direct marketing

1

Do you believe in magic?

Marketers tend to. They are suckers for miracle cures – and here’s why.

We all know our customers are lazy. That’s why the words “quick” and “easy” always increase readership of any headline.

Show them how they can do something – lose weight, learn a language – with less effort, and you probably have a winning proposition.

You must package it well, though – preferably with an impressive name.

So it’s not listening to and repeating words and phrases; it’s “programmed learning”. That makes you feel you’re doing something important, doesn’t it?

And guess what? Marketers are just as lazy as customers – hardly surprising, as they are customers every day. Most (as I learned from asking them to define it in many countries) are is too lazy to even learn what marketing is – let alone what “direct marketing” means.

Anyhow, that word “direct” … doesn’t it sound distressingly close to direct mail? And we all know what that means, don’t we? Junk. Ugh. That certainly doesn’t sound very flattering, does it?

CRM sounds much better. People love it. Though I cannot for the life of me see how it differs from what I’ve always done.

Mind you, it took me about nine years to get any good at what I do, whereas a few years ago Oracle’s ads said: “Start today and have global customer relationship management in 19 days.”

Sounds a lot better than hard work, doesn’t it? Mr. Super CRM would whiz into their office and take care of everything for them! No wonder it took off.

Many firms started CRM divisions before even knowing what the heck it really was – or meant to their business.

No wonder that a few years after it first came into fashion, the US magazine Advertising Age reported that over 70% of firms who tried it said it didn’t work.

I shall discuss why in a moment, with some good, practical advice you can act on from somebody who has specialised in this field.

In the meantime, here’s a little reminder that miracles only happen in the movies.

The word ‘loyalty’ is often used about CRM. But as a former chairman of Marks & Spencer observed, “Customers are not loyal nor should they be. We have to earn their loyalty every day”.

His firm forgot that and it nearly ruined them.

Sober people know the obvious: nobody sane wants a relationship with their bank or supermarket. They have enough trouble getting on with their families. And a “programme” won’t cure any dodgy relationship.

But the intelligent use of data does pay. Here is a good example. Ocado sent my partner Marta this, based on things she had bought before.

CRM schemes fail above all because your business lives or dies on its attitude to customers. And a quick fix doesn’t change attitudes.

So here is check list for you. It was put together by my associate Peter Hardingham, who has worked with me on and off for 20 years, and revised by me because I interfere with everything that leaves this office.

Is CRM right for you? A 15-minute quiz

Step 1

Unless you have answered these four questions, there is absolutely NO point in boarding the good ship CRM.

  • Do you really know what your customers want?
  • Do you know what they think you promise them? Are they the same things?
  • Can you clearly identify these desires and beliefs, before and after they have become customers?
  • How will you find out? Do so before anything else!

Step 2

Set realistic expectations, and deliver what you promise or you can end up worse off than if you never started.

  • Can you deliver what your customers want – and, just as important, what they think you promise?
  • If not, what can you deliver now, and in the future?
  • If it is in the future, how quickly? And how will you keep them happy in the interim?

Step 3

A customer in the dark is an angry customer. A customer in the know can end up buying more.

  • At what points in the purchase process will you tell your customers what they want to know
  • About their order?
  • To reassure them?

Step 4

  • Can you identify the points from step 3 in every customer transaction?
  • Are you sure your IT team can deliver?
  • If you have retail outlets, can the staff get this information – quickly and easily?

Step 5

Many firms still have separate databases for customer and transactional information If your marketing database can’t access both, you’re in trouble.

  • Can you record what happens at all every point in the transaction?
  • On a database all those who may need to know can access?

The moment of truth.

Did you answer the first 5 steps mostly ‘yes’? If so, you stand a chance of CRM working for you. If you said mostly ‘no’, stop right now and get it right.

If you’re talking to CRM consultants politely ask them to leave. Their time is expensive, and you’ll lose your shirt.

Step 6 – start the ball rolling

  • Tell your customers what you plan to do
  • Manage their expectations
  • Involve, motivate and train all your
  • Make sure everyone – particularly retail staff – gets the same respect

Step 7 – attend to detail

Remind yourself what you’ve promised, and deliver it. Often, essential processes are not part of firms’ structures. They don’t appreciate what skills and structures you need.

  • If this is an incentivised scheme, how will points, miles or other benefits be allocated, captured, and communicated to the customer?
  • How will redemptions be handled?

Step 8

Most customers won’t tell you they are unhappy. They tell their friends – and walk away.

  • Set up a monitoring process in your company
  • Make sure you identify any weak links that appear in the chain

Step 9

  • Ask your customers how they think you’re doing
  • Loyalty can improve just by making it easy for them to tell you what they think
  • Allow your customers to suggest improvements. It’s the best research you’ll ever get

Step 10 – it doesn’t stop

Don’t imagine this is something you just “put in place”.

  • Keep listening to your customers
  • Keep learning from your customers
  • Keep refining your system
  • Keep training and re-training your people

When should you refer to these questions?

When your IT director says, “We’ve got this wonderful CRM software…”

When the board says, “That’s a brave move you’re making there, this CRM stuff…”

Just take out this quiz, and re-read it. You’ll know more than many CRM consultants. You might even keep your job.

If that interested you, you might find half an hour with Peter worth your while. I sent him along to three clients a while ago, and all wanted to know more. One – a travel destination – had him on a plane within a week.

Best,
Drayton
www.directmarketingcourse.com
www.commonsensedirectmarketing.com

Filed under direct marketing, Drayton Bird, marketing by on . 1 Comment#

0

Do you believe in magic?

Marketers tend to. They are suckers for miracle cures – and here’s why.

We all know our customers are lazy. That’s why the words “quick” and “easy” always increase readership of any headline.

Show them how they can do something – lose weight, learn a language – with less effort, and you probably have a winning proposition.

You must package it well, though – preferably with an impressive name.

So it’s not listening to and repeating words and phrases; it’s “programmed learning”. That makes you feel you’re doing something important, doesn’t it?

And guess what? Marketers are just as lazy as customers – hardly surprising, as they are customers every day. Most (as I learned from asking them to define it in many countries) are is too lazy to even learn what marketing is – let alone what “direct marketing” means.

Anyhow, that word “direct” … doesn’t it sound distressingly close to direct mail? And we all know what that means, don’t we? Junk. Ugh. That certainly doesn’t sound very flattering, does it?

CRM sounds much better. People love it. Though I cannot for the life of me see how it differs from what I’ve always done.

Mind you, it took me about nine years to get any good at what I do, whereas a few years ago Oracle’s ads said: “Start today and have global customer relationship management in 19 days.”

Sounds a lot better than hard work, doesn’t it? Mr. Super CRM would whiz into their office and take care of everything for them! No wonder it took off.

Many firms started CRM divisions before even knowing what the heck it really was – or meant to their business.

No wonder that a few years after it first came into fashion, the US magazine Advertising Age reported that over 70% of firms who tried it said it didn’t work.

I shall discuss why in a moment, with some good, practical advice you can act on from somebody who has specialised in this field.

In the meantime, here’s a little reminder that miracles only happen in the movies.



The word ‘loyalty’ is often used about CRM. But as a former chairman of Marks & Spencer observed, “Customers are not loyal nor should they be. We have to earn their loyalty every day”.

His firm forgot that and it nearly ruined them.

Sober people know the obvious: nobody sane wants a relationship with their bank or supermarket. They have enough trouble getting on with their families. And a “programme” won’t cure any dodgy relationship.

But the intelligent use of data does pay. Here is a good example. Ocado sent my partner Marta this, based on things she had bought before.



CRM schemes fail above all because your business lives or dies on its attitude to customers. And a quick fix doesn’t change attitudes.

So here is check list for you. It was put together by my associate Peter Hardingham, who has worked with me on and off for 20 years, and revised by me because I interfere with everything that leaves this office.

Is CRM right for you? A 15-minute quiz

Step 1

Unless you have answered these four questions, there is absolutely NO point in boarding the good ship CRM.


  • Do you really know what your customers want?

  • Do you know what they think you promise them? Are they the same things?

  • Can you clearly identify these desires and beliefs, before and after they have become customers?

  • How will you find out? Do so before anything else!


Step 2

Set realistic expectations, and deliver what you promise or you can end up worse off than if you never started.


  • Can you deliver what your customers want – and, just as important, what they think you promise?

  • If not, what can you deliver now, and in the future?

  • If it is in the future, how quickly? And how will you keep them happy in the interim?


Step 3

A customer in the dark is an angry customer. A customer in the know can end up buying more.


  • At what points in the purchase process will you tell your customers what they want to know

  • About their order?

  • To reassure them?


Step 4


  • Can you identify the points from step 3 in every customer transaction?

  • Are you sure your IT team can deliver?

  • If you have retail outlets, can the staff get this information – quickly and easily?


Step 5

Many firms still have separate databases for customer and transactional information If your marketing database can’t access both, you’re in trouble.


  • Can you record what happens at all every point in the transaction?

  • On a database all those who may need to know can access?


The moment of truth.

Did you answer the first 5 steps mostly ‘yes’? If so, you stand a chance of CRM working for you. If you said mostly ‘no’, stop right now and get it right.

If you’re talking to CRM consultants politely ask them to leave. Their time is expensive, and you’ll lose your shirt.

Step 6 – start the ball rolling


  • Tell your customers what you plan to do

  • Manage their expectations

  • Involve, motivate and train all your

  • Make sure everyone – particularly retail staff – gets the same respect


Step 7 – attend to detail

Remind yourself what you’ve promised, and deliver it. Often, essential processes are not part of firms’ structures. They don’t appreciate what skills and structures you need.


  • If this is an incentivised scheme, how will points, miles or other benefits be allocated, captured, and communicated to the customer?

  • How will redemptions be handled?


Step 8

Most customers won’t tell you they are unhappy. They tell their friends – and walk away.


  • Set up a monitoring process in your company

  • Make sure you identify any weak links that appear in the chain


Step 9


  • Ask your customers how they think you’re doing

  • Loyalty can improve just by making it easy for them to tell you what they think

  • Allow your customers to suggest improvements. It’s the best research you’ll ever get


Step 10 – it doesn’t stop

Don’t imagine this is something you just “put in place”.


  • Keep listening to your customers

  • Keep learning from your customers

  • Keep refining your system

  • Keep training and re-training your people


When should you refer to these questions?

When your IT director says, “We’ve got this wonderful CRM software…”

When the board says, “That’s a brave move you’re making there, this CRM stuff…”

Just take out this quiz, and re-read it. You’ll know more than many CRM consultants. You might even keep your job.

If that interested you, you might find half an hour with Peter worth your while. I sent him along to three clients a while ago, and all wanted to know more. One – a travel destination – had him on a plane within a week.

Best,
Drayton
www.directmarketingcourse.com
www.commonsensedirectmarketing.com

0

In october 2006 I decided I’d had enough.

I’d had enough of working for other people and making them the kind of money I could only dream about.

I’d had enough of people looking over my shoulders constantly to ensure they squeezed every drop of blood for the pittance they paid me… even though I worked my butt off.

In fact, in one job my manager actually told me if all the other guys together did half as much work as I did by myself, he’d be a happy bunny. There were eight other people in the team.

Did that satisfy the bosses of the company?

Does spiderman really exist? (Okay, I only used that because I’m a die-hard comic book fan. But you know what I mean).

Anyway, in October 2006 I decided I was going to be self-employed. I was going my own way.

So I called up the relevant government department and told them so.

And I’ve been self-employed ever since.

Although I think the term self ‘unemployed’ would be more suitable.

You see, I tried to learn how to make money on the internet. I bought one course after another.

Each time the promise was:

  1. I had to spend money to make money
  2. “Our course is the best one. And you’ll definitely make money with it”

Three years and about $50,000.00 later (no typo), all I had to show for myself was a huge debt, with no ability to pay it back.

I was desperate.

Then, in October 2008 Drayton Bird held his first course in Direct and Digital Marketing through EADIM (European Academy of Direct and Interactive Marketing).

The cost was 3,000 Euros. I couldn’t afford it.

So I ended up wasting more money trying to learn more stuff that was no good And getting even deeper in debt on my credit cards.

(funny how we can’t afford to pay for something sensible, but can afford to get even more in debt, huh?).

Then in August 2009 I decided enough really was enough.

I borrowed the money from my brother and enrolled on that year’s EADIM course.

Was it worth it?

It was the single best investment I’ve made in all these years of struggling.

In fact, I made back my investment at least 5 times since. And more.

I was so enthusiastic about this course that Drayton Bird himself sent me an email and offered me the chance to work with him.

The result?

Check out this site: www.directmarketingcourse.com

I had a big hand in that copy.

This is what Ross Bowring, a fellow copywriter on the Warrior Forum, said of the copy on this site…


“Rezbi… Bravo! And I’ve never said “Bravo” to anyone before (!) That’s a very nicely written letter. Skillfully communicates benefits with no hype whatsoever. Read the whole thing. Never usually do that. Mightily impressed.”

And this is what Drayton said of the same…

Enthusiasm without knowledge is useless. Rezbi is one of those rare and valuable people – a genuine enthusiast who studies. He was hugely valuable to me in working on the promotion for EADIM. The (very complex) landing page is a good example of his work, a great joint effort!

All I can say is this – I got the opportunity to work on this, and on others, as a direct result of going on that course last year. It is, in my opinion, the best course on direct and digital marketing that exists today.

And, if ANYONE is really serious about their career, online or offline – no matter which industry they are in – they would be jumping to get on this course.

Now my question is: How serious are you?

Don’t waste any more time or money. Get on this course and – finally – start making a success of your business and career.

If nothing else, at least go and check out the site to see how much I’ve accomplished as a result of doing this course. And how much you could, too: www.directmarketingcourse.com

Oh, I nearly forgot… if you book before the end of the year, you also get a HUGE 34% discount.

And, if you can’t afford that measly sum, you can even pay by monthly installments.

Check it out: www.directmarketingcourse.com

Best,
Rezbi

0

In october 2006 I decided I’d had enough.

I’d had enough of working for other people and making them the kind of money I could only dream about.

I’d had enough of people looking over my shoulders constantly to ensure they squeezed every drop of blood for the pittance they paid me… even though I worked my butt off.

In fact, in one job my manager actually told me if all the other guys together did half as much work as I did by myself, he’d be a happy bunny. There were eight other people in the team.

Did that satisfy the bosses of the company?

Does spiderman really exist? (Okay, I only used that because I’m a die-hard comic book fan. But you know what I mean).

Anyway, in October 2006 I decided I was going to be self-employed. I was going my own way.

So I called up the relevant government department and told them so.

And I’ve been self-employed ever since.

Although I think the term self ‘unemployed’ would be more suitable.

You see, I tried to learn how to make money on the internet. I bought one course after another.

Each time the promise was:


  1. I had to spend money to make money

  2. “Our course is the best one. And you’ll definitely make money with it”


Three years and about $50,000.00 later (no typo), all I had to show for myself was a huge debt, with no ability to pay it back.

I was desperate.

Then, in October 2008 Drayton Bird held his first course in Direct and Digital Marketing through EADIM (European Academy of Direct and Interactive Marketing).

The cost was 3,000 Euros. I couldn’t afford it.

So I ended up wasting more money trying to learn more stuff that was no good And getting even deeper in debt on my credit cards.

(funny how we can’t afford to pay for something sensible, but can afford to get even more in debt, huh?).

Then in August 2009 I decided enough really was enough.

I borrowed the money from my brother and enrolled on that year’s EADIM course.

Was it worth it?

It was the single best investment I’ve made in all these years of struggling.

In fact, I made back my investment at least 5 times since. And more.

I was so enthusiastic about this course that Drayton Bird himself sent me an email and offered me the chance to work with him.

The result?

Check out this site: www.directmarketingcourse.com

I had a big hand in that copy.

This is what Ross Bowring, a fellow copywriter on the Warrior Forum, said of the copy on this site…


“Rezbi… Bravo! And I’ve never said “Bravo” to anyone before (!) That’s a very nicely written letter. Skillfully communicates benefits with no hype whatsoever. Read the whole thing. Never usually do that. Mightily impressed.”


And this is what Drayton said of the same…

Enthusiasm without knowledge is useless. Rezbi is one of those rare and valuable people – a genuine enthusiast who studies. He was hugely valuable to me in working on the promotion for EADIM. The (very complex) landing page is a good example of his work, a great joint effort!


All I can say is this – I got the opportunity to work on this, and on others, as a direct result of going on that course last year. It is, in my opinion, the best course on direct and digital marketing that exists today.

And, if ANYONE is really serious about their career, online or offline – no matter which industry they are in – they would be jumping to get on this course.

Now my question is: How serious are you?

Don’t waste any more time or money. Get on this course and – finally – start making a success of your business and career.

If nothing else, at least go and check out the site to see how much I’ve accomplished as a result of doing this course. And how much you could, too: www.directmarketingcourse.com

Oh, I nearly forgot… if you book before the end of the year, you also get a HUGE 34% discount.

And, if you can’t afford that measly sum, you can even pay by monthly installments.

Check it out: www.directmarketingcourse.com

Best,
Rezbi

2

What Is Direct Response Marketing?

Since even a mature business like advertising is not clearly understood by many of its practitioners you can hardly be surprised that few understand what direct marketing is.

Indeed, whilst preparing this article, I saw that, in a survey of 133 leading American direct marketers, no clear agreement on what the business is emerged.

When the phrase direct marketing comes up, most people, in my experience, immediately think of the medium of direct mail.

Others think of direct marketing as a method of selling, like off -the-page selling.

Others confuse it with a channel of distribution, like mail order.

Producing a definition as simple as ‘Salesmanship in print’ for advertising proved an insuperable task for the industry’s pundits. So much so that (in what I can only assume was a moment of despair) Direct Marketing magazine – then the industry’s leading American organ – summoned not one, but three experts to do so.

The result of their labours was placed at the beginning of every issue of the magazine.

It occupied two half pages, featuring one of those gloriously complicated flow charts which always throw me into a state of utter confusion.

You may consider the need for a simple definition unimportant; indeed, few people using direct marketing bother to speculate on what it really is.

But I consider it crucial.

Imagine spending millions of pounds without clearly understanding what you are spending them on.

Not an imaginary scenario, I assure you.

In fact, not long ago, I recall a debate taking place with a leading automobile company, which we shall call Ford for the sake of argument, covering many countries and multifarious marketing problems.

Was direct marketing an advertising activity?

In that case the people in charge of advertising should make the decision.

Was it ‘below the line’? In which case that company’s policy meant that a different department, usually concerned with purchasing everything down to stationery, would deal with it.

I will not go into detail, save to say that in the end different decisions were made in different countries for different reasons – most to do with these varying views of direct marketing.

This is obviously stupid.

And it is not likely to become any more intelligent if everybody involved has to understand and memorise a long, illustrated definition before they start work.

Moreover, the pool of understanding has been muddied further by the fact that many practitioners are not even agreed that direct marketing ought to be called direct marketing.

As a result, combined with the desire to give brand names to particular companies’ approaches to the business, all sorts of names have cropped up: terms such as ‘curriculum marketing’, ‘dialogue marketing’, ‘personal marketing’, ‘database marketing’ and – currently the most fashionable one – ‘customer relationship marketing’.

But the most common term remains direct marketing.

It is certainly the one I propose to stick to.

Nevertheless, these terms do reveal important facts about the nature of the business.

Certainly direct marketing revolves around the building and exploitation of a database – though there is more to it than that.

Equally, building a relationship is one of our objectives – but only one.

The approach is personal; and in the process of building  a relationship, you can guide your prospect through a curriculum whereby you learn more about them and they learn more about you.

But my simple definition of direct marketing is: ‘any advertising activity which creates and exploits a direct relationship between you and your prospect or customer as an individual’.

If you and I can agree that we ought to call direct marketing ‘direct marketing’, and you accept my simple definition, then you will immediately appreciate that a wide range of activities is encompassed.

I am sure you have been stopped by people standing on street corners with questionnaires bearing such inane queries as: ‘Are you able to save as much money as you’d like?’ If you are not careful, these will lead to a visit from an insurance salesman.

Clearly these people are engaged in direct marketing: they are making a direct contact and trying to initiate a relationship with you as an individual.

In the same way, somebody who offers you a leaflet inviting you to go into your local hamburger joint and win a prize; or the ad for the introduction agency offering love everlasting; the note in the shop window selling a used ghetto blaster; the ad suggesting you apply for shares in British Telecom; the leaflet coming through your door in praise of your local Conservative Party candidate – they’re all direct marketing.

In fact the most popular section in many papers – the classified section – is nothing but direct marketing.

And almost everything that happens on the internet involves direct marketing.

Perhaps it is worth stating here what I believe to be the differences between direct marketing and some of the other communications tools. (This is not made any easier by the fact that in the case of sales promotion, people are no more agreed about what they do than are direct marketers.)

How Does Direct Marketing Differ From Other Disciplines Like Advertising?

  • Advertising usually speaks to people en masse, not as individuals. Although today the vast majority of ads do allow people to respond, especially by going to a website, advertising does not usually aim above all for an immediate response. It seeks  to influence customers so that they choose your brand when they reach the point of decision – the shop, for instance.
  • Sales promotion is normally designed to get action at the point of sale. Often it uses the same methods as direct marketing. It can also generate lists. But rarely is there a continuing effort to build a lasting relationship with  respondents by exploiting the full possibilities of a database.
  • Public relations employs media controlled by others to create a favourable climate of opinion. It too can create a database, for instance of replies to editorials, which are usually of very good quality.
  • Packaging protects and draws attention to the product. It can also strengthen people’s belief in your product, reassure them, make offers, and collect names cheaply for the database.
  • Experiential marketing, a fashionable new name for what used to be called events, certainly creates opportunities for building relationships, although few are doing this with it. Certainly practitioners in all disciplines are  increasingly aware of the potential of the direct relationship, but very few appreciate its full possibilities.

The above is an excerpt taken from Drayton Bird’s book, ‘Commonsense Direct & Digital Marketing’.

To discover how direct and digital marketing can — and most probably will — make a difference to your business, click here.

Best,
Rezbi
www.directmarketingcourse.com
www.hotbuttoncopywriting.com
www.commonsensedirectmarketing.com

P.S. I just found a great article by Seth Godin where he also talks about the difference between direct marketing vs. mass market thinking. You can read that article here.

0



What Is Direct Response Marketing?


Since even a mature business like advertising is not clearly understood by many of its practitioners you can hardly be surprised that few understand what direct marketing is.


Indeed, whilst preparing this article, I saw that, in a survey of 133 leading American direct marketers, no clear agreement on what the business is emerged.


When the phrase direct marketing comes up, most people, in my experience, immediately think of the medium of direct mail.


Others think of direct marketing as a method of selling, like off -the-page selling.


Others confuse it with a channel of distribution, like mail order.


Producing a definition as simple as ‘Salesmanship in print’ for advertising proved an insuperable task for the industry’s pundits. So much so that (in what I can only assume was a moment of despair) Direct Marketing magazine – then the industry’s leading American organ – summoned not one, but three experts to do so.


The result of their labours was placed at the beginning of every issue of the magazine.


It occupied two half pages, featuring one of those gloriously complicated flow charts which always throw me into a state of utter confusion.


You may consider the need for a simple definition unimportant; indeed, few people using direct marketing bother to speculate on what it really is.


But I consider it crucial.


Imagine spending millions of pounds without clearly understanding what you are spending them on.


Not an imaginary scenario, I assure you.


In fact, not long ago, I recall a debate taking place with a leading automobile company, which we shall call Ford for the sake of argument, covering many countries and multifarious marketing problems.


Was direct marketing an advertising activity?


In that case the people in charge of advertising should make the decision.


Was it ‘below the line’? In which case that company’s policy meant that a different department, usually concerned with purchasing everything down to stationery, would deal with it.


I will not go into detail, save to say that in the end different decisions were made in different countries for different reasons – most to do with these varying views of direct marketing.


This is obviously stupid.


And it is not likely to become any more intelligent if everybody involved has to understand and memorise a long, illustrated definition before they start work.


Moreover, the pool of understanding has been muddied further by the fact that many practitioners are not even agreed that direct marketing ought to be called direct marketing.


As a result, combined with the desire to give brand names to particular companies’ approaches to the business, all sorts of names have cropped up: terms such as ‘curriculum marketing’, ‘dialogue marketing’, ‘personal marketing’, ‘database marketing’ and – currently the most fashionable one – ‘customer relationship marketing’.


But the most common term remains direct marketing.


It is certainly the one I propose to stick to.


Nevertheless, these terms do reveal important facts about the nature of the business.


Certainly direct marketing revolves around the building and exploitation of a database – though there is more to it than that.


Equally, building a relationship is one of our objectives – but only one.


The approach is personal; and in the process of building  a relationship, you can guide your prospect through a curriculum whereby you learn more about them and they learn more about you.


But my simple definition of direct marketing is: ‘any advertising activity which creates and exploits a direct relationship between you and your prospect or customer as an individual’.


If you and I can agree that we ought to call direct marketing ‘direct marketing’, and you accept my simple definition, then you will immediately appreciate that a wide range of activities is encompassed.


I am sure you have been stopped by people standing on street corners with questionnaires bearing such inane queries as: ‘Are you able to save as much money as you’d like?’ If you are not careful, these will lead to a visit from an insurance salesman.


Clearly these people are engaged in direct marketing: they are making a direct contact and trying to initiate a relationship with you as an individual.


In the same way, somebody who offers you a leaflet inviting you to go into your local hamburger joint and win a prize; or the ad for the introduction agency offering love everlasting; the note in the shop window selling a used ghetto blaster; the ad suggesting you apply for shares in British Telecom; the leaflet coming through your door in praise of your local Conservative Party candidate – they’re all direct marketing.


In fact the most popular section in many papers – the classified section – is nothing but direct marketing.


And almost everything that happens on the internet involves direct marketing.


Perhaps it is worth stating here what I believe to be the differences between direct marketing and some of the other communications tools. (This is not made any easier by the fact that in the case of sales promotion, people are no more agreed about what they do than are direct marketers.)




How Does Direct Marketing Differ From Other Disciplines Like Advertising?



  • Advertising usually speaks to people en masse, not as individuals. Although today the vast majority of ads do allow people to respond, especially by going to a website, advertising does not usually aim above all for an immediate response. It seeks  to influence customers so that they choose your brand when they reach the point of decision – the shop, for instance.

  • Sales promotion is normally designed to get action at the point of sale. Often it uses the same methods as direct marketing. It can also generate lists. But rarely is there a continuing effort to build a lasting relationship with  respondents by exploiting the full possibilities of a database.

  • Public relations employs media controlled by others to create a favourable climate of opinion. It too can create a database, for instance of replies to editorials, which are usually of very good quality.

  • Packaging protects and draws attention to the product. It can also strengthen people’s belief in your product, reassure them, make offers, and collect names cheaply for the database.

  • Experiential marketing, a fashionable new name for what used to be called events, certainly creates opportunities for building relationships, although few are doing this with it. Certainly practitioners in all disciplines are  increasingly aware of the potential of the direct relationship, but very few appreciate its full possibilities.


The above is an excerpt taken from Drayton Bird’s book, ‘Commonsense Direct & Digital Marketing’.


To discover how direct and digital marketing can — and most probably will — make a difference to your business, click here.


Best,
Rezbi
www.directmarketingcourse.com
www.hotbuttoncopywriting.com
www.commonsensedirectmarketing.com


P.S. I just found a great article by Seth Godin where he also talks about the difference between direct marketing vs. mass market thinking. You can read that article here.

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I’m a lazy sod given half a chance, so I thought I’d let an old friend do a bit of work.

Christian Digby-Firth was one of my creative directors years ago at O & M and has a very neat turn of phrase.

Good writing is always a good thing to note if you want good people, since as Dr. Johnson observed, “Language is the dress of thought.”

Here’s something Christian sent me just now.

“What is it about airport ads? They’re breeding grounds for some of the most fatuous copy lines in the biz. “We know what it takes to be a Tiger”, “In business people are good together”, “Hello”, etc. etc and all the others too crushingly dull to recall. Which is of course your point.

International committee work, I suppose.

“Make the most of now” is Vodafone’s anxious strategic imperative writ large: i.e. “Please use your mobile phone to do all sorts of things that are pointless to you but profitable to us, and do them now because we don’t make anything on your boring old voice calls”.

Now, I have to confess that though I agree with almost everything in that hilarious little note, I don’t agree with that.

I think the Tiger campaign is very cleverly aimed at executives with very small p**cks and even smaller minds who want to feel like they’re big bold business marauders – and who are gullible enough to believe Accenture will help them do it without having to think, in exchange for absurdly large sums of money.

But there is an important point I want to make (besides one I made in an earlier piece, which is that emotion beats logic, even in business).

It’s: Playing on people’s inadequacies is a very smart thing to do.

Take a look at any successful self-help ad, and you’ll see what they do.

I mentioned Max Sackheim a week or so ago – the man who wrote “My First 50 years in Advertising”.

He wrote an ad entitled, “Do you make these mistakes in English?” aimed to sell English courses to immigrants who felt unsure about their English. It ran successfully for 40 years.

Here it is:

Lillian Eichler wrote an ad with the heading, “Again she orders – A Chicken Salad, Please.” – to sell a book of etiquette to people who felt socially inadequate.

It took three writers to produce an ad headed, “Here’s an extra $50, Grace – I’m making real money now” – aimed to sell correspondence courses. This is one of my favourite headlines ever..

Now, I hope you’re not going to give me that bleeding heart stuff about playing on people’s fears. If you do I will tell you one thing I know for sure, in fact I bet on it once..

Recently I was speaking at Manchester University, and the celebrity speaker was a famous chef. I was discussing what motivates successful people with a lady at my table..

I said, “It’s fear of failure – and I bet this man is no exception.”

The man’s speech began almost word for word with what I’d said. He revealed how he feared not living up to his father’s expectations..

People who achieve do so almost always because they fear to fail..

And people who fail usually do so because they’re cocksure -not worried about failing, and so don’t try hard enough.

Best,
Drayton
www.directmarketingcourse.com
www.commonsensedirectmarketing.com

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