Posts Tagged ‘direct marketing’

September 28th, 2007

Can direct marketing work for FMCG products?

I read this week that Warburton’s bread is seeking a lead DM agency. Even as one of direct marketing’s staunchest advocates, I found myself asking why an FMCG brand like Warburton’s would hire a DM agency.

Is it because bread is a high ticket item worthy of high levels of individual level communication investment? Nope; at around 70p, a Warburton’s loaf costs about the same as a fully costed unit of direct mail. Is it because Warburton’s bread is a highly complex product that requires the type of detailed explanation that only DM or online can deliver? Nope; surely bread is one of the simplest things in life requiring the least explanation. So is it because retail buyers have become so enamoured with direct mail effectiveness that they’re now more likely to stock product because it’s supported by a DM push rather than a 600 rating TV campaign? I doubt it.

I think the real reason is because many marketers on the client side feel pressured to show they are using more ‘cost effective’ techniques like DM. But there’s a problem for FMCG marketers; DM as a discipline has not shown beyond doubt that it can make a positive net profit ROI contribution to low cost FMCG products.

In my view the relationship between DM and FMCG is a case of square pegs and round holes. Here’s why. If the loaf costs 70p and a fully costed unit of DM costs around the same, then given a 10% net profit margin on the loaf, each piece of DM would have to drive at least 10 directly attributable incremental loaf sales to recoup its cost. Sales of more than 10 loaves would be necessary before the DM campaign began delivering a positive net profit ROI. By comparison to DM’s 70p per unit, each person who sees a Warburton’s TV ad will cost the advertiser around 0.7p, yes, less than 1p to reach. And just one exposure can be sufficient to drive a change in consumer behaviour.

There are some interesting arguments around nurturing high value FMCG customer segments, i.e. large portions of profit may come from small numbers of buyers, but for each of these there are equally compelling counter arguments, most notably the Double Jeopardy theory of market share versus brand loyalty.

All this leaves us with the rather cold reality that the economics of DM cannot be reconciled profitably with the economics of FMCG products and markets.

So, if I were chewing my pencil at Warburton’s I’d do two things. First, I’d centralise all the DM and sales promotion spend (and agency fees) into TV advertising. Second, I’d give BBH the following brief: “Make Warburton’s the most talked about bread in the country”. Bread has waited for thousands of years to be made special. The space is there for the taking and TV is the one medium that can deliver it.

April 11th, 2007

Sorrell may not be an adman, but he could be a direct marketer


“Start experimenting with mobile, test, refine, repeat,” was the advice offered by Sir Martin Sorrell, chief executive at WPP, at the Mobile Entertainment and Advertising Summit held by the GSM Association.

Well there you have it; ‘experiment, test, refine, repeat’. Ogilvy and Sorrell may not have seen eye to eye when the new boy was buying up O&M, but D.O. may be very proud to see how the young lad Sorrell has come along. Ogilvy himself was a big proponent of testing - a habit he picked up from Claude Hopkins (see post below).

In case anyone is wondering, Ogilvy too was a direct marketer before he was an adman. He referred to DM as, “my first love, and later, my secret weapon.”

February 27th, 2007

Dodo’s, Direct Mail and Extinction


Have you seen the kids movie Ice Age? In it, the Dodo’s, on the eve of extinction, run around in a broken circle of dead ends, lame excuses and half baked ideas, arguing that they’re the best thing since sliced bread as the world progresses beyond their stagnanting ideals. Of course we all know what happened in the end.

The DM industry behaves in much the same way and in the process has made itself a sitting dodo for environmentalists. It runs an ongoing drip campaign to remind almost every UK household of its very ungreen credentials - by delivering on average 13.4 items per household per month (DMIS). The maths are shocking; 643,000 tonnes of direct mail per year of which around 95% is wasted; 611,000 tonnes - straight in the bin. The campaign bursts come in the form of the huge pile of poorly targeted white envelopes that litter our doorsteps after a week away - the annual total according to DMIS is 5.1 billion items a year. Like the Dodo’s, I doubt the DM industry will ever get real about the impending demise of direct mail.

Is there a future? Well yes, of course. There is for all species, but only if they successfully change to meet the demands of their new environment. The DM industry should be thinking much more strategically about where 1-1 communication is going and what they can offer. They are in the 1-1 communication business. They understand it; the fine tuning, the detail, the nuances, the customer behaviour and the regulatory framework (even if they don’t always abide by it). They could export these skills into the web arena and build powerful customer communication businesses. OK, so they’d have to sell their printing presses, close down their print shops and move out of paper. But if they spend their money now, to build strategic positions in 1-1 communications, they could avoid the extinction that otherwise awaits many of them.

February 21st, 2007

(Oh) Dear Volvo


My wife has just received 5 ounce monster (140g) direct mail pack from Volvo. By a monster I mean two things - large, lots of cardboard, paper and plastic wrapping. And secondly, ooh, the content. Within this triumph of industrialised packaging and laser printing, Volvo run the headlines “Protecting Your Family. It’s In Our Nature” and “Kinder to Children with Asthma, Allergies and Hay Fever.”

Now at a push I could get over the unfriendly waste/recycling aspect of the pack, but the family and child protection line is a bit harder to swallow. In the Euro NCAP ratings, the big Volvo attracts the following commentary, “The bumper and bonnet leading edge were unforgiving. But the top of the bonnet protected children’s and adult’s heads to give the XC90 a two-star rating. Volvo needs to work harder to improve pedestrian safety.” It got 5 stars if you’re on the inside and just 2 for pedestrians.

Seems it’s OK if you’re inside the big Volvo, but your’re *$&^%ÂŁ if you’re on the outside - which is where most of us happen to be.

February 21st, 2007

Why didn’t direct agencies really get digital?

I’ve just bought my new edition of The Institute of Direct Marketing’s Guide to Best Practice in Direct, Data and Digital Marketing. It’s a weigthy tome - 11 lbs on my scales. The 3 Volumes total 1,500 pages penned by some 50 authors. It has 12 Sections divided into around 56 chapters. The forward lets us know that it’s 20% bigger than the last edition.

Eight of the 56 chapters cover digital in at least some depth and four of them are fully dedicated to digital channels e.g. to Search, Email and Mobile. I suppose that goes some way to letting people know just how much there is to know about direct marketing and how much direct marketing has to give to digital marketing.

Digital agencies know that they don’t know enough about direct marketing. I know this because they’re trying to hire direct marketing specialists left, right and centre. At the same time direct agencies are yet to fully embrace digital. It really does amaze me that the established direct marketing agencies never really got into digital media. As it emerged, the Internet quickly showed itself to be the holy grail for the direct marketer; precise, measurable, accountable and flexible.

But digital was pretty much ignored. Why? The problem is that many direct agencies have hungry printers to keep happy. Big machines to feed. They are still structured around print media and particularly direct mail. They make nice margins and juicy profits off big direct mail print jobs.

Long may it remain so. If the direct marketing agencies ever really got their digital act together, digital agencies could be in serious trouble.