Direct Mail Strategy: Still In Style
Why, when and how to use direct mail to your advantage
May 2007 By Pat FriesenDirect mail also offers the benefit of easier retention and the ability to stand out in the stack of other direct mail messages. (Compare that to a stack of generic-looking, printed-out e-mails.) Not only can a direct mail package be retained for later reference and passed along to a friend or colleague, but also it’s pocket-sized, portable, and can include a product sample or free gift. No downloading, waiting or store visits are required. Plus, it puts the recipient in control of your advertising without annoyance or interruption.
An Integrated Strategy
Yes, direct mail still has its advantages. But with all the media choices now available for targeting customers and prospects, it’s rare that you’ll find direct mail used in a vacuum. And it shouldn’t be. Instead, direct mail can be a powerful partner—integrated with other media—to do one or more of the following:
• Generate Web site traffic. Do more than just mention your URL in your letter or list it with your toll-free number on your postcard. Create an entire mail piece—including the offer—to drive customers and prospects to your Web site. A search engine may get them there, but why not test direct mail?
• Direct people to a unique landing page or personalized URLs. Don’t create a mail piece that sends people to your homepage, and expect them to remember how and why they got there. You may lose them and the opportunity to measure response to your original mailing. Use a landing page or personalized URL to tie your offer and customer to your mailing.
• Generate store traffic. Even though J. Jill, Chico’s, Gap and Banana Republic have retail stores and use e-mail communications to drive store and Web site traffic, they also use direct mail. You never know which medium will drive your customer to the channel through which he or she makes a transaction.
• Make a one-step sale. Even though most solos and self-mailers selling products and services don’t generate mail-in orders, they’re very effective at generating one-step online and phone transactions.
• Identify qualified leads. Direct mail is a powerful and personal tool for providing just the right amount of information to get people to raise their hands and say, “I’m interested.” Then you have the choice of following up in person, by phone or e-mail. Make sure to track and compare your direct mail efforts with those done by phone, online and from referrals. In addition to tracking initial response and close rates, make sure to measure and compare the lifetime value of leads from all sources.
• Provide ink-on-paper sales messages and product benefits. There still are customer and prospect segments that prefer to receive your message printed on paper and delivered by mail. For these audiences, direct mail is more memorable and can be retained more easily for later decision making. If you are tracking, measuring and analyzing results from all media, all sales channels, you’ll know how much of your business is affected by this.
• Support broadcast, space and Web-based advertising. Turn on the TV, then look in your own mailbox and e-mail inbox for examples of how astute marketers integrate media to present a common brand message. A postcard or solo mail piece should be just as effective at communicating your brand as your Web site, TV spots or product packaging.
• Provide customers with a choice. Today’s consumer appreciates having choices. When she’s headed to the beach or to the salon, she may take along your catalog to study the details. Or, when’s she sitting with her laptop in an airport, your e-mail may have her undivided attention. You never know—but she does. And choice is good.
Yes, choice is good. And that’s why it’s good that you, too, have choices when it comes to how to use direct mail as part of your direct marketing media mix.
Pat Friesen is president of Pat Friesen & Co. She can be reached at (913) 341-1211 or friesen_pat@hotmail.com.
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