Creating And Maintaining A Mailing List
Starting to collect proper information to create a mailing list is not difficult, once you know how to proceed. In this report, uses for mailing lists are briefly described. The first steps in identifying the names that might be included on your mailing list are also outlined. Finally, the important concept of a database is introduced.
WAYS TO USE A MAILING LIST
Mailing lists are a versatile tool that your business or organization can use to help achieve many administrative and marketing objectives.
1. In Daily Administration: For-profit and nonprofit organizations alike use mailing lists constantly in their day-to-day operation. Well-maintained mailing lists are required to efficiently carry out important activities such as:
* updating employee phone lists. * sending company newsletters and special notices to employees. * compiling membership directories. * sending out newsletters to organization members. * determining school bus routes. * tracking and evaluating suppliers. * monitoring contract commitments and schedules. * alerting customers about warranty dates.
2. In Marketing: But it is in the marketing area that mailing lists can really make a contribution to the "bottom line." Much of the information in this report can be used for all list needs. Selling through the mail via a catalog is one basic example of a marketing application where a mailing list plays a very important role. The list is the source of names to which the catalog is mailed. Today, organizations of any size can benefit from using a mailing list in marketing functions.
Here are some other marketing uses for which a mailing list is a critical ingredient:
* Soliciting orders without incurring the expense of a direct sales call. (This can be particularly efficient for smaller accounts where the amount of the order does not justify the high cost of a personal sales call.) * Generating and/or qualifying leads for your sales staff or for another direct mail effort. Using direct mail to qualify leads is another way to save on direct sales costs. * Providing background information about your product or services. This type of effort can be used to generate leads, which are then followed up with personal or telephone sales calls. * Reminding patients of the need for periodic checkup appointments. * Conducting a fundraising campaign. * Increasing the membership of your organization. * Extending invitations to attend a public meeting, a seminar, or a special event. * Following up on contacts made in personal appearances (at a trade show or seminar, for example). * Announcing changes in company personnel, product line, pricing structure or location. * Obtaining referrals from current customers or members. * Reviving inactive accounts. * Building good will with customers or members.
You will find that the administrative and marketing uses for mailing lists are almost endless. How many of the ones we've described above would benefit your business or organization?
In the next section, we will define the different types of lists you can develop.
TYPES OF LISTS
From a business or organizational point of view, everyone is not equal. Just as a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush, existing customers are worth more than potential customers. The same principle applies to mailing lists. They can be divided into four types, according to the value of the names they contain:
1. Current Customer: Your list of current customers contains your most valuable names. They have already bought your products or used your services. They are the people or companies most likely to respond again to your future offers.
In this booklet we refer to these names as "customers." However, depending on your type of business or organization, the term "customer" can also include a whole range of people (or organizations) such as:
* clients of professional service firms. * donors who contribute time, money or goods to fundraising campaigns. * investors in a business or stock issue. * patients of health care practices. * policyholders in an insurance agency. * members of an association, religious or cultural institution, or club. * subscribers to a magazine or newsletter. * users of a sports or recreational facility.
2. Inquiries: Businesses or individuals who have contacted your organization to request something - catalog, sample, quote, or perhaps just information - are more likely to respond to your offers than others who have not shown an interest in you. Further, the faster you are able to contact an inquiry with an answer, the more likely it is that he or she will react positively to your next offer.
3. Prospects: Prospects are potential customers. They are people who have not yet responded to your offers nor inquired about your organization. However, you have reason to believe that they may have a need for or interest in your product or service. You also expect that these prospects have the ability to pay (if you're selling a product or service).
(A smart way to look at your customers is to also view them as prospects to be wooed and won for other products or services. Never take a customer for granted. For example, a customer who has bought only one product or service from you may be a prospect - and a very good one - for the other products and services you offer.)
4. Suspects: Suspects are prospects who may have some potential to become customers, but their need for your product or service (and their ability to pay) is uncertain. Developing a mailing list of suspect names should probably be the lowest priority for your business or organization.
For each type of mailing list you create - customer, prospect, inquiry, or suspect - you will want to keep basically the same descriptive information (data) on each of the names you include. If you can keep and maintain the same data on each of your customers, you can find which common characteristics are processed by your best customers. If you can then find prospects which closely match those characteristics, you have a greater chance of success in your prospect mailings.
The next step, in creating your mailing list, is deciding on the data you should try to capture for each of the names.
WHAT DATA TO INCLUDE IN YOUR MAILING LIST RECORDS
This section of the report offers some preliminary guidance in making the necessary decision about which piece of descriptive information, or "data element," to include in your mailing list records.
When you are identifying the data elements you want to include in your mailing list, you are really laying the groundwork for your database.
"Database" is a popular term among mailing list specialists today. However, the concept of a data base is fairly simple. A database is a collection of information about your customers, organized so it can be easily expanded, updated, and accessed by any of a number of its component parts or variable. Mailing information (name, address, etc.) is part, but not all, of a database.
Why is a database so important? Let's begin by reviewing some basic principles: * Whatever your product or service, there is an audience because of its characteristics, is a "natural" customer group for you. For example, expectant mothers are a natural audience for a store selling maternity clothes. * The more you know about your customer, the better you will be able to appeal to their specific wants and needs. * Prospects who share characteristics with your current customers are generally your best potential customers.
Therefore, to make decisions about what data elements to include in your database, first determine what common characteristics your customers share. For example:
* Do your customers share a certain level of income (in the case of individuals) or annual sales volume(in case of businesses)? * Do all of your customers have similar household sizes or numbers of employees(businesses)? * Is age or number of years in business a common characteristic shared by your customers? * Are your customers located in a specific area or a particular type of geographic location?
These are just a few of the characteristics your customers may share.
The following questions don't apply to prospects, but they can also help youdetermine who your best customers are:
* How often do your best customers buy - daily, monthly or even yearly? * What sales volume makes them food customers? * When was the last time they purchased? * When do they buy? Anytime or only at certain times of the year?
The better you understand your best current customers, the better you will be able to identify the data you want to maintain about potential customers.
Copyright 2004 by DeAnna Spencer
Note to editors: To show my appreciation to the editors that use my articles, I offer a free solo ad. Simply send an email to me by using the form on the contact me page on my website to tell me the url the article was used on or send me a copy of the ezine it was used in.
This article may be redistributed freely on the Internet as long as the resource box remains intact. $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ DeAnna is the publisher of the ezine, Prospecting and Presents. Subscribers get one free ad per week. Subscribe today by visiting http://www.pnewsletter.com $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Related News
|
 |
 |
 |
RELATED ARTICLES
Tips for Trade Show Rentals
Trade show rentals allow you more flexibility and the opportunity to change your booth with every expo if you wish. You can rent nearly any booth components, from portable pop-ups to completely custom looks.
Effective Marketing for Small Businesses
Effective marketing for the small business begins with market research
Service Marketing - A Relationship Building Approach
Can we imagine a place in the world today without a marketing activity. It looks remote. When we all move from one place to the other, we need an interactive or a Communicative Response System (CRS) to facilitate a marketing activity and enable the market to respond. When this Communicative Response System (CRS) eventually reaches a market, there are buyers and sellers waiting to respond.
Twelve Places to Buy a Mailing List
©2004 Jeffrey Dobkin
Target Marketing - What Are You Aiming For?
Is Advertising Viable?
Fundraising Renewal Letters: Four Goals to Strive For With Each One You Write
In the fundraising profession, appeal letters that you mail to existing donors are called renewal letters. They are designed to solicit a gift, but, more important than that, they aim to persuade your current donors to renew their support of your organization. Donors renew their support with their cash, of course, but they also renew it with their commitment-with their hearts and minds. And that's why renewal letters are so vital. They help you maintain your broad base of support year after year, cost-effectively.
Four Essential Marketing Plan Components
Preparing a Marketing Plan for your product or service is a real
eye-opening experience. While we all hope that our product or
service will appeal to the masses, the truth is, that may not
happen. Assembling a Marketing Plan first and foremost forces you
to clearly define what you are selling.
Deceptive Marketing and Procrastination
Procrastination is every marketers worst nightmare.
Features vs. Benefits vs. End Results
If you've been in the copywriting realm for very long at all, you've heard the phrase "features vs. benefits." It's a fundamental copywriting principle and driving force behind much of what we, as copywriters, create. But there's also another aspect to this equation.
Too Much To Do: Four Keys to Effective Delegating
Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity. General George S. Patton
4 Steps to Successful Offline Drawings
There are many different ways to market offline, each important to your success. One of these being drawings. Not only does having a drawing bring attention to you and your product/service, but also brings you leads.
Are You Ready To Research Your Market?
Picture this. You develop some product or service, spend countless hours making sure everything is just right, set up a beautiful web site, make sure the ecommerce end is secure, and then release what you know will be of utmost benefit to others.
Online Magazine Subscription Services Make Shopping Online Fun For Magazines
If recreating the old experience of subscribing to magazines by filling out a subscription card is essential to the success as an Internet retailer, then MagMall.com takes top awards. The retailer has created a web site with all the ease of use of the original pop out cards through fast loading graphics, and an intuitively designed layout that is both easy to follow and navigate.
Rules of Thumb for Marketing to Your Past Customers
Keeping in touch can dramatically increase business, when done properly.
Getting Ideas for Your Postcards
If you're going to do postcard marketing on an ongoing basis, it's a good idea to have a collection of cards to inspire you. In advertising and marketing circles, this is called a "swipe file."
The Death of Product Packaging as We Know It.
It used to be you that if you had a great product you put it in a package and voila! . . .someone would come along and buy it. That is not the case any more. The package not only has to protect the product and allow for its tracking, it has to sell it too. Most importantly, the package has to capture someone's attention in less than three seconds.
Top 10 Dos and Donts for an Effective Business Referral Network!
Every business - particularly small, entrepreneurial or professional businesses - must have a powerful referral network. It is very unlikely (and terribly expensive) to "advertise your way to success". Without tons of capital, it can't be done. It is far more effective, and more fun, to create an effective network that sends you clients, supports your business, and makes you money. Unfortunately, most professionals confuse effective networking with passing out business cards and schmoozing. They are NOT the same. Here are my Top 10 Tips for a network that will help you build your business.
The 30 Incredible Ways To Sell Your Products Now and Sell More
How to sell more and sell quickly online for your products and service? Here is the long list for your reference.
The Secrets of?
A lot of advertising and mailings promise to reveal the secrets of something. Most of this kind of mailings deal with search engine optimization. They promise to know how to achieve a high ranking at Google. They tell the readers that they have a special access to Google or that they have cracked the algorithm how Google ranks websites.
Custom Lanyards - The Perfect Solution for Promotion, Branding, and Marketing
Lanyards are fast becoming the new "must have" promotional item.
|