Jack's Special Delivery:
Money-Saving Tips
Jack’s Top Ten Direct-Mail Package-Design Mistakes
10. Vertical rules on the address side of postcards that
crimp address space. (Talk about a good way to ensure your piece
won’t be delivered!)
9. Use of incorrect wording on the mailing
indicia – that
little boxed-in area in the upper right of a card or envelope
where the stamp would normally go. Reprinting envelopes is relatively
quick work, but not that quick when a whole mail promotion sits
in the warehouse waiting for the printer’s delivery.
8. Misplacement of the return address on the carrier
or return envelopes. Uncle Sam says upper left-hand corner. Get
too creative and you’ve got a problem.
7. Wrong size or weight on one or all
components of the mailing package. Postal regulations are precise
with regard to size and weight. An eighth of an inch on an envelope
or postcard can cost you big time. Use an unnecessarily heavy
stock and pay for extra weight. Size a package component wrong
and machine stuffers can’t
place it in the envelope.
6. Folding and sealing issues, especially for flats
mailed without envelopes. Size, weight and folding considerations
determine whether a piece can go in the mail with no wafer seals,
one or more. Each seal adds 2 cents to your per-piece mailing
cost.
5. Omission of a return address on a non-profit mailing piece.
The USPS requires one. Omit it and expect to pay for-profit rates.
4. Putting a square box in the upper-right corner of the envelope
that says, “Stamp here.” If the respondent doesn’t
get that one, your chances of response are pretty low, regardless.
3. Pre-printing a rectangle in the address block. Mail house
data processing managers are constantly challenged by list problems
and complex file manipulations. Forcing them to format addresses
inside a pre-determined area without regard to USPS mailing requirements
is asking for trouble.
2. Not calling the mailing services vendor
to discuss the project before beginning the conceptual and design
process.
...And the Number 1 mistake made by graphic designers
and direct response consultants...
1. Delivering materials to the mailer
and demanding priority service without ever having shown the
package or piece to the mailer in the first place!
If we’ve sounded a bit strident in this edition of “Jack’s
Special Delivery,” it’s because we see the problems
noted above more times in a month than we’d like to remember.
Help do your part to preserve our sanity. Have your designer
call ahead!
More questions? jack@citymailusa.com
Jack Zaccardi
See more money-saving direct mail tips in
our archives.
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