The Private Life of Mail - Methodology and the making of the story - January ...Royal Mail MarketReach
Over the last 18 months, Royal Mail MarketReach has conducted a series of research projects to understand exactly what that means for consumers, and what it means
for you.
We’ve looked into consumers’ homes and found that mail lives a rich, complex and surprisingly long life beyond the doormat. We’ve looked into their hearts and uncovered the deep emotional responses that are triggered by sensations of touch.
And we’ve literally looked into their heads, using the latest neuroscience techniques to discover that mail has a profound and direct impact on the brain.
It’s an unprecedented look at what happens after mail enters the home, which is why we’ve called it, The Private Life of Mail.
Over the last 18 months, Royal Mail MarketReach has conducted a series of research projects to understand exactly what that means for consumers, and what it means
for you.
We’ve looked into consumers’ homes and found that mail lives a rich, complex and surprisingly long life beyond the doormat. We’ve looked into their hearts and uncovered the deep emotional responses that are triggered by sensations of touch.
And we’ve literally looked into their heads, using the latest neuroscience techniques to discover that mail has a profound and direct impact on the brain.
It’s an unprecedented look at what happens after mail enters the home, which is why we’ve called it, The Private Life of Mail.
The Private Life of Mail - Methodology and the making of the story - January ...Royal Mail MarketReach
Over the last 18 months, Royal Mail MarketReach has conducted a series of research projects to understand exactly what that means for consumers, and what it means
for you.
We’ve looked into consumers’ homes and found that mail lives a rich, complex and surprisingly long life beyond the doormat. We’ve looked into their hearts and uncovered the deep emotional responses that are triggered by sensations of touch.
And we’ve literally looked into their heads, using the latest neuroscience techniques to discover that mail has a profound and direct impact on the brain.
It’s an unprecedented look at what happens after mail enters the home, which is why we’ve called it, The Private Life of Mail.
Over the last 18 months, Royal Mail MarketReach has conducted a series of research projects to understand exactly what that means for consumers, and what it means
for you.
We’ve looked into consumers’ homes and found that mail lives a rich, complex and surprisingly long life beyond the doormat. We’ve looked into their hearts and uncovered the deep emotional responses that are triggered by sensations of touch.
And we’ve literally looked into their heads, using the latest neuroscience techniques to discover that mail has a profound and direct impact on the brain.
It’s an unprecedented look at what happens after mail enters the home, which is why we’ve called it, The Private Life of Mail.
As a busy company owner, marketing director, or contact center manager, you are faced with challenges not even imagined a couple of decades ago. In those days, customer service was most often accomplished through a phone system, making for easy calculations of metrics such as ROIs and KPIs. Limited budgets could be allocated toward innovations and enhancements to the phone system, as well as toward phone training for agents.
Those days of the single channel “call center” are gone, however, replaced by multi-channel contact centers. Managers must now allocate their limited budgets to address a myriad of complex, new channels and data points. It can be a challenge to know if you are investing in the communication channels that will provide the most return for your money. One emerging customer service channel—texting via SMS—is turning out to be more important than previously thought.
Up until now, companies have usually incorporated texting into their business strategy by employing uni-directional marketing or reminder blasts, using short codes. However, this is not how people experience texting in their personal lives. Among each other, people expect texting to be part of a conversational dialogue, complete with rich, relational history between both parties. Responses are also expected to be instant and personal. So far, most companies have not even come close to following these conversational rules of texting.
To find out exactly what customers would like most from the customer service text channel, Harris Interactive conducted a nation-wide survey of over 2000 adults on behalf of OneReach.
How did brand-led newspaper and online newspaper ads coupled with TV positively drive web traffic and active consideration for the credit card provider?
With more than ten years of experience in creating, producing, distributing, tracking and promoting Public Service Announcements (PSAs), we (Williams Whittle) consider ourselves experts in this specialized media. Last year, we developed and launched a survey to our public service contacts at TV and radio stations around the country. For years, we’ve spouted off anecdotal evidence to many of the questions asked in the survey, but lacked the data to support it. Now in our second year, the survey is showing distinct trends in this evolving marketing vehicle.
A survey of Irish businesses and consumers about the state of loyalty and rewards in Ireland today. Commissioned by An Post.
More details here:
http://www.anpost.ie/AnPost/AnPostDM/Tools/Stats/Consumer+Insights+and+Trends/Loyalty+Research/Put+value+back+into+customers+hands.htm
At Royal Mail we’ve always believed in using the power of 1 to 1 communications to build customer relationships.
However, technology has transformed marketing communications. The development of email and the rapid adoption of smartphones and tablets have changed the way
we connect with customers forever. When you want to talk to customers directly you now have many different tools at your disposal and that’s a good thing.
So we’ve conducted extensive research to find out how customers prefer businesses to talk to them. You have this research in front of you and we think the results are fascinating.
It shows that the core strengths of mail have endured and in some cases grown even stronger, often by driving customers online. Mail is still opened, still valued, still kept and still drives response. Digital has transformed marketing but it hasn’t replaced mail for one simple reason. Customers don’t want it to.
Customers are very clear about what they prefer to receive by mail. They prefer to receive items of substance that they can spend time with and keep. Equally, there are some communications like quick updates that customers prefer to receive via email.
So, complementarity pays. A recent meta-analysis by Peter Field on the IPA Databank reveals that 27% more of the campaigns which delivered high sales performance included mail than did not.
He also looked at campaigns which drove high acquisition levels. And 40% more of these included mail than those that didn’t. Campaigns with mail achieved over twice (104%) the market share growth when measured against campaigns without mail in the mix.
La communication papier et le @ sont des alliés, pas des ennemis.
• le DM soutien votre business
• l’impact du papier adressé
• les forces du papier + le e marketing
• l’impact environnemental du papier
Welcome to our Customer Growth Incentive Promotion, a great opportunity designed to help you to grow your business.
This promotion is for you to use mail to test new markets and marketing approaches or to supplement your multi-media campaign.
By sending incremental volumes that qualify for the Promotion, you will have the opportunity to earn a 2.5p postage credit for each qualifying incremental mail item that you sent during the promotion period and that Royal Mail has verified.
As a busy company owner, marketing director, or contact center manager, you are faced with challenges not even imagined a couple of decades ago. In those days, customer service was most often accomplished through a phone system, making for easy calculations of metrics such as ROIs and KPIs. Limited budgets could be allocated toward innovations and enhancements to the phone system, as well as toward phone training for agents.
Those days of the single channel “call center” are gone, however, replaced by multi-channel contact centers. Managers must now allocate their limited budgets to address a myriad of complex, new channels and data points. It can be a challenge to know if you are investing in the communication channels that will provide the most return for your money. One emerging customer service channel—texting via SMS—is turning out to be more important than previously thought.
Up until now, companies have usually incorporated texting into their business strategy by employing uni-directional marketing or reminder blasts, using short codes. However, this is not how people experience texting in their personal lives. Among each other, people expect texting to be part of a conversational dialogue, complete with rich, relational history between both parties. Responses are also expected to be instant and personal. So far, most companies have not even come close to following these conversational rules of texting.
To find out exactly what customers would like most from the customer service text channel, Harris Interactive conducted a nation-wide survey of over 2000 adults on behalf of OneReach.
How did brand-led newspaper and online newspaper ads coupled with TV positively drive web traffic and active consideration for the credit card provider?
With more than ten years of experience in creating, producing, distributing, tracking and promoting Public Service Announcements (PSAs), we (Williams Whittle) consider ourselves experts in this specialized media. Last year, we developed and launched a survey to our public service contacts at TV and radio stations around the country. For years, we’ve spouted off anecdotal evidence to many of the questions asked in the survey, but lacked the data to support it. Now in our second year, the survey is showing distinct trends in this evolving marketing vehicle.
A survey of Irish businesses and consumers about the state of loyalty and rewards in Ireland today. Commissioned by An Post.
More details here:
http://www.anpost.ie/AnPost/AnPostDM/Tools/Stats/Consumer+Insights+and+Trends/Loyalty+Research/Put+value+back+into+customers+hands.htm
At Royal Mail we’ve always believed in using the power of 1 to 1 communications to build customer relationships.
However, technology has transformed marketing communications. The development of email and the rapid adoption of smartphones and tablets have changed the way
we connect with customers forever. When you want to talk to customers directly you now have many different tools at your disposal and that’s a good thing.
So we’ve conducted extensive research to find out how customers prefer businesses to talk to them. You have this research in front of you and we think the results are fascinating.
It shows that the core strengths of mail have endured and in some cases grown even stronger, often by driving customers online. Mail is still opened, still valued, still kept and still drives response. Digital has transformed marketing but it hasn’t replaced mail for one simple reason. Customers don’t want it to.
Customers are very clear about what they prefer to receive by mail. They prefer to receive items of substance that they can spend time with and keep. Equally, there are some communications like quick updates that customers prefer to receive via email.
So, complementarity pays. A recent meta-analysis by Peter Field on the IPA Databank reveals that 27% more of the campaigns which delivered high sales performance included mail than did not.
He also looked at campaigns which drove high acquisition levels. And 40% more of these included mail than those that didn’t. Campaigns with mail achieved over twice (104%) the market share growth when measured against campaigns without mail in the mix.
La communication papier et le @ sont des alliés, pas des ennemis.
• le DM soutien votre business
• l’impact du papier adressé
• les forces du papier + le e marketing
• l’impact environnemental du papier
Welcome to our Customer Growth Incentive Promotion, a great opportunity designed to help you to grow your business.
This promotion is for you to use mail to test new markets and marketing approaches or to supplement your multi-media campaign.
By sending incremental volumes that qualify for the Promotion, you will have the opportunity to earn a 2.5p postage credit for each qualifying incremental mail item that you sent during the promotion period and that Royal Mail has verified.
PermissionCorp is a Leading International Provider of Online Marketing & Advertising. Under PermissionCorp, RewardsCentral has become one of Australia’s largest online communities since its inception in 1999, connecting people and businesses online. Our multi-award winning Australian business continues to grow from strength to
strength, providing online marketing and advertising solutions to Australia’s
leading consumer brands and agencies.
Power Point Presentation Permission Corp Overview With Online Shopping 10 Aug...JeffGlazer
PermissionCorp has a leading Onlien Rewards program to drive sales to its reward partner e commerce stores. This presentation is an overview of RewardsCentral award winning Online Shopping network
Laura Cajade – How numéricable optimized their transactional mail to achieve ...bpost
In deze sessie vertelt Laura Cajade hoe Numericable hun facturen optimaliseerden om een uniek touch point met de klant te creëren. Ze toont ons de impact van een geoptimaliseerde factuur op klantentevredenheid, op timing van de cash inflow en op cross-selling bij bestaande klanten.
Presentation by CJ (All Response Media) and Mark Davies (TNT Post) at the DMA Go Integrated Conference 2012.
This slideshow looks at how offline marketing channels such as inserts and door drops can work alongside an online strategy; driving consumers online with a powerful response mechanism.
The Private Life of Mail at Advertising Week Europe - A critique by Les Binet...Royal Mail MarketReach
If you attended Advertising Week Europe 2015, you will have heard Les Binet, Head of Effectiveness, adam&eveDDB, and Peter Field, renowned author on media effectiveness, critique the results of The Private Life of Mail; 18 months of unprecedented research into mail in the home, heart and head.
Insights into how the digital age impacts on mail integrating effectiveness, measurement and planning. Everything you thought about mail, may not be true. Learn what they think this means for the way mail is planned and measured in the digital age.
Over the last 18 months, Royal Mail MarketReach has conducted a series of research projects to understand exactly what that means for consumers, and what it means
for you.
We’ve looked into consumers’ homes and found that mail lives a rich, complex and surprisingly long life beyond the doormat. We’ve looked into their hearts and uncovered the deep emotional responses that are triggered by sensations of touch.
And we’ve literally looked into their heads, using the latest neuroscience techniques to discover that mail has a profound and direct impact on the brain.
It’s an unprecedented look at what happens after mail enters the home, which is why we’ve called it, The Private Life of Mail.
Research shows that mail and email work more effectively when used together, producing better results than when either medium is used on their own. Mail also triggers action, including driving people to connect with businesses online.
[Google March 2024 Update] How To Thrive: Content, Link Building & SEOSearch Engine Journal
March 2024 disrupted the SEO industry. Websites were deindexed, and manual penalties were delivered—all to produce more helpful, more trustworthy search results.
How did your website fare?
Watch us as we delve into the seismic shifts brought about by Google's March 2024 updates and explore strategies to not just survive, but thrive in this dynamic digital landscape.
You’ll learn:
- How to create content that is valuable to users (not just search engines) using E-E-A-T.
- How to build links that can boost rankings and withstand algorithm updates.
- Best practices for content creation and link building so you can thrive during algorithm updates.
With Vince Ramos, we'll examine the implications of the latest algorithm changes on content creation, link building, and SEO practices, and offer actionable insights from businesses like yours that have remained steadfast amidst the volatility.
Using real-life case studies, we’ll also show you the effectiveness of manual link building techniques and person-first content strategies.
Whether you're a seasoned SEO professional, a budding content creator, or anyone in between, this webinar will help you weather the changes in Google's algorithms and capitalize on them for sustained success.
Check out this webinar and unlock the secrets to thriving in the new Google era.
Top 3 Ways to Align Sales and Marketing Teams for Rapid GrowthDemandbase
In this session, Demandbase’s Stephanie Quinn, Sr. Director of Integrated and Digital Marketing, Devin Rosenberg, Director of Sales, and Kevin Rooney, Senior Director of Sales Development will share how sales and marketing shapes their day-to-day and what key areas are needed for true alignment.
A.I. (artificial intelligence) platforms are popping up all the time, and many of them can and should be used to help grow your brand, increase your sales and decrease your marketing costs.In this presentation:We will review some of the best AI platforms that are available for you to use.We will interact with some of the platforms in real-time, so attendees can see how they work.We will also look at some current brands that are using AI to help them create marketing messages, saving them time and money in the process. Lastly, we will discuss the pros and cons of using AI in marketing & branding and have a lively conversation that includes comments from the audience.
Key Takeaways:
Attendees will learn about LLM platforms, like ChatGPT, and how they work, with preset examples and real time interactions with the platform. Attendees will learn about other AI platforms that are creating graphic design elements at the push of a button...pre-set examples and real-time interactions.Attendees will discuss the pros & cons of AI in marketing + branding and share their perspectives with one another. Attendees will learn about the cost savings and the time savings associated with using AI, should they choose to.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
5 big bets to drive growth in 2024 without one additional marketing dollar AND how to adapt to the biggest shifting eCommerce trend- AI.
1) Romance Your Customers - Retention
2) ‘Alternative’ Lead Gen - Advocacy
3) The Beautiful Basics - Conversion Rate Optimization
4) Land that Bottom Line - Profitability
5) Roll the Dice - New Business Models
Influencer marketing isn't just for big brands or consumer products anymore. In 2024, marketers face hurdles like escalating paid channel costs, diminishing organic reach, and building trust in their ideal customer accounts. This session offers practical ways to bring influencer marketing into your organization, to provide cost-effective access to niche audiences, countering budget constraints and rising CPMs. We'll discuss the impact of social algorithms on reach, the trust deficit in traditional advertising and how influencer partnerships offer genuine connections with audiences. Attendees will gain actionable insights to integrate influencer marketing into their strategies, leveraging influencers for impactful campaigns in both B2B and B2C environments. Join us to unlock the potential of influencers in navigating the evolving marketing landscape of 2024 and driving meaningful business growth.
Key Takeaways:
- Educate on the various types of influence we can use as marketers
- Establish the problems that make influencers a priority
- Walk through some practical tactics on HOW to run a program leveraging several of these influence channels
For too many years marketing and sales have operated in silos...while in some forward thinking companies, the two organizations work together to drive new opportunity development and revenue. This session will explore the lessons learned in that beautiful dance that can occur when marketing and sales work together...to drive new opportunity development, account expansion and customer satisfaction.
No, this is not a conversation about MQLs and SQLs. Instead we will focus on a framework that allows the two organizations to drive company success together.
The What, Why & How of 3D and AR in Digital CommercePushON Ltd
Vladimir Mulhem has over 20 years of experience in commercialising cutting edge creative technology across construction, marketing and retail.
Previously the founder and Tech and Innovation Director of Creative Content Works working with the likes of Next, John Lewis and JD Sport, he now helps retailers, brands and agencies solve challenges of applying the emerging technologies 3D, AR, VR and Gen AI to real-world problems.
In this webinar, Vladimir will be covering the following topics:
Applications of 3D and AR in Digital Commerce,
Benefits of 3D and AR,
Tools to create, manage and publish 3D and AR in Digital Commerce.
Most small businesses struggle to see marketing results. In this session, we will eliminate any confusion about what to do next, solving your marketing problems so your business can thrive. You’ll learn how to create a foundational marketing OS (operating system) based on neuroscience and backed by real-world results. You’ll be taught how to develop deep customer connections, and how to have your CRM dynamically segment and sell at any stage in the customer’s journey. By the end of the session, you’ll remove confusion and chaos and replace it with clarity and confidence for long-term marketing success.
Key Takeaways:
• Uncover the power of a foundational marketing system that dynamically communicates with prospects and customers on autopilot.
• Harness neuroscience and Tribal Alignment to transform your communication strategies, turning potential clients into fans and those fans into loyal customers.
• Discover the art of automated segmentation, pinpointing your most lucrative customers and identifying the optimal moments for successful conversions.
• Streamline your business with a content production plan that eliminates guesswork, wasted time, and money.
Mastering Local SEO for Service Businesses in the AI Era is tailored specifically for local service providers like plumbers, dentists, and others seeking to dominate their local search landscape. This session delves into leveraging AI advancements to enhance your online visibility and search rankings through the Content Factory model, designed for creating high-impact, SEO-driven content. Discover the Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy, a cost-effective approach to boost your local SEO efforts and attract more customers with minimal investment. Gain practical insights on optimizing your online presence to meet the specific needs of local service seekers, ensuring your business not only appears but stands out in local searches. This concise, action-oriented workshop is your roadmap to navigating the complexities of digital marketing in the AI age, driving more leads, conversions, and ultimately, success for your local service business.
Key Takeaways:
Embrace AI for Local SEO: Learn to harness the power of AI technologies to optimize your website and content for local search. Understand the pivotal role AI plays in analyzing search trends and consumer behavior, enabling you to tailor your SEO strategies to meet the specific demands of your target local audience. Leverage the Content Factory Model: Discover the step-by-step process of creating SEO-optimized content at scale. This approach ensures a steady stream of high-quality content that engages local customers and boosts your search rankings. Get an action guide on implementing this model, complete with templates and scheduling strategies to maintain a consistent online presence. Maximize ROI with Dollar-a-Day Advertising: Dive into the cost-effective Dollar-a-Day advertising strategy that amplifies your visibility in local searches without breaking the bank. Learn how to strategically allocate your budget across platforms to target potential local customers effectively. The session includes an action guide on setting up, monitoring, and optimizing your ad campaigns to ensure maximum impact with minimal investment.
In this presentation, Danny Leibrandt explains the impact of AI on SEO and what Google has been doing about it. Learn how to take your SEO game to the next level and win over Google with his new strategy anyone can use. Get actionable steps to rank your name, your business, and your clients on Google - the right way.
Key Takeaways:
1. Real content is king
2. Find ways to show EEAT
3. Repurpose across all platforms
It's another new era of digital and marketers are faced with making big bets on their digital strategy. If you are looking at modernizing your tech stack to support your digital evolution, there are a few can't miss (often overlooked) areas that should be part of every conversation. We'll cover setting your vision, avoiding siloes, adding a democratized approach to data strategy, localization, creating critical governance requirements and more. Attendees will walk away with actions they can take into initiatives they are running today and consider for the future.
Most small businesses struggle to see marketing results. In this session, we will eliminate any confusion about what to do next, solving your marketing problems so your business can thrive. You’ll learn how to create a foundational marketing OS (operating system) based on neuroscience and backed by real-world results. You’ll be taught how to develop deep customer connections, and how to have your CRM dynamically segment and sell at any stage in the customer’s journey. By the end of the session, you’ll remove confusion and chaos and replace it with clarity and confidence for long-term marketing success.
Key Takeaways:
• Uncover the power of a foundational marketing system that dynamically communicates with prospects and customers on autopilot.
• Harness neuroscience and Tribal Alignment to transform your communication strategies, turning potential clients into fans and those fans into loyal customers.
• Discover the art of automated segmentation, pinpointing your most lucrative customers and identifying the optimal moments for successful conversions.
• Streamline your business with a content production plan that eliminates guesswork, wasted time, and money.
How to Use AI to Write a High-Quality Article that Ranksminatamang0021
In the world of content creation, many AI bloggers have drifted away from their original vision, resulting in low-quality articles that search engines overlook. Don't let that happen to you! Join us to discover how to leverage AI tools effectively to craft high-quality content that not only captures your audience's attention but also ranks well on search engines.
Disclaimer: Some of the prompts mentioned here are the examples of Matt Diggity. Please use it as reference and make your own custom prompts.
SEO as the Backbone of Digital MarketingFelipe Bazon
In this talk Felipe Bazon will share how him and his team at Hedgehog Digital share our journey of making C-Levels alike, specially CMOS realize that SEO is the backbone of digital marketing by showing how SEO can contribute to brand awareness, reputation and authority and above all how to use SEO to create more robust global marketing strategies.
The digital marketing industry is changing faster than ever and those who don’t adapt with the times are losing market share. Where should marketers be focusing their efforts? What strategies are the experts seeing get the best results? Get up-to-speed with the latest industry insights, trends and predictions for the future in this panel discussion with some leading digital marketing experts.
3. DEVELOPED IN 8 STRANDS
3
Ethnography
Post ethnography survey
Multisensory Communications: review of academic literature
Tactility
Values: Best Mail
Mail and Digital 1 & 2
Neuroscience
ROI/Effectiveness metrics
4. Mail in the Home
Mail in the Heart
Mail in the Head
Mail in the Wallet
Case Study: The Salvation Army
Summary
Appendix
THE STORY OF THE PRIVATE LIFE OF MAIL
4
6. MAIL GETS OPENED – AT HIGH RATES
6
Statement, bill or information update
Brochure from a company they have ordered from before
Letter – promotion or special offer
Letter – about a product/service they don’t have
Leaflet without an address about a product/service
Leaflet without an address about a promotion/offer
Brochure from a company not ordered from before
83%
71%
69%
60%
59%
54%
54%
OPEN
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Ethnographic Quant, Trinity McQueen, 2014
7. 7
MAIL’S JOURNEY ISN’T OVER WHEN
Adults read their mail on average for 22 minutes a day.
IT HITS THE DOORMAT
1.15PM: Collects mail and brings it into the
home with other bags and belongings
1.30PM: Opens mail whilst doing other jobs
2.15PM: Opens parcel
2.30PM: Uses laptop to get details on a piece
of mail received
5.30PM: Uses laptop again to get further
details on the piece of mail from earlier
8.30PM: Brings catalogue into lounge to read
Source: IPA Touchpoints 5 (Data based on Monday – Saturday morning); Royal Mail MarketReach, Media Moments, Trinity McQueen, 2013
8. PEOPLE GIVE MAIL TIME
Mail is kept for extended periods, creating a constant presence in the home.
17 daysfor mail
38 daysfor door drops
45 daysfor bills and statements
8Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Ethnographic Quant, Trinity McQueen, 2014
9. 9
AND SPACE
80% of adults kept some mail that
companies had sent them in the last four
weeks.
‘The Holding area’ where it is kept
before being dealt with
‘The Pile’ for mail that has been read
and will be revisited
‘The Display area’ for useful or
important items (local information,
time limited offers)
Display Area
Pile
Holding area
Source: TGI, Kantar Media, 2014; Royal Mail MarketReach, Media Moments, Trinity McQueen, 2013
10. MAIL GETS DISPLAYED
39% of people have a dedicated display area for mail in the home
10Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Ethnographic Quant, Trinity McQueen, 2014
11. MAIL IS SHARED
An average of 23% of mail is shared within a household.
11
Brochure from a company I have ordered from before
Statement, bill or information update
Letter – about a product/service they don’t have
Brochure from a company not ordered from before
Leaflet without an address about a promotion/offer
Letter – promotion or special offer
29%
24%
25%
23%
22%
21%
SHARE
Average of 23%
of mail shared
within a household
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Ethnographic Quant, Trinity McQueen, 2014
12. Mail brings a brand into the home where it is not just kept, but
often displayed and shared
It extends reach to additional individuals
It’s seen multiple times
SUMMARY
12
13. MAIL IN THE HEART
CREATING AN EMOTIONAL
RESPONSE
13
15. TOUCH CREATES A POWERFUL
When people can both see and
touch something, they value it
24% more highly than if they
can only see it.
Over a third of people say that
the physical properties of mail
influence how they feel about
the sender.
15
EMOTIONAL RESPONSE
+22% +24%
2.75 2.73
3.36 3.38
0
1
2
3
4
5
Psychological ownership Valuation
VISION ONLY VISION AND TOUCH
Participants were asked to subjectively grade ownership and value on a 7 point scale.
Source: Peck, Joann, and Suzanne B. Shu. The Effect of Mere Touch on Perceived Ownership. Journal of Consumer Research, 2009; IPA Touchpoints 5, 2014
16. PEOPLE FEEL VALUED AND HAVE A
BETTER IMPRESSION OF THE BRAND
16
The emotional impact of mail versus email
I am more likely to take it seriously
It gives me a better impression of that company
It makes me feel more valued
63%
57%
55%
18%
17%
25%
(% True of Mail vs. True of Email)
MAIL EMAIL
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Mail and Digital Part 1, Quadrangle, 2013
17. MAIL IN THE HEAD
HOW MAIL IMPACTS THE BRAIN
17
19. THE BRAIN RESPONDS MORE STRONGLY
Mail had a much more powerful overall impact on the key measures of the
neuroscience study than email or TV.
TO MAIL THAN TO TV OR EMAIL
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Neuro-Insight 2013 19
168
202
172
127
165
130
105
113
100
0
50
100
150
200
250
Engagement Emotional Intensity Long-term Memory Encoding
Indexvs.'Normal'restingbrain
MAIL EMAIL TV
20. 20
IN A MULTI MEDIA CAMPAIGN
SEQUENCING MAIL LAST MAXIMISES IMPACT
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Neuro-Insight, 2013
Mail after TV and email
100 100 100
112
101
106
126
121
110
80
90
100
110
120
130
140
Engagment Emotional Intensity Long-term Memory
Encoding
Indexvs.responsefromfirstexposure
MAIL SEEN FIRST MAIL SEEN SECOND MAIL SEEN THIRD
Engagement
22. 22
MAIL DELIVERS ROI
Mail ROI showed a strong channel performance in BrandScience cases
Revenue Return on Investment of clients using direct mail
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach BrandScience, 2014
0
2
4
6
8
£
RROI (Revenue ROI)
23. 23
Total ROI increased 12% when mail was included in the mix.
MEDIA MULTIPLIER EFFECT
MAIL CREATES A MEASURABLE
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, BrandScience 2014; advertiser cases including mail versus cases without mail.
4.22
4.63
5…
4.73
4.93
6.31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Total Comms TV Print
RROI
RROI-NO MAIL RROI-WITH MAIL
24. 24
MAIL DELIVERS NEW AUDIENCES
Adding mail to the mix opens up new responsive audiences. When mail is
added to the schedule
versus email on its own
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, Mail and Digital Part 1, Quadrangle, 2013
25. 25
INCLUDING MAIL DELIVERED TOP-RANKING
Campaigns that included mail
were:
27% more likely to deliver top-
ranking sales performance
40% more likely to deliver top-
ranking acquisition levels
SALES AND ACQUISITION PERFORMANCE
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, IPA Databank Meta-Analysis, Peter Field, 2013
+27% +40%
45%
30%
57%
42%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
Sale Acquisition
%Clientslistingtopperforming
improvements
RROI - NO MAIL RROI - WITH MAIL
26. 26
WITH MAIL IN THE MIX, MARKET
SHARE GREW 3x MORE EFFICIENTLY
Mail included in multi-channel campaigns drove market share growth with
3x the efficiency versus non-mail advertisers.
2.9xMarket share growth
for all clients
3.4xMarket share growth
for service sector
Comparing market share growth per 10 Extra Share of Voice points (ESOV) shows the increase in efficiency of advertising plans including mail.
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach, IPA Databank Meta-Analysis, Peter Field, 2013
27. MAIL IN ACTION
The Salvation Army: an award-winning charity case study
THE SALVATION ARMY
27
28. 28
THE SALVATION ARMY GREW NEW
DONORS BY 262% IN 5 YEARS WITH
Source: Royal Mail MarketReach/Mike Colling & Company. Awards: IPA Effectiveness Awards, Silver 2014; DMA
Bronze Award, Best Use of Direct Mail 2012; DMA Gold Award, Best Media Strategy 2011.
Background:
The heart of The Salvation Army’s fundraising is a 6 week
marketing campaign before Christmas, during which they recruit
all their new donors. However, this had been the approach for
years and was tiring.
Solution:
The Salvation Army added both TV and search and
simultaneously more than doubled investment in mail volumes.
Cold mail volume increased +270% to 5.4m while door drop
volume increased 158% to 9.6m.
Results:
The number of new donors recruited grew by 262% and total
donations grew by 48%. £9.5m of immediate incremental income
is projected to become an additional £24.8m over the next five
years, as many new donors give again.
MAIL AT THE CORE
29. 29
MAIL REACHES NEW DONORS WITH
Use door drops for reach; cold mail for precision
PRECISION. NO WASTAGE
69%
52%
49%
52%
55%
97%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
120%
TV Press Inserts Search Doordrop Address mail
% NEW DONORS
Source: The Salvation Army data, analysis by MC&C
30. 30
MAIL WAS KEY FOR ACQUISTION
The Salvation Army used net cost per new acquisition and other key
metrics, rather than just campaign ROI.
£122.89
£57.54 £56.37
£52.80
£31.88
£22.53
£2.08
£0.00
£20.00
£40.00
£60.00
£80.00
£100.00
£120.00
£140.00
Press Doordrops TV Inserts Radio Direct mail Paid search
COST PER NEW DONOR 2010
Source: MC&C/The Salvation Army, 2010
31. “Direct mail, both addressed and unaddressed, has the unique
capacity to generate more engagement, response and income
per thousand from consumers exposed to it than any other
medium. In these days of attention scarcity that’s a huge value
to advertisers. When properly integrated with broadcast and
digital media its benefits are amplified”.
Salvation Army IPA Effectiveness Award entry, MC&C, 2014 Silver
THE SALVATION ARMY LEARNINGS
31
“Mail forms the absolute backbone of The Salvation Army’s
direct marketing fundraising operations.”
Julius Wolff-Ingham, Head of Marketing and Fundraising, The Salvation Army
33. Mail brings a brand into the home where it is kept, displayed,
and/or shared
Its tactile qualities have powerful emotional and rational impact
that can be identified and proven
Mail makes your message more memorable
Mail drives successful return on investment
When used in integrated campaigns, it can provide a
measurable media multiplier effect
Mail delivers top-ranking sales and acquisition growth and
efficient market share growth
SUMMARY
33
Mail flows through the household – it is passed around, discussed and displayed in more ways and for longer than previously thought.
And rather than being opened and read on the doormat, we saw that participants interact with their mail, fitting it in around their daily life, even revisiting mail later in the day.
The IPA Touchpoints survey shows that on average adults read their mail for 22 minutes a day. This compares to magazines, read on average 14 minutes per day. However, with magazines, attention is split between editorial and advertising. With mail, 100% of attention is on the advertising content itself.
People not only spend time reading advertising mail, they can take their time with it; we’ve seen that they typically keep it around the house for more than two weeks.
In fact, many advertisers report that results from mail come in for 3-6 months or even more.
So mail not only gives brands more time in customers' hands, it gives them more time in their homes.
Mail can be a constant presence for a considerable time
Recent data from Kantar Media’s TGI study shows that 80% of adults kept some mail that companies had been sent to them in the last four weeks.
But people not only give mail time in the home, they also give it a specific space.
Data from IPA Touchpoints 5 confirms that 69% of people have a specific place in the house where they store advertising mail such as coupons, catalogues, brochures and vouchers – all of which helps to keep your message in the household longer.
Those display areas are particularly important – keeping your message visible, like a poster space in the home.
We noticed how mail was used as functional decoration, occupying a designated space in a room.
The follow-up survey supported this, with 39% of people saying they had a dedicated display area for mail, which was usually the kitchen (51% of people who have a dedicated area).
So mail doesn’t just deliver the message, it quite literally nails it to the wall.
By thinking creatively about ways to encourage people to display your mail, it can become visible to everyone in the household.
Mail not only moves around the home, it also moves from person to person.
An average of 23% of all mail gets passed around other people in the home or household, extending the reach of your message beyond the named recipient. And this increases to 29% when it’s a brochure from a company which the recipient has bought from before.
Sharing is, understandably, more common in shared households.
But since the inhabitants of shared households tend to be younger, this has particular implications for the audience for mail.
For example, according to IPA Touchpoints 5, there is evidence to suggest that 15-34 year olds are:
42% more likely to find mail memorable than the UK population as a whole
71% more likely to trust the advertising mail they receive
So, if a mail piece is a conversation starter, it might not only get additional people seeing it, it can potentially get your brand talked about over and over again.
Behavioural marketing experts have investigated the importance of touch in human psychology.
Multisensory stimulation seems to alter the way the brain processes messages – often making processing quicker.
Physical contact results in what psychologists call the ‘endowment effect’ – a sense of ownership over an item which makes people value it more highly.
Scientific experiments have shown that people value something they can see and touch 24% more highly than something they can only see.
Meaning that the physical nature of mail gives it a sense of importance as well as influencing how they feel about the sender.
A 2013 article in Scientific American showed that there is still a strong preference for reading on paper, driven by the physical properties of mail.
And this preference for reading on paper does in fact translate into a preference for advertising mail over email communication.
For example, we discovered that 63% of people say that they are more likely to take mail seriously, compared to just 18% of people for email.
But not only does mail give a better impression of the company than email (55% vs 25%), people also feel more valued when they receive mail rather than email (57% vs 17%).
.
So why are people’s brains reacting in such a uniformly positive way to advertising presented in a physical medium?
Well, it could be that stimulating more than one sense speeds up the brain’s ability to process information. For example, in learning experiments performance is consistently better when vision is accompanied by sound, when compared to just vision alone.
And the same applies to touch because it appears that the tactile effects of mail do something similar by making the absorption of messages easier, potentially making them more memorable.
In Kantar Media’s TGI survey, 80% of respondents say that they can remember seeing or reading some advertising mail sent to them in the last four weeks. And when we asked about advertising mail that the respondents found useful or interesting, 60% said that it helped to keep the sender’s brand top of mind.
Mail delivers a stronger brain response, on these measures, than tv or email.
This response to mail is also universal. Whilst different indicators are stronger for different age groups, the overall effect remains strong regardless of age.
Mail creates a stronger brain response than tv or email.
In a multimedia campaign, how can we get mail to work the most effectively with other media channels like tv and email?
We found that placing mail last, after TV and email, generated the maximum effect in our Neuro-Insight research.
So, we have seen the role mail plays in people’s homes and how it impacts positively on the heads and hearts of consumers.
What our research also shows is that mail is highly effective at delivering return on investment (ROI), performing not just in terms of sales and direct response, but also on incremental reach, efficient growth of market share, brand switching and cost per new customer acquisition.
But mail also helps in getting new audiences to engage and respond so it can make a
significant difference when integrated into multi-channel communications planning.
We believe it is important to demonstrate the impact mail has on the full range of
marketing and communications measures and to see how these lead to tangible
business results.
We commissioned BrandScience to conduct a meta-analysis of advertiser econometric models – 401 cases (56 of which used direct mail and 42 of which used door drops), each representing one year with an average of 3 campaigns per year.
They discovered that mail’s ROI performance is strong and that it is similar to television and above that achieved by most other media channels covered in the analysis.
Door drops also deliver excellent performance – around the same level as OOH (out of home / posters).
Of the 56 cases using direct mail, we found that mail and door drops did well versus other channels, and that both deserved to be included/considered in their own right.
When mail was included in an integrated plan, total communications revenue ROI jumped from £4.22 to £4.73 – a 12% increase.
The inclusion of mail particularly showed increased revenue ROI from campaigns using TV and print. This is in line with the neuroscience research where we saw a strong interaction between mail and TV.
Adding mail to the mix also delivers new responsive audiences. This is not just from media multiplier theory.
Royal Mail consumer research shows us that different people like to be communicated with through different channels at different points in the customer journey. In our Mail & Email research for example, we found that 68% of people prefer companies to use some communication by mail.
With mail added to the mix, in our Digital and Mail: Part 1 research, we could identify that 13% more consumers visited the sender’s website, 21% more consumers made purchases and 35% more consumers redeemed coupons or vouchers .
The BrandScience analysis focused on ROI, but we also wanted to confirm that mail delivered on other commercial measures.
Peter Field, an independent marketing effectiveness consultant, analysed the IPA Effectiveness Awards case studies data and compared the metrics between campaigns that used mail and those that did not.
The analysis of the IPA Effectiveness Awards databank identified that campaigns that included mail were 27% more likely to deliver top-ranking sales performance and 40% more likely to deliver top-ranking acquisition levels, than campaigns that didn’t.
Furthermore the results of this analysis showed that where mail was included it drove market share growth with 3 x the efficiency of those that did not include mail.
A brand spending the same amount of money on two campaigns, would therefore experience three times the amount of market share growth from one that included mail than one that did not.
The Salvation Army, working with Mike Colling & Company (MC&C), increased investment in both mail and door drops over 5 years.
By integrating mail with digital and broadcast media, and by accurately attributing results and understanding the roles each channel plays in the media mix, MC&C increased The Salvation Army’s net income and profitability.
MC&C were awarded silver at the IPA Effectiveness Awards 2014, to follow their DMA Gold for Media Strategy in 2011.
With TV included, door drop response was uplifted to a level that supported a significant increase in volume of activity.
Door drops worked for reach mopping up response and addressed mail worked for precision finding new donors.
When using mail for acquisition, before mailing, the new names are deduped against the client database to ensure any current clients do not receive ‘acquisition’ mail. Therefore, the campaign represents almost 100% accuracy in only reaching prospective new customers.
The other media cannot eliminate wastage in this way, and so, as above, larger proportions of the audience reached are currently customers who technically can be reached with a crm programme i.e. in a more efficient way. Often ‘new’ cost per acquisition is not considered or results analysed as such. Instead with an overall cost per acquisition or ROI this efficiency can be hidden. (see the next slide)
The primary objective for The Salvation Army was the recruitment of NEW donors. Mail performed poorly on year one ROI due to high costs per contact. However, when measured directly against the objective of acquiring net new donors, it was the most effective generator. Being the second most efficient channel, it was also the largest volume source of net new donors. As seen on the previous slide, the individual level targeting inherent in the channel meant 97% of new donors recruited by mail were new to the organisation, compared with an average of 50% from other channels.
So addressed mail gave the best cost per new acquisition of all channels apart from paid search. Paid search was restricted to brand and advertising terms only (no generic search) – so there was only a restricted volume available at this level of efficiency. Other channels generated income from current donors as well as from new ones and so were a more expensive way of achieving this than directly targeting current donors.
Mail then remained the backbone of the campaign and its volumes increased 2.7x over the five years. MC & C was able to demonstrate, in their IPA Effectiveness Award winning entry, how they successfully mixed together an integrated campaign using other channels like TV and digital with mail and doordrops to maximum effect.