Despite the downturn in the stock market, catalogs
today are flourishing and have become the most successful direct marketing
vehicles ever invented. Why is this so?
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Lightning
fast fulfillment. Remember “allow six to eight weeks for
delivery?” Who can stay in business today saying that? Many
catalogers today even offer next day service. That means that they
have had to streamline their warehouses, with UPS and Fedex trucks
constantly backed up to their doors.
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Massive
exchange of names. North America is about the only place in the
world where you can rent names of mail order buyers. Almost everywhere
else, marketers hold customer names in an Al Gore “lock box”.
My wife, Helena, is an avid catalog shopper. She gets from
eight to ten catalogs a day, all year long. She loves them, reading
every page of every book as if they were novels. As soon as she places
an order, the cataloger immediately rents her name out to fifty or
sixty other competitors who rush to fill our mailbox.
Without this universal name exchange, the catalog industry
would soon die.
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Universally
available credit cards. Not only do all catalogers depend on them,
all consumers have them. Every American family receives at least two
credit card solicitations per week.
What does this mean for the catalogers? Financial success! The
problem of getting paid for products has almost disappeared.
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Sophisticated
Telesales. Today’s call center software is one of the most
complex aspects of
cataloging. Millions of agents staff centers on a 24/7 basis. The call
center software recognizes previous customers using Caller ID, and
calls their purchase history up on the screen, before the call is
answered. The computer terminal screens enable the agent to find
any product immediately, so that she can immediately begin to discuss
colors, sizes and prices effortlessly. If the caller is a previous
customer, the agent doesn’t have to get the name and address a
second time.
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No
hassle return policy. Modern catalogers make it very easy to
return merchandise – and the best ones pay the return postage.
Customers may exchange, get a credit or a full refund, with no
questions asked! Such service was unheard of a decade ago, but has
become standard.
With all of these new
developments, you would think that catalogers would be in the forefront of
database marketing today. You would be wrong. While every cataloger
retains the names of customers so that they can mail them catalogs, and
rent out the names to other catalogers, few have a marketing database
system. Recent studies show that catalogers with sales of more than $100
million per year spend an average of $18,000 on database marketing. Those
with sales of less than $100 million spend almost nothing in this field.
Why not?
To explain this, let’s
define what we mean by database marketing. In modern DBM, a company keeps
track of customer purchases, and crafts special customer communications
designed to build retention, referrals, loyalty and cross sales. Why
aren’t catalogers doing this?
Because they have a good
thing going for them as it is. In theory catalogs could be personalized,
with Arthur Hughes getting a catalog containing things that the sender
assumes he would be interested in, and Helena Hughes getting a catalog
from the same company with a different selection of products. No one does
this. The reason is simple: the increased sales from personalization would
not be sufficient to cover the cost of personalization. Catalogers print
200,000 or more identical copies, trying to get the per-piece cost as low
as possible. They mail their house file plus thousands of rented names.
This method keeps the marketing costs to a minimum.
So, if you cannot
personalize your communications, how can you do database marketing? You can’t, if we limit ourselves to direct mail.
The Internet has opened up
a range of new opportunities for personalization which may lead many
catalogers to reconsider their attitude towards database marketing. Amazon
has shown us the way. “Welcome back, Arthur” is wonderful
personalization. Amazon then goes on to suggest books and movies to me
that I might be interested in – using collaborative filtering to come up
with the suggestions. In the past two years, I have probably spent more
than a thousand dollars with Amazon, of which a significant percentage
were the results of Amazon suggestions.
One email that I received a year ago has stuck in my mind. They
said:
“Two years ago you bought a Dark Sun by Richard Rhodes.
You may be interested to learn that Richard Rhodes has just had a new book
published called Why they kill. To learn more about this book, or
to order it, click here.”
Well, I clicked, I bought
it, and I loved it. This is database marketing.
Most catalogers have built web sites. A
month’s tally of Helena’s mailbox shows that 84% provide a way to shop
on the web. Many of these sites are quite sophisticated and easy to use.
Few, however, are personalized. As a Gold customer, Helena sees the same
web site as a browser who has never bought there before.
Few greet her when she returns with a hearty “Welcome back,
Helena.” Even more annoying, they don’t remember her address and
credit card number, so she has to enter this data all over again whenever
she visits the site. What a nuisance!
Most catalogers who have a developed a web
site have been disappointed at the level of sales. Here is what they have
found:
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Total Web Sales: 15% or less.
Few have been able to get their web sales up to or over 15%.
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Sales to web browsers. Most catalogers find that
their sales are coming from the catalog, not from people who come to them
from a web search. Catalogers report that the catalog produces more than
90% of their web sales.
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Why are web sales so
disappointing? There seem to be several reasons:
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Web search for products is slow.
Flipping through a catalog is easy. You can find what you want
and order it. You can’t flip through a web site. To find a cardigan
sweater in Appleseed’s catalog took about 45 seconds. To find the same
sweater from scratch in the Appleseed’s web site took three
minutes. To find the sweater on the web site, using the catalog number
took about one minute.
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The colors on the web are not true.
There is no way that you can know what user’s monitors are doing
to your products.
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Out of stock is seldom accurate.
When you call a telemarketer, her software tells her and she tells
you that the item you want is out of stock. Web sites seldom do. As a
result, you place the web order and find out by email in a few days that
they are out of stock. After a few experiences like this, you stick with a
live operator.
Out of stock problems should not occur on a
good web site. The other two problems will always be with us. So what can
we conclude?
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Database marketing can work for catalogers using the
web, but only if the web site is as good as what the telemarketer sees on
her screen.
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Web personalization is very inexpensive, but very
effective in building loyalty and cross sales.
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Cross sales can work on the web, but
only if accompanied by personalization and collaborative filtering. The
goal is to make the web so effective that the cross sales rate is equal to
or better than that achieved by a telesales agent.
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The web is best as a ordering device, not a selling
device. A typical sale taken by a telemarketer costs $6.50. The same sale
over the web costs less than $0.10. Forget about web browsers, and
concentrate on catalog shoppers. Get them to use the catalog and order on
the web.
Arthur Middleton Hughes is Vice President of The Database Marketing Institute. Ltd. (Arthur.hughes@dbmarketing.com) which provides strategic advice on relationship marketing. Arthur is also Senior Strategist at e-Dialog.com (ahughes@e-Dialog.com) which provides precision e-mail marketing services for major corporations worldwide. Arthur is the author of Strategic Database Marketing 3rd ed. (McGraw Hill 2006). You may reach Arthur at (954) 767-4558 .
The articles on this web site are available to the general public to read, enjoy and for limited business use. If you want to reprint more than one or two of them for resale or use in a business or educational environment, send an email to Arthur Hughes at arthur.hughes@dbmarketing.com. He will give you permission by return email. The cost, depending on the number of copies you want to reprint, is very inexpensive.
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