recipient experience across scheduling, delivery, and privacy.