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When, Why, and How
to Use Mailing Lists
by DeAnna Spencer
Mailing lists may be the cause of more heartbreaks than
any other single factor in mail order. A poorly chosen list, a
weak mailing and the high cost of mailing to a list can tax
the optimism of a new dealer very, very quickly. Arm yourself
with knowledge before embarking on a course like this!
Whether you should use a mailing list to sell your
product depends on several things:
Is it too complex an offering to be explained in a 30 word
ad?
Can you afford to mail 200 to 1,000 pieces on the chance
that you won't get a single order?
Can you make a profit selling your product to only two to
twenty people in a 1,000 piece mailing?
Will a re-order of your product be required, and can you
make your re-orders pay for the losses you will likely get
from mailing to a list?
Do you know enough to choose the right list for your
offering?
It takes either great faith in your offering or great
stupidity to mail with a list. Most list companies today,
specialize in "opportunity seekers" - people generally quite
new to mail order who are either looking for a product to sell
or an offer that will get them rich in a hurry.
Most of these "opportunity seekers" are engaged in chain
letter type schemes at some point, and they use mailing lists
to make gains in their plans. Most of them lose money, but
enough people will try it once to make money, and these
pie-in-the-sky dreamers are the bread and butter for a lot of
mailing list companies. Unless you have a truly superior
offering for these opportunity seekers, and you probably don't,
they are not worth your time and money. Most of them are
unsophisticated dabblers.
Multi-level lists, offered by many companies, are truly
an interesting way to test response to an MLM offer. Many
MLM people like to write back - in their own handwriting -
about their successes and failures, and they will always
respond to a superior product.
Specialized product-buyers' lists can pull beautifully if
the offering is unique enough, and worth a try for
merchandise marketing.
Regardless of what kind of mailing list you use, be very
careful in choosing a good list. Many are sold and resold to
people making the very same offering, which is a waste of
everyone's money. "Free" mailing lists are usually as good as
their price indicates. Check the guarantees. Common sense will
tell you which are good for you and which are good for the
company selling the lists. And check to see how the lists are
compiled .Are they people who have already bought something by
mail, or are they merely people who indicated they might want
to buy something by mail?
In conclusion, we recommend that you never start any
campaign with a mailing list when advertising is so much
cheaper. While it may prove to be more profitable than
advertising, keep this rule in mind:
When you're ready to try a mailing list, be fully prepared
tol ose every penny you spend in buying and mailing that
list ,because it could happen.
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.
Copyright 2004 by DeAnna Spencer
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

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