Marketing
With Post Cards
by Jeffrey Dobkin
The
absolute best campaign you can create is a letter campaign. A
series of personalized letters sent over time can be your most
effective selling tool, ever. But man, they’re a lot of
work.
So
the problem is: how can you stay in your customers’
Top-of-Mind-Awareness without all that work. The answer is: with
a few post cards. By mailing post cards to each prospect
or customer every three to eight weeks, your customers and
prospects think of you when they need something, and pick up the
phone and call you when they’re ready to buy.
Post
Cards Are Hard Working Marketing Tools Because…
They’re
Cheap To Produce.
Since a post card is usually a single sheet of paper, it’s
always cheaper than sending a letter and a brochure stuffed into
an envelope. Post cards also incur no lettershop charges of
folding and inserting: just image a name and address on one side
and away they go.
The
Postage Is Cheaper, Too.
They’re cheap to mail first class: just 20¢ each. This cost
is before any postal discounts, which can be substantial!
Strangely enough, post cards can be cheaper to mail FIRST
CLASS than bulk. Restrictions apply - they must be
bar-coded and carrier-route labeled, which is done routinely if
you use a lettershop to sort and mail. Need a good
mailshop?
Mailshop USA mails nothing but postcards: 800-432-9870, Fax
(610)-630-8247.
Need
Fast Delivery Of Your Message?
Mailing post cards allows you to take advantage of first class
delivery while enjoying the postage savings from the first class
letter rate.
Postal
Savings Even When Mailing Just A Few Cards.
Is your mailing list just to a few hundred special people? Even
when just mailing a few handfuls, post cards under 4-1/4” x
6” have a lower postage rate than first class letters:
20¢ - even without any discounts.
Mailing
House Costs Can Be Completely Offset By Postage Savings.
Tired of doing it yourself? If you take your post cards to a
mailing house, their entire cost of inkjet addressing, tying,
bagging and delivering to the post office may still cost you
less than if you mailed them yourself. It’s like getting their
service for FREE. You save money because their payment is
recovered from all of the postal discounts they get for
you. It’s a win-win-win: you have less work, save money, and
you get better delivery.
Post
Cards Have High Readership.
Almost everyone reads post cards, even the good folks who throw
out all your bulk direct mail! Heck, all the wording is…
right there! By the time your customers have it in
their hands… they’re reading it.
They’re
Diverse.
Post cards can be looked at as a piece of one-to-one
communication - so you can be as personable as “jest settin’
on your front stoop,” or as formal as a bound book with an
embossed gold leaf cover.
Post
Cards Can Come Back To Haunt You.
Double post cards are great as a response vehicle. Many double
post cards test profitably against long-copy packages on
subscription offers, especially where the magazine is well
known. As a bonus, since the address side already contains
the customer name, along with any marketing data you’d like to
see, it’s possible to use that card as a pre-filled-out
order card the customer just drops in the mail.
Post
Cards Handle Illustrations Well.
Line art, airbrush, four color - even crayon… whatever you
have, it can look great on a post card. Better paper stock
enhances the “It didn’t come out as good as we thought it
would!” designs.
They’re
Inexpensive To Print - No Need To Go Four Color.
A nice thing about post cards - one or two color post cards work
just fine, and they’re cheaper to print. About 90% of
the post cards I create for clients are specified to be printed
in just one or two colors.
Four
Color Post Cards Are Cheap To Have Printed.
There are some gang-run post card printers (no, not that kind of
gang - post cards are printed en masse on giant sheets of 24”
x 26” post card paper stock, then trimmed) and the cost can be
as low as $350 for 5,000 cards. Call 800-POSTCARDS (www.postcardpower.com)
for their free catalog. Or try Modern
Postcard, call 800-959-8365 and ask for their free sample
kit. Or call Mitchell Graphics, 800-583-9401, for samples and
pricing.
They’re
Easy To Handle.
Doing the mailing yourself? No stuffing, no folding.
Not much messing around - just print, address, and mail.
Need
To Get Undeliverable Names And Addresses Mailed Back So You Can
Remove Them From Your Mailing List?
Need to make address corrections in a timely fashion without
additional expense? Send post cards first class with the
imprint “Address Service Requested” below the stamp: the
post office will return cards with undeliverable addresses back
to you. Lots of catalog companies do this before mailing
their catalog - it’s much cheaper to get cards back for free
than to pay for getting wrecked and unusable catalogs back after
the rough handling by the postal service.
Need
A Quick Survey Response?
Keep post card surveys short, and ask recipients to fax them
back. There’s a good chance you’ll get lots of them
returned.
Additional
Recommendations
There are three hard and fast recommendations for post cards.
First, don’t use cheap paper. Since post cards are usually
small sheets, go for the good stuff. In short runs paper
stock is a small fraction of the overall costs. I never
recommend cheap paper for anything but the cheapest promotions
from my cheapest clients, and sometimes for longer press runs of
25,000 sheets and up - where paper cost is a much larger
percentage of the overall campaign costs.
Second,
don’t go for gloss unless you are printing in four colors.
A glossy finish will get marked, mangled and scarred at the post
office - gloss cards aren’t handled well by the
post office automatics. Chances are your glossy post card
will be delivered with the equivalent of an 18 wheeler tractor
trailer skid mark across the billboard side, and hard telling
what the address side will look like. The paper stock I
recommend? A crisp, bright-white 80 pound linen stock.
Third,
don’t go for the smallest size card - like the standard card
the post office offers. The minimum size card doesn’t
scream out for attention like a 5-1/2” x 8-1/2” card does,
which is the size I recommend. The largest size you can
mail without incurring additional expense (over 20¢) is
4-1/4” x 6”. The largest post card size you can mail
for 33¢ postage is an 8-1/2” x 11” sheet. If you
can’t make an impression with that size, call me and let’s
talk.
Examples
Of Successful Campaigns
An insurance client of mine needed a post card that would be
retained by the customer, or at least until their present
insurance expires (their ex-date). Theory was: then
they’d
have the card on-hand and would call him for a quote. We
created a 3-fold (21” x 5-1/2” folded to 7” x 5-1/2”)
card printed in bright yellow and black with the words “SEND
HELP” on one side, and with a “what to do in case of an
accident” report form on the back. His first run was
10,000. Results: 3 more runs of 10,000 each over the
next 6 months. Everyone loved them. They’re in
everyone’s glove compartment. We said “save this
card” on each and everyone did. We also printed “Call
us for fast friendly information or a quick rate quote,” and
everyone did that, too.
An
interim placement specialist in the financial community sends
post cards every 4 to 6 weeks to his client list. His
objective: Top-of-Mind Awareness. Four years ago when we
started he had a mailing list of 250. Now he mails to over
1,200 a month. We’re on his 24th card (we repeated our
favorites over several mailings). Whenever he speaks with
clients they always mention they enjoy his cards. The copy
on one of my favorite cards: “When your loan manager
goes on leave does your customer service follow suit?”
He’s famous in his industry for his post cards.
Creating
Successful Cards Is Easy
On the billboard side, as you would for any advertisement design
for 3 levels of readership:
- a
big bold headline to entice scanning readers. This
copy is for folks who just glance at your card to get the
idea. If you stop them with a clever headline,
they’ll continue reading. Your headline has one
objective: drive the reader into the rest of the copy.
- Subheads
are then written and designed to intrigue and arouse the
reader further. This is the “not quite as large as
the headline type, and not quite as small as the body copy
type” line that encourages the smooth transition between
the two areas. This line also has the same objective
as the headline: get them to read further.

- The
first line or two of the body copy must be smart and sharp -
written and designed from the get go to fulfill the specific
objective of… keeping the reader reading. The
complete transition of a scanning reader to a confirmed
reader still hasn’t taken place yet.
After
the first few clever lines in your body copy, the reader is then
hooked: he’s made a commitment to read the rest. Now you
can start selling your post card objective whether
it is to 1. generate an inquiry via phone by having readers call
for further information, 2. generate an order directly from the
card, 3. get them to come into your retail store, or 4.
send (write or fax) for more information. Don’t forget
to tell the reader exactly what you want him to do, and be
specific.
Additional
Tips:
At
the bottom of the post card your logo may be the same size but
certainly no larger than your telephone number, which should be
big enough to see clearly if the card is laying on a desk and a
cataract patient is trying to dial your number while standing
there with a phone in one hand.
Always
print “Save this card!” somewhere near the top, and people
will. It’s funny - if you don’t print this line, they
won’t.
It’s
OK to send a card more than once. Successful cards can be
sent forever as long as they continue to cover their costs.
Unsuccessful cards or cards tougher to track can still be sent
regularly. You get sick of looking at them long before
your customers get tired of receiving them. If any
customers complain, hey - you’re getting noticed.
Traditional
post cards - those small manila cards you can buy at the post
office - may be used for technical, reference-only mailings to
engineers and computer geeks. If you want
a reference-looking card almost like the one the government
would put out notifying you of a tax lien, this is the one.
“Now shipping version 4.3” doesn’t necessarily need to be
in full color.
Also,
if your sole intention is to notify a broad customer base of a
technology change or B2B product (perhaps as unglamorous as your
launch of a new ball bearing, or other
necessary product information) as cheaply as possible, the
standard manila cards the post office issues will work here,
too. But if you’re selling something the least bit
upscale, or
want to command attention, use a larger card of better quality
paper.
Double
post cards are good for feedback. Besides the larger area
for image and copy, you can get an easy-to-use response vehicle
in the same piece of mail. This format of cards are great
and tests well for well-known and re-up magazine and newsletter
subscriptions. They also are good for purging your
database of old names and bad addresses, and for asking
recipients for recommendations for new names and gathering
addresses for mailing and email lists.
Getting
Your Card Back
While double post cards are the norm, if you’re not
die-cutting one side for the address to show through, it’s
always a problem figuring out which side to address, which is
the
billboard side, and which side to address to get it back to you.
There
are a few alternatives: first, consider a triple post card:
three cards scored and folded over to the size of one card.
For the little extra it costs for the small square of paper and
the extra fold, you get a third more selling space, and it’s
cheaper than a diecut. It’s also much easier to design a
dedicated return card that doesn’t have to double as something
else.
Alternatively,
you can leave the return address side with an address grid the
recipient fills out before sending back. If your computer
printer can print a name and address upside down - you can print
the recipient’s name and address and/or any priority or
special coding in the upper right-hand corner of the return card
above the address grid. This is above the fold. Below the fold
is the address side to whom you are sending the card. This
eliminates inkjetting on the second (back) side of the card in a
separate inkjet pass. It’s an exceptionally easy-to-use
return-card format.
With
a single card you can have recipients fill out a few questions
in a survey, then fax the whole card back to you.
Bring
In Some Visual Recognition
When creating a multi-card campaign, keep the image and the
message the same on the address side of each succeeding card.
It’s usually institutional copy anyhow on this side - name,
address, phone, blah blah blah. The address side is also a good
place for a few bold lines or a free offer to the reader to get
more information: “Call now to get our free
booklet about ____.”
Don’t
forget - a post card campaign is not a single mailing, a
campaign by definition is a sustained effort over time, so mail
frequently. And above all: it’s direct mail and a game
of numbers - mail as many cards to as many people as you can.
©2000
Jeffrey Dobkin
Jeffrey
Dobkin, author of the incredible 400-page marketing manual, How
To Market A Product for Under $500 ($29.95), now has a second
book, Uncommon Marketing Techniques ($17.95) - 33 of his latest
columns on small business marketing, exactly like the one you
just read. Both books are available directly from the publisher
- 800-234-IDEA. He is also a speaker, a direct mail and web
content copywriter, and a marketing consultant. To place
an order, or to speak with Mr. Dobkin call 610/642-1000. Fax
610/642-6832. Email: jeff@dobkin.com.
From The Danielle Adams Publishing Company, Box 100, Merion
Station, PA 19066. Satisfaction Always Guaranteed.
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