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Author: Mark Hendry

MA 8 23 Blog 2

5 Ways to Build Your Mailing List

Direct mail marketing remains a powerful and effective way to reach potential customers, especially when combined with digital strategies. But lists don’t build themselves out of thin air. You have to make them! How do you do that? Let’s look at five proven techniques to take your existing list, improve it, and boost your results.

  1. Purchase a trade show attendee list

Trade shows are industry-specific events that attract decision-makers and potential clients. Acquiring an attendee list from crucial trade shows in your market vertical can provide you with a highly targeted audience. Trade show attendees also tend to be decision-makers, so this is a high-value add.

  1. Purchase a Media List

Specialty magazines, including trade magazines, have well-defined target audiences; some may be willing to sell or rent their subscriber lists. These lists often come with valuable demographic breakdowns, making them effective tools for targeted marketing.

  1. Tap Your Content Marketing

If you have a content marketing strategy, capitalize on it to build your direct mail list. For instance, if you offer an e-newsletter, ask recipients for their street addresses during sign-up. Similarly, when website visitors download white papers or case studies, prompt them to fill out an online registration form with an option to provide their contact information. By collecting this data, you can expand your direct mail list with engaged prospects who have already shown interest in your content.

  1. Use Every Door Direct Mail (EDDM)

Every Door Direct Mail (EDDM) from the United States Postal Service is an affordable way to target households within a specific demographic radius. While EDDM lists do not include individual names, they are highly cost-effective. Not only are these campaigns inexpensive to mail, but once particular recipients respond, you now own those contacts and have their names.

  1. Purchase a Cloned List

If you already have a productive direct mail list, consider leveraging it to create a cloned list. Start by creating a profile of your best customers based on demographics, interests, and buying behavior. Then purchase a list that closely mirrors this profile to expand your reach in your local area or help you move into a new one.

A successful direct mail campaign requires a great list. By utilizing the techniques discussed above, you can improve the accuracy of your targeting and reach new, high-value prospects just like them.

MA 8 23 Blog 1

Planning an Event? You Need These 7 Tools

Are you planning an event? To maximize attendance, you need a comprehensive multichannel strategy incorporating various marketing tools. Let’s look at seven “must-have” elements to make your next event successful.

  1. Direct Mail

Direct mail remains a powerful marketing tool for event promotion. Use the unique power of print to showcase the event’s speakers, activities, and registration details. Personalize the content to cater to different segments of your target audience, making them feel valued and engaged. Direct mail is particularly effective for reaching potential attendees who have not responded to your email campaigns.

  1. Email

Create a series of compelling and visually appealing emails to build anticipation and excitement leading up to the event. Send personalized invitations, reminders, and exclusive offers to registered attendees. Email automation can ensure participants receive timely updates and essential information, streamlining their event experience.

  1. Promotional items

Branded promotional items are essential for leaving a lasting impression on event attendees. Offer valuable and relevant giveaways such as pens, notepads, water bottles, tote bags, or tech gadgets with your company logo. These items are tangible reminders of your event long after it’s over and can help reinforce brand recognition.

  1. Signs, banners, and floor displays

Create visually appealing and professionally designed signs, banners, and floor displays to guide attendees through the event space. Clear and prominent signage will enhance the overall experience and ensure that participants can easily find different areas, booths, or sessions.

  1. Table tents

Table tents are excellent tools for conveying important event information during sit-down meals or networking sessions. Place table tents on dining tables or other gathering areas to highlight the event schedule, sponsors, special offers, or interactive activities.

  1. Branded T-shirts

Branded t-shirts are a fantastic way to unify your team and event staff while promoting your company’s identity. Outfit event organizers, volunteers, and staff with eye-catching t-shirts that display your logo and event theme. This conveys a sense of professionalism and quality.

  1. Social media

Leverage the power of social media to create buzz and excitement before, during, and after the event. Develop a comprehensive social media strategy that includes posting engaging content, behind-the-scenes glimpses, speaker highlights, and real-time updates during the event. Encourage attendees to share their experiences using event-specific hashtags to maximize visibility and reach.

A well-rounded and integrated promotional approach is essential for success when planning an event. By integrating various marketing channels, you can engage attendees, foster brand recognition, and encourage word-of-mouth promotion, helping your event to be its best.

 

Cut Through The Digital Deluge

The Psychological Differences in Response to Direct and Digital Marketing

The amount of time spent on screens has increased strikingly throughout the pandemic. Naturally with less face to face interactions taking place, it is only natural for people to flock to the avenues of connection that are still open. Even before the pandemic kicked off in 2020, there has been a steady increase in the amount of time consumers spend on the digital landscape.

With the birth of the World Wide Web, marketers were given an immense playground to explore new possibilities in creating connections. Digital literacy is a subject that has risen to be a necessary prerequisite for many business leaders, as success in the open market often now depends on how well you can translate your physical business into its online presence. These thoughts have lead many marketers to invest heavily into online advertising. People spending more and more time online probably means that online advertisements are the best way to connect, right? Well… that is not quite true.

A study by the United States Postal Service along with the Center of Neural Decision Making at Temple University sought to observe the psychological responses to marketing material, differentiated by their physical and digital representations. In their study, they looked to observe responses to a variety of stimuli including both physical and digital marketing materials as well as participant’s ability of brand recall, brand association and brand discrimination. Study participants represented a wide variety of age, race gender and other demographic cohorts. To start, researchers had participants view a total of 60 ads, half in physical postcard form and the other half shown on a tablet. During this phase researchers polled the viewers on brand recall, association and discrimination. For the second phase, researchers brought back the participants a week later and asked them to recall the advertisements from the week before. During these phases, use of an fMRI was employed to view the brains active areas to better understand the subconscious/ neural responses.

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Through the study, observers were able to see what format was best from gaining viewers; attention, engagement, stimulation, memory retrieval accuracy, memory, willingness to purchase, desirability and valuation. It was found that physical ads provided similar results or better than the digital ads in all categories besides “attention”.  Viewers of the advertisements across all age groups were found to take less time processing the digital ads than the physical ones. It is seen throughout the study that the time spent with physical advertisements are more valuable than the time a digital ad may be on the screen.  Physical advertisements took a clear lead ahead of digital in the areas of review time, stimulation, memory, desirability and valuation.

The human brain proves its preference to the physical medium over the digital clearly. If you are looking to reach higher engagement, better recollection and more efficient response, direct mail is the way to go, simply because the human psychology prefers it!

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Vol .18

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  • The Happenings at Creative
  • Holiday Planning
  •  Quote of the Month
  • What the Marketing
  • Get Featured Newsletter
  • Exclusive Special Offer
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The Happenings at Creative

We are happy to have been able to host an open house event at our office recently! After such a long period of separation, being able to talk, see and show guests around our facility and office was a wonderful experience.

Prior to the event, we have been working on giving our production and office areas a fresh theme, community. Creative Composition was originally opened in Orland, and moved to Chico in 2010 to better serve the Butte area and beyond. Creative Composition has always been a proud supporter of community and local efforts such as the Butte Humane Society and Jesus Center, and we aim to continue our commitment to providing local people and their businesses the best value we can offer.

We hope that all who were able to attend were able to come out of the day with a better understanding of our facilities capabilities and how they could be utilized. Keep an eye out for other information about events and offers from us in the future!  For those that were not able to attend, make sure to send us a message and let us know where you can be reached.

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Holiday Planning

The Holidays are fast approaching! As some of you are probably aware, there is currently a lack of availability in the supply chain across many industries. Backups at ports and lacking availability of workers means that lead times are extended for many processes. Procrastination is a dangerous game this year.

There has been a trend seen last year and partially this year already of the use of online channels to do holiday shopping. This means that consumers are still hesitant to do the same level of in person shopping as the years but they are also looking to be able to do more in person shopping when it’s acceptable. Last year there was a 28% decline in the amount of in store purchasing, while there was a subsequent increase of 64% in online holiday shopping.

With the pandemic having run its course for almost two years, there has been reportedly an increase in the amount that people are doing their holiday shopping. This may have been brought on by the lack of outside spending opportunities from the past year and a half. People like being able to participate in the economy, especially in the US where the “consumer is king”. Early reports have been showing an increase in those doing their holiday shopping early, and that they are spending more than last year.

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What the marketing

Marketing trends come and go and as we progress further into the age of dissipating attention, trends are sticking around for much less time. Many businesses and brands are able to hop on the bandwagon and gain interaction by riding a wave of up to the minute content. Often time brands are late to the game and release campaigns or content about a trend that is long in the rearview of their audiences mind.

One of the main reasons for this marketing behavior is the focus on Gen Z and the emerging Gen Alpha. While it is a smart move to try to market to these emerging cohorts, it can sometimes result in marketing content that alienates or directly offends members of the older generation. One example of this is the use of celebrity for selling specialized meals at McDonalds. Celebrity inspired meals have been a practice for the fast food chain in the past, with the last one before this recent wave featuring Michael Jordan in 1992. There have been a few partners recently but none seemed to target the youngest generation like the pairing with K-pop group BTS. McDonalds typically targets a wide range of ages, but almost 95% of the BTS audience is below the age of 29, with the majority of its audience living in Asia.

It seems like the route that brands will continue to go is less about the safe and instead is reaching those outlying groups in more meaningful ways. There has also been a trend of businesses going towards marketing material that has reactionary content. Weetabix mixed it up and shocked its followers with an unusual pairing of cereal bar and beans. Some of the best engagement can come from people telling you that you were wrong

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Special Offer

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