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Covenant
Designs
18 ESEENTIAL ELEMENTS That Can Make or Break Your Dallas Direct Mailing Marketing
Campaign
by
René Gnam -- Database Marketing Guru
1.
A terrific product or service is essential.
Otherwise,
people won't return to buy from you again.
An important direct marketing concept: the back end is more important
than the front end. In other words, getting your customers to buy from
you again is most important and you won't get them back unless you have
a terrific product or service.
If your
product or service can stand on its own without a lot of hype, you will
get repeat customers.
2.
Your mailing list can make or break your mailing.
How can you possibly create a successful mailing without knowing who you
are mailing to? You must know their thoughts, dreams, and goals. Know
their demographics (how they are) and psychographics (how they would like
to be). And when you write copy to them, write to them expressing the
way they would like to be, not how they really are.
Most
people want more out of life than work and their paycheck. Promise them
more in your direct mail piece.
In addition,
choose lists that can grow with you. Select vital lists that can return
repeaters to you and you will do so much better in your marketing.
3.
Your offer can dramatically increase your results.
Too many of us use the same offer over and over again. Good offers to
good lists are two key elements to the success of a mailing package.
Test
your new offer even with the lists you've been using all along and your
results should go up.
4.
In creative work, copy writing skills are vital. Art attracts but COPY
SELLS.
Concentrate on the correct copy for the appropriate audience. Proselytize
them with the appropriate offer and then you've got a good, strong package.
Your
wording must appeal to the reader by informing, persuading, cajoling,
convincing and motivating the reader.
There
are only three types of people to whom you mail. They are:
- Those
who will buy from you.
- Those
who won't buy from you.
- Those
who might, but they need a little push in your direction.
If you
get argumentative in your copy, you turn off all those who will buy from
you. Concentrate on the in-between group with your copy. Inform, persuade,
motivate and inspire them.
5.
Good design should lead the eye. It should not dominate the display.
The design does not sell -- even if you're selling Caribbean vacations.
Art attracts, explains and enhances, and good art will let the copy make
the sale.
Write
the copy first. Design once you know how long the copy is, when you know
the key copy points, and once you know to whom it is going. Design follows
copy, and then design gets the reader hooked and leads the reader to respond
by using the response form.
In all
instances, do not have your art display dominate your mailing package.
You want the reader to understand everything the first time it is read.
If the reader has to read it twice you lost him!
6.
Format selection influences the reader's attention.
A self-mailer (one not mailed in an envelope) allows for fast decisions.
Your prospect may feel a self mailer is a bulletin, an announcement or
an annoyance: "Let me glance at this and throw it away." The
reader doesn't pick it up with the idea of reading every word but rather
"do I want to get rid of this?"
The
reader has 17+ pieces of direct mail on his desk each day and he needs
to get rid of them. So, produce your self mailer
with a powerful headline and design it in a way that traps the reader.
Then, the reader thinks: "Oh, I can make a fast decision."
A mailer
in an envelope is more complicated. The reader may think: "there's
a lot of stuff in that envelope and I don't know if I have time for it."
So it may be set aside. Then it gets piled on and the mailing package
may never be seen. An envelope mailer is okay, but not when it says to
someone, "It's going to take two hours to read this thing!"
That's how you lose readers.
7.
Proper timing is essential.
You need to reach prospects at a time that is convenient for them. Mail
to people at a time when they're not grossly involved - like their busy
season - and when they've got the time to read your message.
8.
Budget restrictions can severely hamper results.
Saving a few pennies per thousand may mean you create the wrong impression
on your audience. What you want to do is test with the most powerful presentation
possible. If the test is successful, then the second time you mail, modify
the expense on the new package (B) and test against the more expensive
one (A). This will help you see if B, at the reduced cost, pulls as well
as A, at the higher cost.
9.
You must take advantage of A/B split testing.
Never, ever mass mail without doing some split testing. The point is to
get information back that you can use in the next mailing.
10.
Segmented marketing can achieve very high responses for you.
Select a segment of names from a database and mail them a given proposition.
When you are selling the same product to different groups (clusters) it
is important to use a different approach, touting different benefits.
Remember to treat each cluster individually.
11.
Tailor your mail to an individual prospect.
Tailored mail PULLS BEST because it talks to the reader as an individual.
When tailoring mail, you must change more than a couple of headlines.
The first few paragraphs of the letter could be different to suit a specific
reader's interest.
In addition, tailoring means the order form will be composed with different
benefits on it. The outgoing envelope or headline portion of a self-mailer
will also speak right to the reader's interests.
When
you tailor your mail to the specific interests of the reader, you will
pull far better.
12.
Personalization pays.
This includes personalized reply cards and letters which will ALWAYS outpull
non-personalized mailings. But, you have to be sure to use personalization
in a natural way. Don't personalize so that every paragraph has a personal
message. It's a turn off and makes people think you're scamming them.
If you are personalizing, you must take very special care to talk with
your computer programmers and inform them that you are personalizing the
mail. Otherwise, mistakes are made.
13.
Options put your prospects in a power position.
If you don't offer the reader options, you don't pull as well as if you
do offer options. Once you get the reader to pick up a pen to choose an
option, you've got him.
The
more options you put in, the more you pre-qualify the recipient. However,
too many options will exhaust the prospect instead of getting him to contact
you.
14.
Urgency lifts your total response.
If the reader sets aside your mail piece for later, it will not be read
again. Give a deadline to force the reader to read it and make the deadline
as specific as possible.
For
contests, sweepstakes, lotteries, or prize drawings in which the prospect
must qualify, use the time of day, along with the day and date. The more
specific the deadline, the better the pull.
15.
Risk relievers, such as guarantees or warranties, build confidence.
Your prospects are tired of a rip-off society. Guarantees and warranties
need to be highly specific and point out why it is appropriate for the
reader to deal with you.
Double
guarantees outpull single guarantees. So, try this Gnamism: If one works,
try two. If two work, try more. It may increase your response dramatically.
16.
Use reinforcers, such as testimonials and case histories, which state
your product or service is really the best.
If someone else says you're great, that's better than you saying you're
great.
17.
Benefits are better than features and are more important than features.
People buy benefits. They don't buy features. They use the features
to rationalize the benefits. And there must be more than one benefit.
A smart
marketer sets his/her product apart from all others by promoting benefits.
18.
The response command.
Telling someone to do something works better than assuming the prospect
knows what to do. For example, the outside of an envelope should say "Open
Now" or "Look Inside." Once inside, tell them to fill out
the order form and fax it back. Here's where you need to push a little.
Covenant
Designs' Creative services, Graphic Design services and Direct Mail services
are applied to Command
Attention and get results.
Copyright © 2000-2008 by Covenant Designs Marketing Communications
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