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How
to Know if Direct Mail Will Work for Your Business
Here's
a great lesson that applies to direct mail. Ready? Some people say
one thing and do the opposite.
In other
words ...
One
shouldn’t pay attention to what people say they’ll do
as much as what they actually DO.
For
example, it seems most readers of the National Enquirer don’t
want to admit they read it. Just ask people, “You read that
tabloid stuff?”
"No
way! Not me."
Maybe
they’re afraid of looking silly to others? Maybe their embarrassed
to admit buying a paper with headlines like, “Brad Runs To
Jen As Angelina Lays Down The Law.”
Perhaps
they fear people will think they’re too shallow? Un-sophisticated?
Doesn’t
matter.
What
matters to the National Enquirer, of course, is that millions of
readers each week buy it. Whether folks admit to reading tabloids
or not there are a whole lot of those papers being sold. So the
old rule applies… Don’t pay attention to what people
SAY they do as much as what they DO.
What’s
this got to do with direct mail?
Plenty.
If anyone
should LOVE direct mail it would be a magazine editor. Direct mail
is used to sell millions of magazine subscriptions each year.
But
check out what William Baldwin - - editor of Forbes magazine - -
wrote in the July 4th 2005 issue:
“The
junk mail industry, says Chana Schoenberger in the story beginning
on page 90, is giving a new lease on life to Xerox. This firm sells
a $500,000 color printer ideal for customized advertising circulars.
Junk
is a lucrative sector of the ad business, with a $51 billion annual
volume that dwarfs the outlays for magazine advertising. Lucrative,
and wasteful. I don’t know if the catalogs I get from Land’s
End cost more to make than the shirts, but surely they weigh more.
Between
printing and mailing it costs at least half a buck to send a first-class
pitch to someone. If 90% of the recipients chuck the envelope unopened
into a wastebasket, then the pitchman is spending $5 just to get
one advertisement read. Isn’t there a better way of getting
people’s attention? …”
Now…
please ignore the fact Mr. Baldwin writes this even as he gets a
Land's End catalog in the mail.
This
means, of course, that either he, or his wife probably bought something
from it. Which is why he continues getting a Land’s End catalog
in the mail regularly.
Also
ignore the fact that direct mail sales letters have been used to
launch prominent magazine-publishing empires over the years.
Mr.
Baldwin says direct mail is lucrative (for the “junk mail
industry”) yet wasteful (for those using it) at the same time.
Am I missing something here? Doesn’t he know much advertising
is "wasteful", and direct mail sellers only mail things
out over and over again because it’s profitable?
How
many advertising dollars are spent (and wasted) targeting people
who won’t buy because they’re not the right audience
for the sales pitch? How much ad money is wasted paying for commercials
on T.V. nobody watches?
Direct
Mail is Targeted Marketing
There’s
no better… or more cost efficient way… of reaching those
most interested (and most likely to buy) your product or service
than direct mail. And after you reach the person most likely to
buy you’re able to hit all their emotional hot buttons. Give
them all the reasons they should buy from you. Tell them your story.
Person-to-person.
Is there
any waste? Sure there is.
People
live busy lives. Even if your sales pitch reaches the right person
it may not reach them at the right moment in time.
They
might not have time to read it today. Or this week. They might not
be ready to buy again. Your pitch might end up in the trash before
it even gets read.
Overall
... doesn’t matter. Know why?
Because
if you’ve mailed correctly a certain percentage of prospects
are going to read your pitch. They’re going to respond they
way you want them to.
They’re
going to buy ... or call for more information ... or send for the
free sample. You’re going to be offering people something
they want. Maybe even something that makes their life easier. Or
helps them out in some way. Or lets them be more productive. Or
enhances their quality of life somehow.
So how
do you know if direct mail is good for you?
Well
… despite everything you may have read about response rates
… the test is simple.
First
thing though ... forget about the fact everyone says they don't
like getting "junk" mail. The majority of people who get
lots of "junk" mail (and say they don't like it) get on
mailing lists after buying something through the mail.
Now
…
Determine
beforehand if a mailing can make money on paper ... then do a live
test mailing. If, for example, you get a 16% response rate but your
overall mailing costs exceed your net profits then your mailing
is a failure.
Bottom
line … if your net profits from a direct mail campaign are
a lot higher than your costs to do the mailing then you’ve
got a winner.
Some
direct mail companies run successful advertising campaigns with
less than a 1% response rate. They mail millions of ad pieces. But
their mailing costs are low relative to their huge profits - - even
with low response rates.
Response
rates aren't nearly as important as actual profit margins.
Small
businesses usually can’t keep mailing costs extremely low.
If you don’t mail tens-of-thousands of pieces you won’t
be able to get letters and envelopes printed in bulk for pennies-a-piece.
Don’t let that bother you.
If the
numbers work … and your product or service is priced right
… then maybe only a few orders out of every 100 sales letters
will make money.
So what
are you waiting for?
Sit
down. Work the numbers. Do a test mailing.
I bet
if you think about it hard enough you’ll be able to figure
out a way to make direct mail work for you. If you need some help
contact me. And don't worry about what people say. Pay attention
to what they do.
Joe
Farinaccio is a direct-response copywriter. Joe specializes in writing
sales letters and direct mail packages for small businesses. To
learn how you can do direct marketing for your business, or get
help with your sales letters and direct mail packages visit his
website at http://www.sales-letters-and-marketing.com
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