However, the challenge with direct mail is that marketers don’t always understand the kinds of campaigns that are most compatible with direct mail marketing. To help marketers better understand the arenas where direct mail can shine, let’s look at three kinds of common marketing campaigns where direct mail can be most effective.
While event-based marketing campaigns that promote things like an open house or a grand opening may seem more suited for email marketing, the continued decline of B2B email health via metrics like decreasing inbox placement or increased bounce rates actually makes email campaigns more of a gamble in getting the word out about your event — plus, the increasingly ineffective nature of email makes it less likely that your recipient will share your email with others in their professional network.
What’s more, 85% of consumers who receive direct mail read pieces the day they’re received, whereas about 40% of consumers said they have up to 50 unread emails languishing in their inbox.
With direct mail campaigns for event-based marketing, here are a couple of things to keep in mind or try to better equip your direct mailer to drive recipients to your event:
With more than 72% of households having more than two people living together, using direct mail campaigns for event-based marketing can also be extremely effective in creating buzz via word of mouth.
Launching a product or service is a more focused initiative than event-based marketing in large part because the messaging in these kinds of campaigns needs to be more targeted or speak more directly to the challenges your audience faces, and how your product or service can help them overcome their challenges.
The challenge with using digital channels for product launch campaigns is that so many marketers are relying on email to introduce themselves to new customers — for example, a recent report found that there will be more than 376 billion emails sent per day by 2025. In contrast, consumers receive less than 400 pieces of mail per year, which significantly reduces the noise and competition for marketers to position the value their product or service provides.
There are a number of steps marketers can take to help ensure using direct mail to market a product or service launch is effective and delivers a healthy ROI. For example:
B2B account-based marketing (ABM) campaigns are the most highly-targeted campaigns of the ones we’ve looked at thus far, and part of what makes them a good fit for direct mail marketing is that the number of people you’re sending to is relatively small, which then allows you to create high-value offers that are specifically tailored and personalized for your target audience.
As such, the ROI with direct mail in ABM campaigns is best realized with premium print pieces — something beyond a conventional postcard — that are sent to contacts you know are most likely to convert on an offer or take some other specific desired action.
For example, ABM direct mail campaigns can include incentives such as special gifts, personalized merchandise, offer codes, exclusive promotions, personalized AR experiences, and even virtual reality experiences.
ABM campaigns in direct mail can also be an ideal vessel to create effective omnichannel campaigns that include additional touchpoints like follow-up emails, SMS messaging, or even InMail messaging on LinkedIn — provided you have a contact’s profile information — to continue the conversation after your mailer has been received.
Using direct mail in ABM campaigns can be extremely effective in demonstrating to already interested prospects that you have a detailed understanding of their industry and their challenges, and that you took the time to craft a memorable piece of content with an offer that’s designed specifically with them in mind.
Curious about how you can use direct mail in your next marketing campaign? Quantum Group can help you print high-quality direct mail that achieves your goals and objectives. Download our new guide, How to Execute a High-ROI Postcard Campaign, to take your direct mail campaign to the next level.