9 Direct Mail Techniques to Instantly Increase Involvement and Boost Response


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One of the primary advantages of using direct mail is your ability to divide Cost Of Stamps conquer. Your letter delivers a personal message and makes an offer. Your brochure demonstrates features and dramatizes benefits. Your Texas Food Stamps form calls for action and eases response.

Each piece in a direct mail package performs a specific function and, because each is dedicated to that function, does a better job than a mailer attempting to do everything simultaneously.

With that in mind, consider testing an appropriate insert or involvement device that can boost response enough to offset the additional cost. Here Notary Public Stamp just a handful of ideas:

  • Encourage involvement with a quiz or checklist. Is your offer relevant to your prospect? You can prove that it is by including a simple quiz: "Do you qualify for our 80% discount on life insurance? Take this quiz and find out." Or a checklist: "Here are 25 ways our investment course can turn you into a millionaire in 10 years."

  • Make your offer tangible with a check or coupon. If you're offering $25.00 off, enclose a coupon or simulated check worth $25.00 and instructions for returning it with an order. If you can, offer a real check that provides an instant reward or even activates a service when cashed. A check can be personalized and show through an envelope window.

  • Dramatize your offer with stamps or stickers. If you have several offers, configurations, or options, you can print each on a stamp and ask the recipient to affix one to the order form. If you have a simple offer you want to highlight, you can print it on a sticker that must be lifted and transferred to the order form. Stamps and stickers are highly involving and make it clear that some action is required.

  • Answer objections or highlight a benefit with a lift letter. The lift letter is the dean of all inserts. It is usually a short message signed by someone of higher authority than the letter signer. It presents a second point of view, meets objections, adds credibility, highlights benefits, etc. Often it's folded with "Read this only if you've decided not to order ..." or words to that effect on the outside.

  • Increase credibility with a testimonial insert. Testimonials often work best when you print them as a stand-alone piece, which increases the "bandwagon" effect. You can also have a benefit headline to introduce them, such as "Over 3 million satisfied customers agree, a Wahoo Widget lasts so long, it's the last widget you'll ever have to buy."

  • Prove your superiority with a sample. Let's say you're selling a coat or jacket to outdoor enthusiasts. You claim it will withstand all manner of torture because it's waterproof, fireproof, rip proof, and stain proof. Enclose a one-inch square of the fabric that is attached to a small card with instructions for testing the fabric. That way, your prospect can see firsthand that your product is everything you say it is.

  • Emphasize exclusivity with a membership card. People like to belong. If you can structure your offer as joining a club or organization, you can send a membership card printed on plastic or heavy paper. You can even personalize it, provide contact information, and list benefits. This transforms a mere transaction into something more beneficial and relevant to prospects.

  • Reinforce your guarantee with a merchandise return label. It's one thing to say a dissatisfied customer can return a product. It's another to actually provide a prepaid return label in advance. It shows how confident you are in your product and lowers perceived risk. One way to do this is to combine a label with a lift note that explains the return process and how there's no risk or obligation for responding.

  • Announce last-minute news with a buckslip. You don't have to redo a whole package just because one small thing changes. Enclose a brightly-colored slip touting a new feature, a premium, deadline, or special offer. Of course, there doesn't have to be a change to use this technique. You can use it anytime to highlight something or test an offer or premium.

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About the author:

Dean Rieck is a directcreative / direct mail copywriter, designer, and consultant who has helped over 200 leading direct marketing companies increase sales, generate leads, and raise funds with winning direct mail, ads, e-mail, sales letters, brochures, postcards, radio spots, and more. Learn more about Dean's direct mail copywriting and design services and sign up for his free monthly newsletter at directcreative /newsletter directcreative .

Copyright Dean Rieck. You may reprint this article online provided that you keep the links live and keep all the content "as is," including title, author byline, article text, and "about the author" information.


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