Transcript

DM DAY 2001DM DAY 2001Fundamentals of Fundamentals of

Direct Marketing to ConsumersDirect Marketing to Consumers

John M. Coe

President

Database Marketing Associates

Scottsdale, AZ

480-778-9900

My Objectives TodayMy Objectives Today

• Present to fundamentals of consumer direct marketing to you.

• Give you the opportunity to ask questions on issues or problems that you are facing today.

AgendaAgenda

• Trends and Issues

• Breaking through the clutter

• List, Offer and Creative

• Media

• Testing

• Measurement

Three Key Issues Three Key Issues • Clutter

– There has been a six fold increase in the last 20 years in messages we see or hear in our daily lives.

– It’s now between 3,000 and 5,000

• As consumers we are on overload and are increasingly tuning out – Response rates are declining

• The privacy issue is headed straight at direct marketers

Breaking Through the ClutterBreaking Through the Clutter

• Tighter targeting and segmentation leads to increased relevancy of message and offer.

• Personalization that recognizes the relationship you have with the recipient of the communication.

• Media combinations that overlay

Breaking Through the ClutterBreaking Through the Clutter

• Permission based programs and relationship marketing– Not just an web based program

• Great offers or very unique selling propositions – Consumer think most products and

services are commodities

• Straight talk

The Interplay of the Three The Interplay of the Three Direct Marketing Elements Direct Marketing Elements

• Targeting and list 40 – 50%

• Offer 30 – 40%

• Creative & media 30 – 40%

The Wonderful World of ListsThe Wonderful World of Lists

• There are over 100,000 lists available– SRDS Mailing List Books

• Three general types of public lists– Compiled– Response/purchase– Co-op databases

• House or customer

The List BusinessThe List Business

• Owners, managers and brokers

• Co-op databases

• Rental vs. purchase

• Seed names

• List accuracy and decay rates

More List StuffMore List Stuff

• All lists have “selects” and your targeting process should identify the proper “selects”– Typical selects

• Most DM campaigns use multiple lists and there is normally a merge/purge process.

• Correct postal preparation is important as well.

Targeting for list selectionTargeting for list selection

• “Affinity” list selection is a process of deciding how closely the list matches the characteristics of your most likely customer.– Prior behavior is the strongest predictor of

response and campaign success

• Profiling and modeling is a database approach that takes actual customers and enhances and then profiles the file with demographic and lifestyle information.

RFM as a Targeting ModelRFM as a Targeting Model

• Recency of purchase

• Frequency of purchases

• Monetary value of purchases

• Score the customer file by quintiles and assign a score for all three characteristics – 125 cells.

• Which is the best predictor of future response?

Offer StrategiesOffer Strategies• The offer is the reason to respond or

buy now – it’s not the product/service.

• Most common offer types are:– Price – Time – Availability

• Multiple offers

• Kobs’ 99 Offers

Creative Creative

• The creative triangle– Copy– Graphics– Production

• Direct marketing creative is different from advertising creative and requires additional skill sets.

• The role of the Creative Brief

Rational/Emotional GridRational/Emotional Grid

• FCB Grid

• A template to help you think through the creative development of a DM campaign

• Can also be used to graph the competitive messages

The Rational/Emotional Grid

Rational(thinking)

Emotional(feeling)

HighImportance

LowImportance

The Rational/Emotional Grid

Rational(thinking)

Emotional(feeling)

HighImportance

LowImportance

Examples of Products/Services

•Computer Systems

•Insurance•Farm Tractors

•Temporary Services

•Cellular Phones

•Company Cars•Software

•Mfg Maintenance Supplies

•Employee Uniforms

•Long Distance Service

•Office Supplies

•Office Furniture

•Wall Hangings

•Corporate Gifts

The Rational/Emotional Grid

Rational(thinking)

Emotional(feeling)

HighImportance

LowImportance

Marketing Communication Tactics

•Long Copy Letter•Impact Mailing

•Complex Packages

•Telemarketing

•Dialogue eMail

•Video

•Advertising•Short Copy Letter

•Brochures/Pictures

•Humor

•Permission eMail

•Post Cards•Self Mailers

Creative TipsCreative Tips

• Take your personal opinion out of the process to act as your own creative director. Use known and proven principals plus the “eye of the beholder”

• Cost should not be the first consideration. Results, as measured in gross margin or profit terms is the guiding factor.

Creative TipsCreative Tips

• Relevancy of message and offer fights through the clutter.

• Remember that a “flat” piece of mail is handled differently than a 3-D or something that goes “bump in the mail”.

• Don’t try to trick the audience.

Direct Mail Creative Direct Mail Creative GuidelinesGuidelines

• Direct mail is a conversation with one person.

• Design the envelop to get it opened!

• Letter is the heart of your communication and does the hard work.

• Design the response vehicle first and then write the letter.

• Who’s the “hero”? Offer, reader or you?

Bob Stones’ Seven Copy Bob Stones’ Seven Copy GuidelinesGuidelines

• Feature the most important benefit no later than in the headline, first sentence or first paragraph.

• Immediately enlarge on your most important benefit.

• Identify specifically what they will get if they act now.

Seven Copy GuidelinesSeven Copy Guidelines

• Back up your statements with proof, endorsements or testimonials.

• Call to action -- tell them what to do, when and even how .

• Highlight what they might lose.

• Rephrase the prominent benefits in the closing offer.

Creative TipsCreative Tips

• Design the letter– 1st, 2nd and 3rd order scanable

• Z path – start upper left; exit lower right

• Folds – reader will open to widest point

• Color out pulls b/w – 2 to 1

• Cartoons vs. picture – a tough choice

• No more than 7 lines per paragraph

• Type size should be no less than 10 point

Creative TipsCreative Tips

• Opening paragraph should have no more that 11 –17 words.

• All sentences should average no more than 14 words.

• In a 2-page letter, break the last sentence into the next page.

• Quotes increase readership and interest – unless they are by you.

• Odd numbers are more believable than even

• Be as specific as possible

Creative TipsCreative Tips

• Don’t ever use an *

• Serif type is best for letter readability

• The eye goes to anything out of order

• Use screen tints – red and yellow are best

• After their name people read either the– P.S. or response card

• Avoid reverse-out type – decrease readership by 33%

Media – a Brief OverviewMedia – a Brief Overview

• Mail– Post card– Inserts– Self-mailer– Letter package– Impact mailing

• Telephone– In and out-bound

• E-mail and Internet

MediaMedia• TV

– Short form– Long form

• Print

• Radio

• Outdoor and others

• Combinations– TV and mail– Mail and phone– E-mail and phone

Brand ResponseBrand Response

• The advertising quandary:– “we advertise for brand awareness but

measure by number of leads or sales we make”

• Combine brand advertising with direct response.– The key is the offer that is related to

the USP– The design of the ad changes as well

TestingTesting

• You are not a direct marketer unless you test. Why test?

• What to test is the issue– List – Offer– Creative

• How to test is the second issue– A/B split – Multiple cell– Statistical projections

MeasurementMeasurement

• Response rates

• Cost per lead

• Cost per sale

• Breakeven

• Lifetime value

To Sum UpTo Sum Up

• Consumer DM is BIG – in 2000 sales were $937.7 billion

• We have barely touched the surface in this large, growing and sophisticated world.

• Suggest you learn more by joining the DMA, attending conventions, reading trade journals and stealing from people like me.

Thanks for AttendingThanks for Attending

• Questions – call us at 480-778-9900

• Come to a completely different session on B2B this afternoon

• By By

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