Direct mail tests on a tight budget
Joseph E. DanielHow smaller magazines can create affordable direct mail tests
Developing a simple direct mail test for a small magazine is sort of an oxymoron. No matter how basic you try to make the test, it still has many levels of complexity. For most publishers, there are four questions that must be answered quickly when marketing a new magazine:
1) How should you price it?
2) What kind of direct will package will work best?
3) What kind of offer will draw the largest number of subscribers?
4) How big is the universe of potential subscribers?
These seemingly simple inquiries could easily require a matrix of 24 different tests against dozens of mailing lists, just to acquire the data most circulation directors would feel have enough depth to be statistically relevant. Here's why it gets so complicated and so costly.
Let's assume you're pretty sure that the market will support a $15 annual subscription price for your new magazine. Well, you'd better test at least one price point on either side, say, $18 and $12, just in case you're wrong. Then you have to determine whether you can catch a new reader's attention with a relatively inexpensive device, like a simple double postcard, or whether you'll need a more conventional direct mail package - with a snazzy outside envelope, a convincing sales letter, a colorful brochure and a postpaid business reply envelope. Better test both - in all three price categories, of course.
You'll also need to find out whether potential subscribers will respond to a "hard" offer that requires them to send in their money before they see the magazine - or whether you'll need to lure them in with a free sample issue "soft" offer. Should you include a "bill me" option and offer a premium with each paid order? Or perhaps offer a discount for cash? You'll need to test all these options in every configuration against each other. So much for the simple test.
Unless you're willing (and able) to invest what could easily be more than $100,000 in printing, postage, design, copywriting, list rentals, and so on, you'll have to settle for a scaled-down version to get the feedback you need.
Shopping for numbers
For attracting investors, the most important number is how many subscribers responded to your subscription offer. When Parenting (not a Time Inc. title at the time) was conducting a direct mail test, it was able to convince Time Inc. to fund the venture before the magazine was launched - because of carefully orchestrated testing. The initial test consisted of two conventional packages, each with the same brochure but with different outer envelopes and sales letters. With both packages, Parenting tested a soft offer and a hard offer at $12 and $15; it mailed to 130,000 names drawn from 27 different lists. The total cost was about $1 per piece.
While this certainly wasn't an inexpensive test, it was somewhat simple, using a matrix of only eight tests against a fairly broad list selection. Parenting's goal was a high response percentage, which it achieved by keeping testing to a minimum. The final result: a 5.7 percent overall gross response rate. After eliminating all lists that produced less than a 4.5 percent response, Parenting was left with an average gross response rate of 7.2 percent from lists that represented a universe with which to go shopping for funding.
Modify as needed
This test can be easily modified for smaller magazines. I suggest testing both a hard and a soft offer with the highest quality conventional package you can afford. On top of that, I also suggest testing the same soft offer with a double postcard. Many by magazines don't pull well with a postcard's limited sales space, but it remains the control (that is, best responding) package at some magazines. Why? It costs less to produce and mail, uses far less paper, and can be effectively printed on recycled stock.
Also consider a "discount with cash" as part of the soft offers and a "premium upon payment" as part of the hard offer. The cost of the discount and premium can easily be made up in the savings on billing. Both of these devices can increase pay-up and help cut unnecessary paper use.
As for operating on a tight budget, consider trading some equity to a designer and copywriter for the creative work, or do it yourself (after examining many successful direct mail pieces). See whether list managers will trade lists for the use of yours in the future. You can mall to as few as 50,000 names drawn from a minimum of 10 lists, but going smaller could threaten the validity of the data. If you're really low on funds, test only your "must have" price. With planning, you should be able to produce this test for about $30,000 and ideally net the results you need to make your dream a reality.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Copyright by Media Central Inc., A PRIMEDIA Company. All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group