Lumpy
Mail Gets Your Message Through
When it comes to your gravy,
lumps are bad. When it comes to getting your marketing message
through the mail room, past the gate keepers, and onto your buyers
desk, lumps are just the ticket. I love direct mail for small
business marketing and Im particularly fond of something I call
lumpy mail. Lumpy mail is a direct mail piece or package with some
dimension to it. A box is lumpy mail. A balloon arrangement, a
kitten, a hoola hoop. You name it. The point is you just cant
ignore a piece of lumpy mail.
Its getting harder and harder to get your message through all of
the advertising clutter so sometimes you need to up the ante and
make a real statement. A lumpy mail package screams notice me, open
me.
A lumpy mail campaign can give your marketing message center stage
attention. Of course, youve still got to deliver the performance.
But half the battle is finding an audience.
How to run a lumpy mail campaign
Go to your core marketing messages. You core point of difference or
benefit. The primary things you promote when you want to tell your
prospects why they should hire you.
Now think of some unique items, trinkets, or packaging that you can
use to help communicate your point. Well jump through hoops to get
your business the hoola hoop. Were the key to your success a box of
keys. We provide total solutions a box of Total brand cereal. Weve
got the tools to help you get the job done a box of play tools. Its
very important that you can create a very strong image and metaphor
for the message you are trying to communicate.
Repetition
Like any good direct mail campaign, repetition will improve your
results. I usually suggest looking at three installments in your
campaign. If done correctly this will usually leave the recipient
eager to perform whatever call to action you request at the end of
the campaign.
A building series
A very powerful way to construct your campaign, particularly if
your audience is not too familiar with you, is to create your three
pieces in a story fashion. Each piece builds on the last and
delivers an integrated message. You can use this method to build
intrigue. Many times I will send the first piece in a lumpy
campaign without a company name, logo, or return address.
Generally, I will imply that there is more to come. The impact of
this technique can be pretty strong. In some cases your prospects
will actually look forward to getting the next piece. People love a
good mystery.
The Call to Action
Like any marketing campaign, decide what you want the final outcome
or call to action to be and deliver it in the last piece. If you
want them to call your office, take your call, visit a website,
attend a workshop, make it painfully clear what the price of the
game has been.
Ive actually had clients tell me that prospects who wouldnt even
return their phone calls, eagerly made appointments and sometime
still displayed the items they were sent throughout the campaign in
their office. People dont get this kind of attention from much in
their lives and they want it. More than ever your prospects crave
two things content and contact. A lumpy mail campaign had the
potential to deliver both with a bang. (careful with too much
auditory impact)
How Much For Those Lumps
A lumpy mail campaign can get relatively expensive when compared
to, say, a postcard mailing so its important for you to consider
two things when you are designing yours. How many clients you can
serve and what the lifetime value a new client has to your
business.
Most small businesses only need a handful of new clients at any
given time to thrive. Lumpy mail is perfect for that kind of
growth. Carefully target 10 new businesses at a time, throw the
kitchen sink at them and watch your appointment rate soar to about
70%.
If you are in a business that sells a one time $19 product then you
cant really spend to much to acquire a new client but if your
business can generate thousands of dollars from a long term, loyal
client then perhaps spending even $100/new client running a
creative lumpy mail program makes a ton of sense.
So get to your local toy store to get the creative gravy flowing
and pass the mashed potatoes already.
About the Author
John Jantsch is a marketing
consultant based in Kansas City, Mo. He writes frequently on real
world small business marketing tactics and is the creator of Duct
Tape Marketing a turn-key small business marketing
system.
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