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Direct Marketing Myths:
- More options increase the chance that the prospect will see something they "like".
- We can save money by driving all prospects to the web. Everybody's online now anyway, and it's cheaper to process responses online.
- If you research, you don't have to test. Customers and prospects can tell you what they like and don't like - whether or not they would respond to the offer.
- If you test, you don't have to research. Testing is measurable and
projectable, so it will give me all the data I need to make a decision
about what approach I should use.
- Design is about symmetry. I should color-coordinate my promotions to make them attractive. If it looks pretty, it will be effective.
- It's all about getting the first purchase, then it's all downhill from there. If they've purchased once, my work is done.
- All customers should be treated the same. Besides, it saves money to have large quantities to order.
- My major job is to get the lowest bid and save money on the promotion. If I can cut the costs, I can be more successful.
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What expert direct marketers know:
- Options confuse the prospect. If you confuse them, you will lose them.
- Prospects will "self select" the method they feel comfortable with. It's a personality (and age) thing. If they aren't comfortable, they won't respond at all.
- People lie. They don't mean to. They are often trying to "make nice". But research has to be confirmed through valid testing to determine the best approach.
- If you only test, you've limited your possibilities to the choices
you've made for the test. You won't uncover new data. Testing tells
you "what happened", not "why" or "what else should I know".
- I must immediately get their attention and quickly convey essential benefits and offer information. Design must be used for impact. Symmetry is not my friend.
- It's all about getting the 2nd and subsequent purchases. The first response may cost me money, the 2nd and subsequent purchases are where profits lie.
- I must reallocate my budget, based on ROI. The worst decision is to send everyone the same promotion.
- You can't save your way into a success. Don't throw away money, but invest wisely in promotions to the greatest potential ROI segments.
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