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FAQ's
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the strengths of Direct Mail?
When designing a mailing program, it's helpful to keep the medium's
unique capabilities utmost in mind. That way, you're likely to
take advantage of everything that it has to offer. Consider mail's
five special strengths, and how you can make them work most effectively
for you:
° Targetability: When you use mail,
you select exactly whom you want to talk to. You speak to people
in their own language and about their individual needs. You can
target many different ways, such as geographically, demographically,
and combine approaches for still greater selectivity. You can
even time your efforts to coincide with a critical point in a
customer's buying cycle.
° Measurability: There's no guesswork
when it comes to the results of a mail campaign, and virtually
no waiting. If you've got a winner worth rolling out, you know
right away. By allowing you to rapidly compare the merits of
various strategies, mail provides the kind of knowledge that
will help you in every aspect of marketing.
° Accountability: Because you can prove
that mail works, it becomes its own justification. As responses
pour in, the value of your program speaks for itself. This high
level of accountability enables you to proceed with a high level
of confidence.
° Efficiency: With mail, you know that
every dollar you spend is being directed at people who are genuine
prospects for your product or service. Instead of paying for
circulation or viewership that may not be relevant to your needs,
your budget is working all-out where it really matters.
° Flexibility: Mail can handle a wide
variety of advertising or marketing tasks. Mail can sell directly,
of course. But it's also the medium that can deliver a sample
right to the consumer, bring back the information you need to
build a database, or develop a dialogue that helps to create
a lifetime customer.
How does Direct Mail relate to other
advertising media?
Many marketers have found that a mailing's response will be higher
when it's part of an integrated campaign, which also includes
advertising in the print or broadcast media. The resulting "recognition
factor" can work in favor of a mailing and bolster its results.
How does Direct Mail's cost-per-thousand
(CPM) compare the other advertising media?
For mail, the CPM is greater than those of the print and broadcast
media. However, mail's cost per response and in many cases its
cost per sale is in fact the lowest of any advertising medium.
Recall that, by definition, the CPM figure refers to the cost
per thousand people reached. Most broadcast and print vehicles
include a considerable amount of "waste circulation,"
bringing your message to thousands or even millions who are simply
not interested in your product or service. But with mail's precision
targeting, a marketer can zero in directly on the right people,
and not spend money reaching large numbers of the wrong people.
With mail, you pay to contact fewer individuals, and every one
of them really matters so the result is the industry's hardest-working
advertising dollar.
How important is the list in a Direct
Mail effort?
Important indeed. In fact, most Direct Mail professionals regard
list choice as the single most critical element in determining
the success of a mailing. A good list can pull ten times as many
responses as a poor list. No matter how well crafted your mailing
may be in other respects, if it isn't reaching the right people,
your product or service results will suffer.
How can the success of a Direct Mail
campaign be measured?
It depends on what you want your campaign to do for you. Ask
yourself some questions. Are you selling directly and looking
for cost-per-order that provides a certain profit margin? Are
you trying to build in-store traffic? Are you attempting to create
long-term customer loyalty? Do you want to generate requests
for information at a certain cost-per-inquiry? Are you willing
to settle for a break-even response rate if it means garnering
a list of names that you can continue to sell to in the future?
In other words, the measure of your success is in the mastery
of your goals.
When I send out a mailing, how long
should it take for responses to start coming in, and when can I be fairly certain that responses
have run their course?
Response time will depend on whether you mailed First-Class or
Standard Mail A. First-Class packages reach their destinations
sooner, and so naturally bring back a faster response. If you
chart responses against time elapsed, you'll generally see the
classic "bell-shaped" curve.
Should I follow up with a phone call?
You can enhance your mailing efforts with a telemarketing program.
Most mailing lists have phone numbers available as well. This
is a good tool to use as a follow up to a direct marketing campaign
to remind the consumer of your product or service. |