Starting
a direct mail campaign with poor preparation is
perhaps the most common of all mistakes.
Direct mail is not the end - but the first step
in attracting new customers. The preliminary leads
it generate may turn into actual sale only by
proper follow-up. Do not start a direct mail campaign
unless you have made all arrangement for prompt
and proper follow-up. Indeed, there is little
justification for starting an elaborate mail campaign
if you are not in a position to encash the sales
leads.
Hot leads rapidly turn cold if not followed up
promptly and properly. Delayed response, slow
fulfillment, poor marketing literature and inept
response can easily destroy initial interest shown
by potential customer. Think of how hard you worked
to get these leads - Isn't the end result so very
frustrating !
Here is a checklist of questions
you should ask yourself before starting a direct
mail campaign
- Can I respond to every inquiry within 24-hours
?
- Is follow-up mail and printed literature in
place ?
- Am I responding with answers to customer's
inquiry or a general-purpose sales letter ?
- What is my plan for people who do not respond
? Do I send additional mail ? If so, at what
intervals ?
- How do I mix e-mail, postal mail and phone/fax
for people who have shown positive interest
? Direct mail followed by postal mail, telephone,
fax, sending representative (wherever possible)
generate upto 10 times more response than direct
mail with no follow-up
- Does my follow up inquiry fulfillment package
include a strong sales letter telling potential
customer what to do next ?
- Does my inquiry fulfillment package include
a reply element, such as printed order form,
link to on-line order form in website, full
specifications etc.
- Does my sales brochure give the reader the
information he/she needs to make an intelligent
decision about taking the next step in the buying
process ?
Don't put 100% of your time and effort into lead
generation mailing and 0% into follow-up, as so
many mailers do. Remember, your ultimate aim is
to sell and keep selling - not mail distribution.
|