Target Marketing

You will be automatically redirected to targetmarketingmag in 20 seconds.
Skip this advertisement.

Advertisement
Advertisement
 
 

Five Ways for the Letter to Overcome Short Attention Spans

January 2008 By Ethan Boldt
Every day, marketers battle the shrinking attention spans of their potential customers. While the electronic channels appear to operate on the same wavelength—and, in part, created those waves of attention and inattention to begin with—of our scatter-brained society, direct mail naturally struggles with it.

Direct mail requires the prospect to read sentences, paragraphs and—gasp!—even pages. How anachronistic. Of course, unless it wants to go extinct, every company that uses direct mail needs to acknowledge this attention-span problem and adapt—just as it is grappling with the postal rate changes. But, no, that doesn’t necessarily mean gutting the package.

Instead, consider six ways to get that attention back just long enough to improve your chances of getting a response.

1. Provide Plenty of Value
Just because prospects have decreased attention spans, it doesn’t have to follow that letters get shorter, says Peggy Greenawalt, president and creative director of Tomarkin/Greenawalt in Hartsdale, N.Y. “It has always been true that when you give people the feeling that they are getting a lot of stuff for their money—value—they are more apt to buy. A long letter makes it seem like you’re getting a lot, even if the reader just scans it,” she remarks.

If you do make the letter shorter, she recommends you use a four-page booklet format in a smaller size. That way, “you can cram in a feeling of ‘more stuff,’” says Greenawalt.

But there’s a method to such creative madness. Instead of filling the open air around the Johnson box and the signature, as well as the big margins in an 8-1/2˝ x 11˝ letter, or writing long lines to use up the margins, Greenawalt says to fold a similar sheet size to four pages so the real estate can be used more efficiently. Also, she advises to not drop the still effective P.S.

2. Make It Quick, Even if It’s Long
The trick to overcoming the perceived attention-span problem is to make a letter a quick scan, suggests Greenawalt, who says that the important words and ideas must pop visually.

She lists these examples: a great Johnson box, easy-to-spot subheads, underlines, highlights, color and handwritten margin notes, short phrases, short paragraphs, and a repeat of the words you want heard.

3. Make Sentences Short and Sharp
What about the letters with apparent flab? “Only badly written letters have flab. People who don’t know how to sell tend to write long sentences and to use proper grammar they learned in school,” asserts Greenawalt, who urges copywriters to write the way they talk. “If your ear can catch it, your eye can catch it,” she says.
 

Companies Mentioned:

SPONSORED CONTENT

MORE ON DIRECT MAIL & POSTAL >>

FROM THE BOOKSTORE

(PDF DOWNLOAD)

Who’s not talking about QR codes lately? Since appearing on the US marketing scene two years ago, QR codes have revolutionized the way businesses promote their products and brands. So what exactly is this stamp sized, abstract art-looking module? And how can your business benefit from it? <i>Cracking the QR Code</i> outlines <b>how to seamlessly incorporate QR codes into your marketing campaign</b> by explaining:

• How QR codes work and which companies and industries they work for best
• How to implement a marketing strategy for QR codes
• QR code creative best practices
• The future of QR codes and more!

Let <i>Cracking the QR Code</i> teach you how to <b>get a passive prospect to take immediate action</b>. See how QR Codes can <b>successfully transform your marketing efforts and increase traffic to your site</b>. Find out how to integrate QR Codes into your marketing campaign and how to track and measure the results. Learn more about the technology that has revolutionized the way businesses promote their products and brands.  

Read case samples from well-known companies using QR Codes, including: Best Buy, Big Fire Wine, Gap, Calvin Klein, Gap, Home Depot, Time Out New York, World Wildlife Federation, Sibcy Cline Real Estate, and more!

<i>Cracking the QR Code</i> helps you navigate your way through this up and coming technology, which has been labeled the <b>“direct link between print and the internet.”</b> In the past year alone, QR codes have skyrocketed in popularity; first quarter 2011 scan rates increased more than 4,500% over first quarter 2010 rates. With numbers like that, it’s difficult to ignore this rising trend in marketing strategy. Don’t get left behind; order your copy of <i>Cracking the QR Code</i> today to learn how you can apply this tool to your business!

<u>About DirectMarketingIQ</u>
The Research Division of the Target Marketing Group, DirectMarketingIQ (www.directmarketingiq.com) is the marketers’ go-to resource. Publishing books, special reports, case studies and how-to-guides, it opens up a new world to those who seek more information, more ideas and more success stories in order to boost their own marketing efforts. DirectMarketingIQ has unparalleled access to direct marketing data – including the world’s most complete library of direct mail as well as a massive library of promotional emails across hundreds of categories – and producly produces content from the most experienced editors and practitioners in the industry.

<b>Note: You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to read Cracking the QR Code, which is in PDF format.</b> Cracking the QR Code

(PDF DOWNLOAD) Who’s not talking about QR codes lately? Since appearing on the US marketing scene two years ago, QR codes have revolutionized the way businesses promote their products and brands. So what exactly is this stamp sized, abstract art-looking module? And how can your business benefit from it? Cracking...

ORDER NOW

(PDF Download)

Direct mail, email, mobile, social media, video, search ... the marketing landscape can either be a minefield where mistakes can kill campaigns, or a perfectly integrated mix of channels that maximizes the reach of the message and gives a nonprofit the best chance to capture more donor dollars.  

<b>In <i>"The Art & Science of Multichannel Fundraising" </i> from DirectMarketingIQ, the roadmap to that "perfectly integrated mix" is thoroughly laid out in over 130 pages -- <u>it's specifically created (and priced) for nonprofits</u>. </b>
  
First, 9 chapters from leading fundraisers give you the latest best practices in multichannel fundraising, including how to:  

• Choose the right channels for your campaign 
• Develop creative that works across multiple channels 
• Revitalize the direct mail component of your multichannel mix 
• Make sure email plays its increasingly important role perfectly 
• Seamlessly integrate mobile marketing into the fundraising campaign 
• Boost your online strategy with social media 
• Create a multichannel donor renewal campaign 
• Figure out that you're doing right — via testing and results measurement 
• Use all the pieces of the multichannel puzzle  

Second, in 8 robust case studies, find out the secrets behind multichannel fundraising campaigns that worked.

About DirectMarketingIQ
The Research Division of the Target Marketing Group, DirectMarketingIQ (www.directmarketingiq.com) is the marketers’ go-to resource. Publishing books, special reports, case studies and how-to-guides, it opens up a new world to those who seek more information, more ideas and more success stories in order to boost their own marketing efforts. DirectMarketingIQ has unparalleled access to direct marketing data – including the world’s most complete library of direct mail as well as a massive library of promotional emails across hundreds of categories – and producly produces content from the most experienced editors and practitioners in the industry.

<b>Note: You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to read , The Art & Science of Multichannel Fundraising which is in PDF format.</b> The Art & Science of Multichannel Fundraising

(PDF Download) Direct mail, email, mobile, social media, video, search ... the marketing landscape can either be a minefield where mistakes can kill campaigns, or a perfectly integrated mix of channels that maximizes the reach of the message and gives a nonprofit the best chance to capture more donor dollars....

ORDER NOW

 

COMMENTS

Click here to leave a comment...
Comment *
Most Recent Comments: