email marketing  emarketing Why I Like PostCard Marketing as a Door Opener

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Why I Like PostCard Marketing as a Door Opener

Over the years I've spoken with thousands of small business and home business entrepreneurs.  Each of them looking for the most effective means to deliver their message into the hands of their target audience.  With the proliferation of the Internet and email into the fabric of our society, many folks in my opinion, mistakenly fall in love with the concept of using email lists to drive cold traffic.  I'm not anti-email.  Far from it.

Email is an incredible vehicle, but as a prefered solution for building a business on a shoe-string budget...it is not.  Email to communicate with customers/clients is a magnificently efficient tool.  But unless you have a significant budget to devote to the testing of Subject Lines, copy, images, etc...the odds of hitting a winner with a one-shot email blast is slim.

Targeted Direct Mail on the other hand is a much better bet.  Once you have chosen the right list(s) for your marketing effort (Reference my post on "How Do I Buy a Great Mailing List") you need to decide what message you want to communicate to your prospect.  Once you have determined this, you next must design a mailing piece around your call to action (Reference my post on "Do I Need a Good Call to Action in My Direct Marketing Pieces?".

And that is where we come to WHY I like Postcards as a door opener.

Next time you go to your mailbox, observe yourself.  Once you have thumbed through your mail, stop and replay what you did.  Was there anything that caught your eye?  Any plain or unexpected #10 envelopes that just made you want to open them?  Probably not, unless they used 4-color artwork or were from a company that you were familiar with.  How long did it take you to go through your mail and determine what was trash and what you would/needed to keep?  Not long, huh?

So, in that fraction of a second when you were determining the fate of a piece of unsolicited mail what tempted you?  Maybe nothing.  Maybe it was an attractive or interesting postcard?  It certainly wasn't a plain envelope.

The beauty of a postcard is that it NEVER has to be opened.  In that fraction of a second that you will have to convince your prospect to keep you from the recycling bin (we're all thinking Green these days, right?) having a postcard with your call to action staring them in the face gives you a much higher probability of gaining relevance in the prospects eyes than an envelope that needs to be opened.

Trusted Supplier Special Update!

For those interested in finding an excellent source for the turnkey creation and printing of postcards, I've found a company called AdSwift.com that does a fantastic job! 

Comments

i personily would like to do post cards where do i get the post cards from or how do i subccribe to starting from scratch
Posted @ Thursday, March 20, 2008 2:27 AM by Rosalyn Lott
Thanks for your question Rosalyn. There are two primary ways to get postcards for direct mail marketing. Which option you choose typically is dictated by your overall marketing budget.
The first option is the one most small start-ups and entrepreneurs choose, and that is to simply go to their local stationary supply store (Staples, Office Maxx, for example) and select the size postcard you want to use. You will need to have some basic computer software know how , or have someone who does, to layout and print your cards for you. The cards will print out of any standard ink jet pc computer printer.
The second option is to find your local quick printer or Mailhouse/Lettershop (consult your local yellow pages) to get them to quote you on printing. They most likely also offer design services as well if needed.
Hope this helps. Remember to make sure your "call to action" is prominent on the postcard.
-the DCSListGuy
Posted @ Thursday, March 20, 2008 6:09 AM by Doug Sauerhaft
I could not agree more. We produce hundreds of thousands of postcards annually for small sized businesses in our industry. The results speak for themselves in the amount of repeat business.
Posted @ Monday, March 24, 2008 10:21 AM by Robert Keay
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