DMA Releases 5th Annual 'Response Rate Trends Report'‘2007 Response Rate Trends Report’ Has More Refined Calculations, More Precise Results Chicago, IL, October 13, 2007 — For nearly 30 years, direct marketers have been asking the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) “What’s the typical response rate for a direct marketing campaign in my profession and product category, and what channels will yield the best response?” Five years ago, DMA put all the answers in one book. Today, DMA’s 2007 Response Rate Trends Report is bigger and better than ever. The report includes: · Four years of data — with more refined calculations, and more precise results — to help multichannel direct marketers benchmark their campaigns. · Details four direct marketing objectives that are isolated and reported on separately: direct order, lead generation, traffic building, and fundraising. · Breaks out direct marketing channels and types of lists used (house file vs. prospect), as well as the industry being advertised. “We’re especially proud of this report, because it directly and immediately answers members’ top marketing campaign questions,” said “For the 2007 report, we opted to provide revenue/sales and promotion cost on the somewhat more widely used per thousand (/M) rather than per contact basis,” Chernis continued. “Also for the first time, this report shows promotion costs as a percent of revenue/sales — a useful performance benchmark.” Among the findings of this year's report: · Direct Order and Fundraising: Direct marketers with a primary goal of soliciting direct-order sales or motivating customers to make a contribution achieved the highest response rates: Catalog (2.24 percent), and direct mail (2.15 percent). · Lead Generation: Email (4.09 percent) produced the highest absolute response rates for those whose primary objective was to generate leads. · Traffic Building: Direct mail (5.35 percent) is the premier medium used for traffic building. DMA’s 2007 Response Rate Trends Report includes data for more than 1,600 campaigns received since 2004. Six media channels are explored, which may have been used solo or in combination, to achieve specific campaign objectives: direct mail (flat), catalog, email, inserts, outbound telephone, and newspaper/magazine. In addition, the study provides information for 19 major professional categories, consistent with the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), as well as a selection of 30 specific products and services. DMA’s 2007 Response Rate Trends Report — priced at $245 for DMA members and $445 for non-members — can now be ordered through DMA’s Bookstore at www.the-dma.org/bookstore. About Direct Marketing Association (DMA) The Direct Marketing Association (www.the-dma.org) is the leading global trade association of businesses and nonprofit organizations using and supporting multichannel direct marketing tools and techniques. DMA advocates standards for responsible marketing, promotes relevance as the key to reaching consumers with desirable offers, and provides cutting-edge research, education, and networking opportunities to improve results throughout the end-to-end direct marketing process. Founded in 1917, DMA today represents nearly 3,600 companies from dozens of vertical industries in the US and 50 other nations, including a majority of the Fortune 100 companies, as well as nonprofit organizations. In 2006, marketers — commercial and nonprofit — spent $166.5 billion on direct marketing in the United States. Measured against total US sales, these advertising expenditures generated $1.93 trillion in incremental sales. Last year, direct marketing accounted for 10.3 percent of total US GDP. Also, there are today 1.7 million direct marketing employees in the US alone. Their collective sales efforts directly support 8.8 million other jobs. That accounts for 10.5 million US jobs. The Power of Direct: Relevance. Responsibility. Results. # # #
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