It's a fact that your customers are your best leads. This means that the most likely people to purchase your products and/or services are the ones who have paid for them before. It's also a fact that it costs far less money to keep a customer than it does to go out and get a new one. These are the two reasons that using direct mail postcards to keep in touch with your customer database is a must. There are a few rules to follow when marketing to contacts in your company database.
Rule #1: Collect all of their information.
It sounds like a no-brainer but you would be surprised. The more information that you have on your customers the more likely it is that you will be able to get in touch with them to let them know about specials or to remind them it's time for their next service. Also, don't neglect to ask for your customers' email addresses, everybody has one and most will give it up pretty easily.
Rule #2: Don't treat your customers like prospects.
Make sure when you collect the information in your database you differentiate between people who have placed an order in the past and people who have not. Customers want to feel like you are paying attention to them and when they have placed a few orders with you and are still getting your "10% for First Time Buyers" postcards they tend to feel unappreciated. Bottom line, if they don't qualify for an offer you are sending out, don't send it to them.
Rule #3: Don't let your designs get stagnant.
When you are mailing to databases of people that you have never spoken to before it is OK to send them the same postcard multiple times. It helps to increase recognition and will eventually increase your response rate. Dealing with customers and prospects that you have already spoken to (meaning they already know most or all of the details of your business) you need to mix things up a bit. Your mailings should be attention getting and informative. If you have started offering a new service recently, a postcard designed to let your database know about it would be a smart move. The main point is to keep your company in the front of their mind and to keep them reading your postcards.
If the promo that you send to your database gets too repetitive your customers will lose interest and at that point you are just wasting your money on postage because your postcards won't get the attention that you want.
One of your main goals should be to educate your customers about how your product or service works and this will in turn help them to get more use out of your entire line of products and services. Many times it is as simple as sending out mailings that make your customers aware of all that you can do for them.
Take, for example, a California based software company called Fort? Systems. Not only do they use direct mail postcards to acquire new business, they know how to use them to effectively market to their current customer database as well. To fully understand how you will need a little background information.
Fort? Systems is one of the current leading companies in Medical Practice Management and Billing Software. This means that their software will essentially run an entire medical office. The software can be purchased in any one of four levels, depending on budget and number of doctors working for the practice.
Once a medical practice becomes a customer of Fort? Systems the marketing strategy is changed to reflect the rules above. They are no longer trying to convince the doctor to become a customer, they are now educating them on how better they can be served by Fort? Systems? products. Now the customer receives direct mail pieces concerning:
?Updates on software upgrades (example 1)
?Notices when they are running specials (example 2)
?& information about Other Fort? Systems products such as
software training tutorials on CD (example 3)
This enables them to continue to service their customers at the highest level and also helps to strengthen the customers loyalty to Fort? Systems. Sometimes you lose customers because they either forgot who they dealt with last time they made a purchase or they received some kind of promo from one of your competitors and decided to check it out. If the customer is constantly updated about what is available from your company they will not have to spend their valuable time doing research and will be less likely to "shop around." This will help to control the normal attrition of your database to other companies.
The pieces are all designed with the Fort? Systems logo prominently displayed on the front and back - the same general feel and most importantly the same color scheme. Picking a company color or group of colors and sticking with it will help to increase recognition and readership of your promo. Simply put, your customers will get to the point that they read what you send them. They need to know it is from your company before they read it because if it doesn't look like what they are used to you sending it may go in the trash without a second look.
Being great at what you do is not always enough to keep the customers that you have earned. With all of the competition out there today you need to be constantly reminding your customers that you are the best at what you do. Direct mail postcards are the best way to give them that reminder.
Always remember to keep mailings that you send to your database informative, attractive and most of all current. Personalize everything that you can and make sure that what you are sending to a past client actually pertains to them or their company. Anything less and your customer may start to drift, and the only people that are going to be happy when that happens are your competitors.
Direct Mail Marketing Postcards
Tom arrives home from work, parks his car in his driveway, and walks to his mailbox. It’s cold out, so he hustles. He reaches inside, pulls out the day’s deliveries, and then hurries inside the house.
After greeting his family, he begins to sort through the mail. Tom’s a busy guy and doesn’t like clutter, so he doesn’t need much of a reason to throw mail in the trash. In fact, without realizing it, Tom has developed an effective system for doing just that:
1. Sort through the mail once.
2. Throw away anything that’s not immediately important or worth keeping.
3. Sort through the mail again.
4. Begin opening whatever is left, in order of importance.
Like many working Americans, Tom is "time-starved." He can never find enough hours in the day to do the things he wants to do. So why waste time on something like the mail?
The Need for Stopping Power
In direct mail marketing, this scenario represents one of your greatest challenges -- stopping power. Your postcards have to overcome great odds to stop people long enough that they (A) read your message, (B) understand your message, and if all goes well, (C) respond to your message.
But it all starts with getting the reader to stop.
Without stopping power, your message will be ignored, your offer will be missed, and your postcard will earn a one-way ticket to the nearest trashcan. So in order to maximize the return on your direct mail marketing investment, you need to crank up the stopping power of your postcards.
Here are three ways to do just that.
Stopping Power Ingredient #1 -- Relevance
Relevance means your offer should match your audience. This is a two-part concept. First, you must know exactly who your audience is and what they want or need. Then you must communicate with them in a way that capitalizes on that knowledge.
Direct mail marketing gives you the ability to segment your list and tailor your message, more so than with most marketing channels. Today’s database technology makes it easy to create a highly targeted mailing list for your postcard marketing campaigns. With such specificity at your fingertips, there’s no reason not to crank up the relevance of your message.
Stopping Power Ingredient #2 -- Singularity
One idea per postcard -- that should be your messaging goal. One product, one service, one event, one idea, one objective. The further you go beyond that, the more you dilute your message.
The best marketing postcards are the ones that readers "get" right away. This comes from having a singular focus, a singular idea, and a singular objective. (It also helps when the postcard is well written, but that’s another article.)
There’s not much room on a marketing postcard, so you can’t fill it with multiple topics. That’s the job of a website, brochure or booklet -- not a postcard. Put too much information into such a confined space, and it will seem intimidating and unapproachable to many readers.
Remember Tom and his ruthless screening process? Give him too much to think about at one time, and out you go!
Stopping Power Ingredient #3 -- Simplicity
Here’s a good formula for keeping postcards simple and clean, while at the same time delivering a strong enough message to evoke a response:
Create a billboard side and a message side. The billboard side is the purest form of stopping power. It’s light on copy but heavy on message. It includes a killer headline; relevant, eye-popping graphics; and something that gives the postcard immediate value.
The message side picks up where the billboard side leaves off. It delivers on the promise and tells the reader what to do next. It also offers some kind of reward for the reader to take that action.
Conclusion
Tom has finished screening his mail. In the trashcan, you’ll find a handful of marketing pieces that lacked relevance, singularity and simplicity. Held onto the refrigerator with magnets, you’ll find the marketing pieces that had all of these ingredients -- and these are the champions of stopping power.
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Both Joe Niewierski & Brandon Cornett are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Joe Niewierski has sinced written about articles on various topics from Marketing, Sales and Negotiation and About Branding. Joe Niewierski is the VP of Marketing & Promotion at PostcardMania, became published after graduating with a BA in Advertising from USF. Joy Gendusa founded PostcardMania in 1998. By 2005 the company did over $12 million in. Joe Niewierski's top article generates over 1600 views. to your Favourites.
Brandon Cornett has sinced written about articles on various topics from Realestate Marketing, Home Buyers Guide and Real Estate. Brandon Cornett is the editor of PostcardSmart.com, the Internet's largest website dedicated entirely to with postcards. For more expert articles. Brandon Cornett's top article generates over 4400 views. to your Favourites.
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