SalesVantage.com >> Article Archives >> Direct Marketing >> How To Own Your Local Consumer Market With Saturation Mailings
Imagine having a sales person that never calls in sick and consistently delivers your company’s best sales pitch to everyone within a three mile radius of your business. Marketing Nirvana if you do business locally, right? Imagine that you can hire this sales person for about 20 cents per sales call, with a guarantee that he or she will "knock on every door you specify," with the exact same offer presented in the same way, to every prospect. What is old is indeed new again, especially for small businesses trying to expand in their local market. Long before CRM became the acronym for customer relationship management, it had a different meaning: carrier route marketing, which also describes what is more commonly known as "saturation mailing." Ever wonder what that "R003" or "C007" means on the mail that lands in your mailbox? These numbers identify the carrier route in which you live, in the order that mail is delivered along the route. According to the USPS, approximately 20 percent of the 52 billion flats delivered in a year are saturation mailings, in automatic walk sequence order. Local mailings are certainly not new, but this direct marketing strategy may be new for you! Ignore it at your peril, because your competitors may be hijacking all of your prospects using this common sense marketing method. If you are familiar with the classic Acres of Diamonds by Russell H. Conwell, you will appreciate the strategies presented in this article. There are, quite literally, acres and acres of diamonds under your feet, or more accurately, within five to 10 miles of your business. It has never been easier or more cost effective to blanket a radius with an introductory offer, or target specific neighborhoods based on the profile of your current customers and best prospects. There is a wealth of free information about your local market that can help you develop and refine a smart, local direct mail program. Keep in mind, that while saturation mailings offer certain advantages, you have to follow the rules for "walk sequencing" and for pieces delivered along a carrier route. Here are a few points to ponder as you develop a carrier route or saturation mailing:
Saturation mailings may not always be appropriate, so plan carefully. Keep in mind that sometimes a First Class stamp is the best way to get your sales message delivered, depending on what you are trying to accomplish. If you really want to get creative about reaching your local market with a saturation mailing, or to reach specific prospects along a carrier route, you can stretch your postal dollars with a joint mailing from another local merchant. For example: a roofing company, a pizza parlor, and a retailer could share the cost of printing and mailing an oversized postcard with three strong offers to the homeowner. This is only recommended if all parties enjoy the same great reputation in their local market. Of course, your mailing strategy is only one piece of the business growth game plan. Your marketing message, your offer, and how you treat your new customer when they respond are the true differentiators that lead to lasting customer relationships. Bob Martel is a contributing author for Melissa Data
(www.melissadata.com), a marketing consultant, direct marketing
copywriter, and author of the book “How to Create All of the Business
You Can Handle.” Subscribe to his monthly newsletter: Marketing With
Ease. Reach him at (508) 481-8383 or by email at
bobmartel@jmbmarketing.com to request your free copy of 34 Reasons to
Write A Sales Letter to Your Best Customers.
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