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Jim Kobs on...Direct Marketing
I recently caught up with Jim Kobs, an internationally known direct
marketer and author of Profitable Direct Marketing. Here are some
excerpts:
What's the most important direct marketing lesson you've learned?
The importance of the offer-or what you promise someone to have
them take the desired action. Yes, it's true that the list and the
media choice have more overall impact on a mailing's response. But,
I've found that the offer plays a pivotal role.
Over 30 years ago, I authored a list of "99 Proven Direct
Response Offers" for the first edition of my book. Today, when
I go to revise that section, I find 95% of the offers are still
relevant. Spend time developing the right offer and your direct
marketing efforts will benefit.
How has direct marketing changed in the last 5 years?
To start, there's an emphasis on branding. In addition to creating
an immediate response, today's direct marketers also seek to enhance
the brand image. They've found that establishing an image and position
in the market yields additional long term sales.
And things have really snowballed in the e-commerce arena. Five
years ago, this marketing vehicle was in its infancy. But, just
in the last year, I've seen the Internet make a huge impact on a
company's sales. Just a year or so ago, Internet sales were concentrated
in a handful of industries. Today however, most traditional direct
marketers are seeing it impact sales-to the tune of 5-10% or more
of a company's total sales.
What do marketers have to do differently with the Internet?
So many companies today underutilize their websites. They should
look to a web-site as a vehicle to drive relationship marketing.
This is the real potential for the
Internet. Use your website as a lever to strengthen relationships
and the payoffs will be enormous.
Marketers must also integrate the web with their traditional direct
marketing activities. Do your consumers peruse your catalog, and
then place orders online? Do they visit your website first then
pick up the phone to order? Use the web the way the consumer wants
to use it-not the other way around.
What marketing advice would you give the owner of a growing
company today?
Establish a database that includes history about each customer's
purchases and interests. I still run into companies these days whose
only database is for billing purposes. They haven't transformed
this tool into a marketing database. Today, with the tremendous
improvements in computer technology, capturing and analyzing marketing
information is very affordable. I recently heard that if automobile
technology had made the same advances as computer technology, we'd
all be able to afford a Rolls Royce that got 2000 miles per gallon
for only $1,000!
Jim Kobs Formed Kobs Gregory Passavant in 1989. Recognized as
one of the nation's leading authorities in direct marketing, he's
won most of the industry's top awards in his 25-year career, including
the Ed Moyer Award for Educational Leadership and was recently Hall
of Fame. He can be reached at (312) 819-2300.
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