Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Only Statistics You Can Count On


I wish I had a nickel for every time I have been asked “what response rate can I expect from this type of product” or “do you have any statistics on someone else’s similar campaign”. Invariably when I am asked to quote on a direct marketing project I get asked these questions. In order to provide some kind of response to these questions, I maintain a few a case studies and I can always check The DMA’s or PODI/Caslon’s Response Rate Report or even the USPS’s Household Diary Study. But, the real question is should I?

I contend that it is impossible to predict with any degree of certainty how one campaign would perform versus another of the same type.

Why?

Even if the same direct marketing medium and offering are similar, that is where the similarity will end. Here are some of the key differences in all campaigns:

1) Differences in name recognition of the sender
2) Difference in copy, color, art/design
3) Difference in geography and demographics of the target audience
4) Timing of the offer
5) The number of touches and contact cycles employed

I’m sure that there are other differences, but these are significant enough to insure that one campaign result will not look like another.

So how should I answer the inevitable question regarding response rate or success?

The correct answer is that there is only one way to truly know how your campaign will perform.

That is to run your own campaign and analyze the results and then modify the campaign, using any of the above differences to try to improve the results. This is commonly known as testing.

If you ask any direct marketing pro what the secret of successful direct marketing is, their answer will invariably be “Test, Test, and Test”. This is another reason not to conduct “one and done campaigns”. They are rarely successful and even if you get lucky, they are probably not repeatable.

So while there are lots of statistics available and even a whole passel of case studies, I highly recommend that you use outside marketing expertise to help you create a winning campaign rather than predicting the outcome of your campaign before it runs.

If you would like more information, give me a call. Let me help you set up a marketing campaign that includes email notification when the delivery of the mail piece is imminent. These campaigns have real teeth and get much improved response rates.
Learn: www.intelimailer.com

Watch: http://youtu.be/He429Ylw3l8

Build: https://storefront.acculink.com/Promo/Login.aspx

Friday, August 17, 2012

Study: Direct Mail Most Effective for Non-Profits

ATLANTA—A study carried out by research company Campbell River on behalf of the non-profit advisory body, Dunham+Company, found that people were more than three times as likely to donate after being contacted by direct mail than by e-mail.

The researchers asked people making a donation what had prompted them to make a contribution to the charity. The portion of people who were donating after receiving a direct mail appeal was 17 percent, more than three times higher than the 5 percent who had been prompted to donate by an e-mail.

Rick Dunham, CEO of Dunham+Company, described the results of the study as “a bit of a shock.” Dunham notes that recipients pay more attention to a physical object that comes into their mailbox than e-mail, which he points out is easily deleted.

According to the study, donors in the 40-59 age categories are the most responsive to direct mail—47 percent of them responded to receiving a letter by making a donation in 2012, which is a dramatic increase from 34 percent in 2010. Donors over the age of 60 also respond well to direct mail—24 percent of them donated in 2012 after receiving a letter, an increase of 6 percent since 2010.


Printing Impressions Magazine, 2012

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Track for Increased Response


Given all of the issues we hear about the USPS recently, it has become difficult to predict, with any degree of certainty, the time line for delivery of a direct mail piece. Delivery could take a few days or it could take a few weeks depending on the class of mail and the distribution of the pieces across the country. We mail campaigns every day and the only way, up until now, we were able to determine the delivery time was by seeding the list or waiting for responses to come in. Why would you want to know when a mail piece is being or has been delivered? What could you do with that information?

1.    Begin measuring response rates and ROI

2.    Prepare your team to expect and respond to inquiries

3.    Send an imminent delivery email notification to the recipient that raises their interest level in anticipation of receiving the forthcoming direct mail piece.

So how can you know when a mail piece is or will be delivered? Look no further than the Intelligent Mail Barcode. The Postal Service has mandated that we all switch to the IMB in January 2013. At this point, in the transition to IMB, over 95% of all mail is being scanned and “clocked in” when it enters the postal system and at several points along the delivery path including the “stop the clock” final delivery point facility just before it goes into the carrier’s hands for delivery to the mail box.

By identifying the date of actual delivery, sending an email to alert the recipient that an important mail message is coming today or tomorrow could mean a significant increase in response rates. The anticipation of knowing that a personalized, highly relevant mail piece is being delivered can become a strong marketing message.

Tracking the IMB is not something that all marketing organizations are prepared for or adept at yet. Paying for tracking and notification from some service providers can be expensive and restrictive. Be sure your provider knows what they are doing tracking the IMB and not just guessing at the delivery date.

AccuLink has linked the InteliMailer and other direct mail products to the IMB scanning by the USPS so we can successfully track mail pieces all the way to the “stop the clock” delivery point.

If you would like more information, give me a call. Let me help you set up a marketing campaign that includes email notification when the delivery of the mail piece is imminent. These campaigns have real teeth and get much improved response rates.

Ed Glaser
Chief Marketing Officer
252.321.5805
ed.glaser@acculink.com


Website: www.intelimailer.com

Storefront: https://storefront.acculink.com/Promo/Login.aspx

InteliMailer Video: http://youtu.be/He429Ylw3l8