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In This Issue
Still Relying on Offline Direct Marketing
Five Ways to Double DM Response
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BITS & TIPS

100 "Dirty" Words Not To Use in Direct Mail

Use these words in email subject lines at your own peril: www.snipurl,com/words375
Even email to customers who have whitelisted a company's domain (and opted to receive marketing messages) can end up in the spam bin.
Follow the link above to a great list of not-so-obvious words to avoid.

Popularity of Digital Coupons Soaring

Redemptions for online coupons jumped 140% in 2008, says a recent study by Inmar, Inc., a coupon processing company. Manufacturers in particular are taking advantage of the growing popularity of digital coupons and have benefited greatly, due to the industry's 13% redemption rate. That's well above the 1% redemption rate for coupons found in newspapers and on product packaging.
Info: www.WSJ.com

Anticipate Everything

Please your customers by knowing what they'll appreciate before they know it. Win over new customers by accurately anticipating your competitor's service capabilities and strategies, and then beating them to the punch. There's not a market leader in any business that can keep its position by being complacent. Look ahead, to see what your customers will want in the future. Then plan a strategy to deliver it to them before anyone else in the market place.
(Taken from Tested Secrets of Direct Marketing Success)

Value is not a fixed number.
It is more than just price. Value is relative to what you're selling, what others charge, what the prospect is used to paying, how badly the prospect wants it, and how the prospect perceives the difference between your offer and others. The idea is that you must show a value that seems to be equal to or greater than the asking price. The greater the value relative to the price, the more likely people will respond to your offer.
                                    April, 2009

Small/Medium Businesses Still Rely On Offline Direct Marketing

According to a new study released by Bredin Business Information (BBI), major marketers continue to move online to reach small and medium businesses, despite businesses preference for some offline tactics.

BBI conducted two surveys in late January and February 2009, asking 50 leading marketers about their outreach and research efforts for 2009 and 741 small and medium businesses, about their online and offline media preferences.

Among offline tactics, marketers say they will increase spending on PR and telemarketing versus 2008, while direct mail, print advertising and trade shows will decline. Marketers plan to increase spending on every online tactic surveyed, especially microsites/resource centers, social networking and webinars.

While marketers report a declined interest and investment in most offline tactics, this is in contrast to the channels small and medium businesses say they rely upon -- newspaper and magazine articles (43.6%) and direct mail, including letters, postcards and catalogs (43.5%) are most popular. Phone calls (27.4%) and radio/TV ads (32%) are least popular.

Online, referrals from friends and peers are the most popular source of information on products and services (71.9%), followed by search engine marketing (57.0%), educational websites (44.5%) and email newsletters (38.2%). The least popular online formats are ads on cell phones/PDAs (8.1%), videos/podcasts (19.2%), forums/chat rooms (20.2%), and social networking sites (27.8%).

Source: Print in the Mix March 26, 2009 newsletter www.printinthemix.com
5 Ways to Double Direct Mail Response

In his latest report, 101 Ways to Double Your Response Rates, copywriter Ivan Levison declares the secret of better direct response lies in the taking care of all the tiny details of whatever you're writing. There is no magic bullet when it comes to rapidly increasing response rates, but if you handle these details appropriately and apply proven techniques to your mailing, success is likely around the corner.

Here are five ways to boost response that he mentions in this report:
    1. Put the right information in the Johnson box.
    What should you include there? The offer. The main product benefit. The phone number to call or the URL to visit. The expiration date of the offer. The guarantee. Mix and match these as appropriate.

    2. Use the Johnson box in the right kind of letter.
    If you're writing a nonpersonalized letter that's going out bulk rate in a window envelope using teaser copy, a Johnson box will fit right in. After all, it's part of the "classic package" format. (Don't scoff at it. It still works!) But if you're writing a first-class letter, in a close-faced envelope riding First Class, the Johnson box will look cheap and out of place.

    3. Be clear. Be honest.
    Your guarantee should spell things out in simple terms and never scare people away with legalistic clauses or "fine print." You know those TV commercials local car dealers run? The ones with the eight sentences of unreadable type that flash on the screen for a nanosecond at the end? You want your guarantee to do just the opposite and make an unqualified promise of satisfaction.

    4. Use a border around the guarantee.
    Never, ever bury a guarantee in body copy! That's a great way to lose one of the most compelling elements of your mailing. The guarantee should float as a separate element surrounded by a corny border, or at the least, a one-point ruled line. You want your guarantee to jump out and get read. Many companies ignore this rule and miss out. Don't let yours be one of them!

    5. For the brochure, give your Question & Answer section a title. Never just say, "Questions & Answers" and let it go at that. Always try to warm things up with a little personality and add a "finished" quality. Some headline title examples:
  • Five commonly asked questions about contact management software.
  • Do you know the answers to these important database questions?
  • How to select tax preparation software-straight answers to tough questions.
  • Do you have questions? We've got answers!
By Ethan Boldt, editor-in-chief, Inside Direct Mail

Please contact me with any questions or comments.
Michael Vitch
President
Compu-Mail | 800.255.0670 | www.compu-mail.com