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6 Stupid Things Smart People Do to Screw Up Their Direct Mail | Global Intelligence Blog

Written by Melissa Team | Jul 27, 2017 7:00:00 AM

6 Stupid Things Smart People Do to Screw Up Their Direct Mail

By Dean Rieck, direct mail copywriter

I once asked a young chess player how he wins so many games, often against older and more experienced players. He just smiled and said, “I try to avoid making mistakes.”

That’s a great piece of advice. And it works in direct mail as much as it does in chess. If you avoid obvious mistakes, you stand a pretty good chance of coming out a winner. 

What sort of mistakes? After working with over 200 clients in the U.S. and abroad, I’ve seen lots of smart people making lots of stupid mistakes. But there are a few particularly stupid things I see again and again, each guaranteed to screw up your direct mail big time: 

Stupid Thing #1–Having the artist design the piece first, and the writer fill in the blanks later. 
I’ve been in this situation more times than I care to admit. And the result is always bad. It’s usually an agency. And it’s usually right after they’ve won a client’s business with the aid of a few funky design mockups. Trouble is, when clients are acquired that way, they want to see a final product that looks like the original concept. The format is selected and the layout is created before any thought is given to the actual message. 

Like the time an agency sent me a mockup of a three-dimensional mailing to announce a trade show. The copy areas were indicated by neat little gray boxes here and there in the design. My job: fill in the blanks. But, I asked, what about a response form? What about a letter? What about … “no, just fill in the blanks, thank you.” 

Design is a vital part of every direct mail piece. But it’s the copy that sells. Always start with the copy and let the design serve the message, not the other way around. 

Stupid Thing #2–Plastering a clever teaser on every envelope you mail.
A teaser is a technique, not a requirement. But some people seem to experience physical pain at the idea of mailing a plain envelope. 
A financial services firm asked me to write a lead generation package. I delivered it, and my contact called me to say some of my copy had been lost. 

Me: Lost?

Client: Yes, there is no teaser copy for the envelope. 

Me: Oh, well I didn’t write any. 

Client: Didn’t write any? (Long silence.) Well the envelope can’t go out like that. 

What would the board of directors say? 

Me: Are you mailing it to the board of directors? 

Client: No, but they want a professional-looking package. 

Me: Really? I would think they want a package that gets the best response possible. And in this case, I think that means using a plain envelope. 

Client: (Another long silence.) Okay, well, our designer has some ideas for teaser copy, so we’ll come up with something. 

The decision about whether to use a teaser depends on what you are selling and your relationship with your prospects. And it depends on whether you want your mailing to look like advertising. Sometimes it should. Often it shouldn’t.

My rule for teasers and graphics on outer envelopes is simple: When in doubt, leave it out.

Stupid Thing #3–Spending 2 weeks on the flyer and 2 hours on the letter.
I know. Brochures are sexy. Letters aren’t. But the old saying is as true as it ever was: “The letter sells. The brochure tells.” So if you spend all your time on the tell, you just aren’t going to sell. 

A newsletter publisher sent me a sample of a direct mail package that wasn’t working like they thought it should. I could see one big problem right away. The letter was a four-paragraph snoozer–little more than “Enclosed you will find yadda yadda.” The company president said his secretary wrote it. 

Sigh.

I could go on and on about the importance of letters, but here’s the bottom line. If it’s in an envelope, it needs a letter. And if you enclose a letter, it should sell. That’s where you make the personal connection. That’s where you make your pitch. That’s where you close the deal. 

A package can work without a brochure, but it will seldom work without a good letter. It’s the most important part of every direct mail package, and you should allot your time accordingly.

Stupid Thing #4–Playing hide and seek with the order form, guarantee, and testimonials. 
A software company had tested a half dozen versions of the same mailer. 

All of them had performed poorly. When I got the samples, I could see why. The order form was hidden on the last panel of the brochure. The guarantee — one of the strongest I’ve ever seen — appeared in only one place in the middle of some text. And the testimonials were merely filler for a few open areas in the design.

An order form is not a piece of extra paper. A guarantee is not a necessary evil to jam into the copy. Testimonials are not a design element. Each of these is part of the skeleton of your direct mail message. Without that skeleton, the body of your package collapses into a lifeless mass of paper.

Whenever possible, make your order form a separate piece. If you have a strong guarantee, highlight it on every piece to assure your prospect of your integrity. And group your testimonials so they make a stronger impression. 

Stupid Thing #5–Buying first class postage and third class creative.
If ever there was a definition of false economy, it’s this. One New York publisher is typical. They had an expensive, specialized industry publication they wanted to sell. Could I help them? Sure. So I gave them a quote for a package, but they said it was too much. To save money, they did it on the cheap with some local people. 

I talked to them again some months later and guess what? The package bombed. That economy mailing wasn’t very economical after all. They admitted this, and said that’s why they were calling. Could I help them? Sure. So I gave them another quote. Again it’s too much. They claim they have to save money because the first mailing didn’t do well!

Look. If you’ve spent months developing the product, researching lists, spying on the competition, setting up fulfillment services, and getting all the particulars in place, then why would you suddenly get cheap on creative?

Do you want the cheapest brain surgeon? Do you shop for economy parachutes? Do you pinch pennies on rattlesnake venom antidote? If something is important, you want the best. Right? 

Some of the best creative talent in this business is freelance. And most of those people command much more than the $50 an hour types who are just looking for some work between agency jobs. Professional-level copy and design for a typical direct mail package can easily cost $5,000 to $20,000 or more, depending on size and complexity. But it’s never cheap. 

I know you can’t judge quality solely on price, since there are hacks at every price level. But you can be sure of one thing: if the price is low, there’s a reason. If you need brain surgery, you don’t want a doctor who is paid $15 an hour and drives a rusty Pinto. And if you need effective direct mail, you don’t want cheap creative talent either. 

Both will make your brain hurt.

Stupid Thing #6–Guessing, guessing, guessing instead of testing, testing, testing.
This is probably the stupidest thing of all. And I run into it all the time. Despite the image our industry has for being a bunch of number-happy bean counters, a frighteningly large percentage of businesses don’t test. Or don’t test properly. 

One guy wanted me to help him sell a software product. He was using a self-mailer, but I thought he needed an envelope package. He said he had tested envelope packages and determined that they don’t work. 

But after asking some very specific questions, I found out he had done one mailing. With a new offer. To an untried list. During a bad time of the year. And didn’t mail it against his control. In other words, he did a lousy mailing, got lousy results, and concluded that envelope packages are lousy.

And you would be amazed at the businesses I talk to that don’t test at all–respected, household names you probably think are testing their socks off. Some of the worst offenders are big companies that have direct mail programs, but don’t rely on them for their success. (Yikes! You’re probably borrowing techniques from these people!)

I don’t care how smart you are or how well you know your market or product. Until you run a properly designed test, you don’t know jack. And even then, you should test again just to be sure. 

Is testing expensive? Let me put it this way: it’s less expensive than rolling out a mailing that is destined to flop. So make this your mantra: Test. Test. Test.

Avoiding stupid mistakes won’t guarantee success. But like the chess player, you will reduce your losses and thereby increase your wins. 

Dean Rieck is a leading direct mail copywriter. For more copywriting and selling tips, sign up for Dean’s FREE direct response newsletter and get a free report, 99 Easy Ways to Boost Your Direct Mail Response.
 
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All data goes bad (up to 25% per year), whether due to data entry errors or the simple fact that consumers change jobs, move, update email addresses, marry, etc. At Melissa, we help companies harness the value of their Big Data, legacy data, and people data (names, addresses, phone numbers, and emails) to drive insight, maintain data quality, and support global intelligence