Editor’s Note: Today’s post was written by Mark Hasland and originally appeared on the Overnight Prints blog. It is reprinted here with permission.
Despite all the hype about social media, marketers seem not to be convinced of its effectiveness, and many are still relying on traditional marketing platforms such as direct mail, said a recent study.
According to a report from Massachusetts-based BluePoint Venture Marketing, just 19 percent of marketers surveyed said that establishing a social media presence was an important company marketing goal in 2009.
Meanwhile, more than half of respondents – 52 percent – said that direct mail was an effective branding and awareness vehicle.
Yet even the growing popularity of social media shouldn’t be a threat to the existence – or the effectiveness – of direct mail; experts say that integrated marketing campaigns – those that promote a consistent brand and message across a variety of platforms – are typically the most effective.
Scott Buresh, founder and CEO of organic search engine optimization company Medium Blue, agrees. In an article for Promotion World, Buresh said that using a combination of online and offline marketing can provide the best results.
“Nobody can deny that the advent of various internet marketing methods has been a game-changer,” he wrote. “Some forms of traditional advertising may even be on their last legs. Trade show attendance is down. Magazines and newspapers are in decline. I can’t remember the last time a door-to-door salesperson came up to my house.”
However, he added that some channels “still can provide exceptional returns.” Even Medium Blue, which is based entirely on online marketing, uses direct mail – Buresh admits that “direct mail, done properly, still works for us.”
Integrated marketing can be so effective because each platform essentially cross-promotes itself. For example, companies can add Facebook and LinkedIn links to their email campaigns, and can promote a Facebook campaign in their postcard mailings.
At its most basic, all companies should make sure to have a link to their website on all business cards, brochures and other printed materials.
Experts add that integrated marketing campaigns are only as successful as they are consistent – campaigns that promote different messages and feature different brand voices work separately at best (thereby negating the effects of cross-promotion) and against each other at worst.
At the very least, Buresh noted, using a variety of different marketing channels ensures that companies do not “put all of their eggs in the online basket.”
This entry was posted on Friday, July 16th, 2010 at 10:10 am and is filed under Direct Mail Marketing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
