Interview Links

Part 1: The one motivating factor that gets prospects to respond, respond, respond!

Part 2: How selling desirable end-results can be the difference between a blow-out and a bomb!

Part 3: The single biggest mistake direct marketers make.

Part 4: Cost-saving strategies that fall right to the bottom line!

Part 5: Success formulas for targeting promotions to the right audience.

Part 6: How to find the right list for your offer, then maximize your results through smart segmentation.

 

 

 

 

 

Interview Part 4

Q  Getting back to cost issues, are you saying marketers shouldn't be concerned with costs?

A  Of course they should be ... I really want to make the distinction between spending whatever it takes to bring in a qualified customer at an acceptable cost, versus cutting expenses that will only have a positive impact to the bottom line.  They are two very different dynamics.

When it comes to finding ways to cut costs, I have a good one to share with you.  Just recently, I was working with a large publisher that was sending their premium fulfillment packages out First Class at a cost of about $2.50 each.  I was able to show them how to re-configure these packages so they would qualify for Periodical Class rates.  Their postage cost went down to about 35 cents per package, a savings of over $2 each!  And are you ready for this … the company sends out one million of these packages each year!

Q  That's a great strategy for publishers, do you have any cost savings advice you can give to direct marketers in general?

A  One of the few cost areas for mailers that has actually come down significantly over the years is address processing, commonly referred to as merge purge.  To process a typical merge purge complete with postal qualification, test panels, sequence numbers, etc., mailers should not be paying more than $6 per thousand net in the mail.  Companies that mail in the millions should pay even less!  Plus, your service bureau should bill you using a simple flat per thousand mailed price, instead of a slew of unit prices.  This will ensure this expense stays controllable and will greatly simplify the paying and reconciling of invoices.

I have observed that many mailers aren't really sure what they pay for processing because of unit pricing, and they are surprised to find out they end up paying from $10 to $15 per thousand mailed.  Recently, one mailer I helped in this area was able to cut their annual address processing costs by $150,000 and, at the same time, add valuable new processing techniques that I introduced to them.

Continue to Part 5 >>>>

   
 

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