These Four Things Will Make Your Direct Marketing Successful
by Al Lautenslager
Published on this site: August 5th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month
Direct marketing is built on four things. The other way to
look at it is that when you think direct marketing is not
working only one of four things can be wrong. Let's look at
each.
- The Target - This is who you are sending your
marketing to. The target is your list and the list is your
market. These are the people most interested in what you
have to say, what you have to offer and what you have to
sell. These are interested prospects, hopefully, that will
want what you have to sell. If this group does not want
or need what you have then your target needs changed. Your
target does not represent your market in this case.
When working with list brokers, you can specify what your
ideal target, ideal client or market should be. This is
where most people think of demographics. How big a company
is, what the income is or sales level is, where they are
located, their age, their family size, etc. All of this
defines your target and the tighter the definition of your
target, the higher the probability of success.
TO-DO: Write out the description of your ideal client.
Contact list brokers and see how many of these there are.
Make sure to specify geographical areas. Determine the cost
of such a list. Buy the list and start mailing to it over
and over and over on a frequent, consistent basis.
- The Vehicle - This is what you are sending to
your list. In the world of direct mail its pretty simple:
A letter, A postcard, A catalog or a three dimensional package.
Professional companies like letters. People that are on
the run, multi-tasker entrepreneurs may prefer postcards.
C-level officers buying high ticket items may prefer a package.
Consider this when determining your direct marketing campaign
budget and base it on what you think your target market
will want.
- The Message - This component of direct marketing
is what you are saying to your market; to your audience;
to your list. This is also where you develop and communicate
the offer that you are seeking a response to. Your job with
the message is to communicate benefit oriented information
and advantages that will motivate the prospect to take some
type of action. The action might be a sale, a phone call,
a visit or a web-site visit.
Think of a coupon. That is a response mechanism. The prospect
sees the value and product offering on the coupon and visits
a place of business and redeems it, all conforming to benefit
communication and motivation to action.
- Frequency - So many times people try direct marketing
and give up because of low response. They typically give
up before giving the campaign enough time to work. We are
inundated with marketing messages everyday, therefore it
takes repetition and consistency of delivering that message
to match up with timing and desire to the point where the
prospect will take action.
The rule of thumb is 6-8 times will create the top of mind
awareness in the mind of your prospect so that they think
of you, your product or service when their need or want arises.
Concentrating on just these four marketing components will
help you develop the highest probable direct marketing campaign
for your products and services.
Get a free 7 step PR plan by sending a blank email to [email protected]
or get a report on how to instantly add 50 people to your
network by going to http://www.market-for-profits.com
. Also visit www.directmailmarketingsuccess.com
for over 300 tips, techniques and tactics on direct mail.

Al Lautenslager is a speaker, author, business owner, consultant,
a certified guerrilla marketing coach who helps businesses and
professionals increase their revenue through focused marketing
and an increased client base. He is the bestselling co-author
of Guerrilla Marketing in 30 Days and a featured business coach
for entrepreneur.com. He can be contacted through his website,
http://www.market-for-profits.com

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