Not exact matches
As a direct mailer you might hire vendors including some or all
of the following: a professional writer to write your copy, a graphic designer to lay out your
piece, a quality printer to print and fold your sales
pieces, a
list broker to provide a targeted
list of prospect names with addresses, a
mail house to stuff and sort your sales
pieces to be
mailed according to postal regulations and take it to the post office... Am I leaving anyone out?
We've
mailed more than 300,000,000 sales
pieces, used thousands
of mailing lists, sold hundreds
of thousands
of products, courses, services, and newsletters.
It doesn't matter how great your copy is, how perfectly designed the sales
piece is, or how sweet
of an offer you have... if you use the wrong
mailing list, your
mail will not even show - up at the door.
The best way to get samples
of their
pieces, and also to get a feel for how often they
mail and what kind
of offers they advertise, is to get on their
mailing list.
That means that if you
mail 10,000
pieces of mail without cleaning your
list or running a merge purge, you could easily end up
mailing 1,500 names that are worthless.
I followed up with him a few weeks ago and he told me that after a year
of mailings, testing, and using a variety
of sales
pieces, his
mailings are still doing extremely well (to the same
list I might add...).
Last - minute direct
mail pieces will shower mailboxes, robo - calls will assault ears and answering machines, and volunteers will groan under the weight
of neighborhood walk -
lists and call -
lists.
And then I remembered a
piece of mail that went through one
of the
lists I subscribe to suggesting folks take a look at Go2Web20.net, a site that describes itself as the «complete» directory
of Web 2.0 tools.
By Marcy Kennedy (@MarcyKennedy) One
of the almost universal
pieces of advice we hear as indie authors is that we need to build a newsletter
mailing list.
But it's a handy
piece of software to have to send to anyone on your
mailing list.
If I could offer only one
piece of book marketing advice to aspiring authors, it would be this: start building your
mailing list (a.k.a. e-mail newsletter) as soon as possible.
Landlords in Kentucky can be
listed as additional interest and made aware
of changes in the status
of their residents» policies without ever opening another
piece of mail from an insurance company.
Ray's site needs to invite the visitor to do something — I generally recommend that they invite the visitor to sign up for a
mailing list or to take a look at a
piece of art that is for sale.
My two best
pieces of advice are start a
mailing list and treasure it — and don't skimp on your advertising and promotional materials.
Artists like Nathalie Van have literally sold hundreds
of pieces of art on Etsy, building up a massive
mailing list that she can then upsell.
It's probably a good
list of names to have on your exhibition
mailing list, especially if your works sell for more than a few hundred thousand a
piece.
• Manage
mailing services including organization
of address
lists, imprinting
of mail pieces, and coordination with the post office.
@Andrew Cordle Are you
mailing the SAME
list every week or are you
mailing PIECES of the
list every week.
My personal residence has received a few direct
mail pieces and I am not an out
of state owner or delinquent on my property taxes, so not sure how I got added to a
list unless investors are
mailing large non-targeted
lists.
Ongoing Campaign: After you have found an effective combination
of your message,
mail piece, and
mailing list filters, starting an ongoing campaign may be your next move.
A copy
of the marketing
piece to be
mailed using the ORRA
mailing list must be submitted for approval prior to release
of the
list.