Monday, November 30, 2009

Stay Out of The Waste Basket

When you return home from a business trip or vacation, what method do you use to sort your mail?
  1. Bills, personal mail, advertising mail
  2. First class mail and all other mail
  3. Important or interesting-looking mail and all else
We assert that no matter what method you use, an eye catching mail piece will make the first cut and stay out of the waste basket long enough for you to take a second look. The same is true for your customers or prospects. Marketing mail can survive a first glance if it is well designed and of obvious quality.

Whether your marketing mail is a postcard, self-mailer or traditional direct mail piece enclosed in an envelope, the choice of paper is an important quality consideration. The stock should be sturdy enough that the mail piece can withstand high speed mail processing without damage, and appropriate to the printing process. And if you are using post-press processes such as die cutting or embossing, you will want to select a stock that is known to produce a good result.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Why does half the space on a postcard have to be devoted to the address?

It may surprise you to learn that it doesn't! The practice of placing a vertical line midway across the postcard and using all the space to the right for the outbound address is a holdover from postcard designs dating back to 1907.

The term for the part of the postcard containing the outbound address is the address block, and the amount of space required for it depends on the elements of the address - the number of lines and the length of the longest line. In addition, the United Staes Postal Service (USPS) has requirements for the location of the address block and the barcode in order to qualify for postage discounts. But meeting these requirements generally does not require devoting the entire right half of the postcard to the address.

Depending on the size of the postcard, the amount of information in the address block, and other items such as the return address and the postal indicia, it may be possible to devote much more room than you thought to the sales message or teaser copy.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Interesting Direct Mail Statistics

A recent study by Vertis Communications in Baltimore found that 46% of adults responded to direct mail in 2007. This remains steady from 47% in 2003. It means that Internet has not yet taken over the world of marketing and you can and should still use direct mail as part of your marketing strategy.
Here are some more findings to consider as you design your direct mail campaign:

  • 72% of adults said they have replied to direct mail pieces that contained a “buy one, get one free” offer. This means direct mail pieces that include an irresistible offer will get results. Also, it indicates that the word “free” is more appealing to people than a discount. The study found that 63% of people have responded to direct mail that offered a percentage discount on a purchase. This also indicates that you should include an offer in many, if not all, of your direct marketing pieces.

  • 57% of women age 35-64 want companies that they’ve indicated interest in to follow up with direct mail pieces that are personalized for their needs. 38% of men age 35-49 prefer generic direct mail pieces when they’ve indicated interest. Is your target market made up of mostly men or women? The gender of the recipient of your direct mail obviously will influence the content of your copy and the form you send it in. For women, you would be better off sending a brochure, with details about how you can solve their exact problem. For men, a postcard printing piece will do, with general information that you would want everyone to know about your product.

  • 85% of women age 25-44 read direct mail pieces. If you’re sending direct mail to households, it’s best to address them to the woman living there. You’ll have a better chance of your piece being read, and she’ll probably relay your message to her husband or others in the household after reading your piece. And, you can choose the right words and graphics to market to women just by doing a little research on the Internet.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Create Curiosity

Think for a moment of how the mail looks when it arrives at your home or office. It will be oriented with the addresses all facing you and sorted from smallest to largest. Keep this in mind when you are designing your direct mail piece and improve the chances that your mailer will stand out from the rest of the mail.

If an envelope is being printed with a return address and a postal indicia, then it costs nothing extra to have teaser copy printed at the same time. Teaser copy is anything - a picture, an image, text or a combination - that piques the reader's curiosity or arouses interest.

Here are a few tips for writing good teaser copy:
  • Be honest; don't mislead the reader. Make sure the teaser copy on the outside relates to what's inside. Misleading the reader solely for the purpose of getting him to open the envelope can backfire.
  • Urge action. Create a sense of urgency in responding by providing a call to action with a limit (either time or number).
  • Write a benefit statement. Answer the question "what's in it for me" in the teaser copy.
  • Be sure the words and pictures work together. If using graphics or a photograph to illustrate the teaser copy, be sure one explains the other. Otherwise you risk confusing the reader.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Why Can't I Copy Pictures From Their Web Site To Use In My Printed Material - They Look Great On My Computer Screen.

You are certainly right about photographs looking great on a web page.The phosphors on the computer screen lend a brightness to the color that is visually appealing.

But color created by light shining through red, green and blue phosphors cannot be exactly reproduced with the cyan, magenta and yellor colors of printing ink. Even more importantly, the digital photo files have been optimized for fast loading on the web page by reducing the file size through file compression. And for photographs in JPG format, a lossy compression technique was used.

This means that the original high resolution photograph had pixels permanently removed to make the file smaller. If enough are removed, the remaining pixels will be visible to the naked eye instead of smoothly blending in to one another. In specific circumstances (such as taking a very large photograph and using it in a smaller size) the pixelation may be less apparent though still visible.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Turn You Business Card into a Marketing Tool

Enhance the likelihood that your business card will be kept by printing something of value on the back. here are some possibilities.
  • Information: Use the back of your business card to provide reference or other information of interest such as a calendar, a size chart, weights and measures or emergency phone numbers.
  • Invitation: On the back of an organization's business card, print the meeting time and place and an invitation to attend the next meeting.
  • Appointment: Physicians, dentists and other professionals can use the back of the business card to record the patient's next appointment.
  • Notes: Include lines to accommodate note-taking on the back of the business card. Use the space to record things you want the prospect to remember - an additional phone number, a referral, the item number of a product you sell.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Does the printing industry have trade customs I should know about?

 The printing industry of North America's trade customs are a set of common business practices prevalent in the industry but adopted by each individual business owner. The industry's first trade customs were originally announced at the annual convention of the United Typothetae of America in 1922 and were updated five times through 2002. At that time, two industry organizations (NAPL and PIA) released a three-part report entitled Best Business Practices for the Printing Industry to take the place of the trade customs. The best practices report includes guidelines for digital-asset-management issues; terms and conditions of sale, including quotations, orders, delivery and production schedules; and a glossary of the industry's most common workflow terms.

Like trade customs, the purpose of the best practices is to act as a framework so that printers and their customers can discuss and develop a clear understanding of how they will do business. When printed on the back of an invoice (as ours are), they become our Terms and Conditions of Sale.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

A Horse of a Different Color

Perhaps you had the disappointment of having the color on your printed piece look somewhat different then if did on your computer monitor. There is a scientific reason for this - the RGB (red, green and blue) phosphors that create color on the computer monitor are capable of producing more colors than the three process printing inks (cyan, magenta and yellow or CMY). And the process printing inks, when combined cannot always match exactly the single hue of a PMS spot color.

To put it more simply - there is not a perfect overlap in the range of colors that are both visible to the human eye, reproducible with RGB additive color (like on a computer screen), and reproducible with CMYK subtractive color (like a printed newsletter). Whereas the human eye can see billions of color, RGB can reproduce 16 million and CMYK printing 5-6 thousand. So some colors will convert from RGB to CMYK fairly well (because the color is in the CMYK color gamut).

To illustrate, try this exercise. Using PageMaker, Publisher, Quark XPress, InDesign, or PhotoShop, convert RGB blue to CMYK. Watch what happens to the color. Does it turn to purple? Now reduce the percentage of magenta by 50% and watch it turn back to blue. This is a dramatic example of how additive and substractive color spaces are not perfectly overlapped.