Notice: Direct Marketing is a Strategy, Not a Tactic

Misunderstanding the role of direct marketing in the marketing mix severely limits it’s potential as a key part of most any company’s marketing portfolio.

If you are a DM professional, then you see the broad scope and long-term impact of direct marketing as a strategy. If you are a positioning strategist or a branding practitioner, then you might view direct marketing as a tactic and “below-the-line” tactic. Which is accurate?

Let’s start at the beginning by defining the role of marketing and reason together about how marketing strategies evolve.

In my own vernacular, marketing consists of activities that create products or services that people are willing to buy. In addition, marketing includes broad-based strategies for selling those same products for long-term profitability.

As with any business venture, marketing plans are developed based primarily on quantifiable profit objectives. These objectives answer WHAT we want as a result of our marketing strategies.

The strategies deal with HOW the marketers intend to accomplish the stated objective. And finally, the tactics spell out the DETAIL of how the strategies are implemented.

As outlined in the classic definitions of the terms, tactics tend to be low-level breakdowns revolving around implementation for the short term.

Definition of the word STRATEGY:

A carefully devised plan of action to achieve a goal, or the art of developing or carrying out such a plan

Encarta® World English Dictionary © 1999 Microsoft Corporation.

Definition of the word TACTIC:

A method used or a course of action followed in order to achieve an immediate or short-term aim

Encarta® World English Dictionary © 1999 Microsoft Corporation.

For example, the media plan includes target market analyses, media selections based on audience reach and frequency and other methods that are tactical in nature. But when the media plan is driven by a direct marketing strategy, then the media plan evaluation and selection tactics take a totally different direction.

For example, instead of looking primarily for “reach and frequency” called for by the image advertising strategy, the direct marketing media plan is driven by cost per lead or cost per sale financials. This direct marketing media plan depends upon constant tracking that expands, reduces or cuts broadcast buys, lists selections and other media decisions based on test results. The general advertising strategy totally and properly ignores this selection and evaluation process for media buys.

The simplified flow chart below illustrates my view of the interrelationships between the objective, the strategies and the tactics selected to achieve the objectives.

DMCG Results

When treated with the respect it deserves, the direct marketing strategy drives the creative development, offer development, pricing, the tracking system, the dependence upon the house file, the media plan and other marketing functions in ways that the general advertising or branding strategy does not even consider. In some cases, it may even subordinate image advertising depending upon the situation.

Ted Grigg
What Ted does best is increase response by beating controls, applying multiple channels to target markets, profiling customer databases and generally improving sales results using deep direct marketing principles. Regard Ted as your personal “think-tank” for your direct marketing planning and strategy development. After analyzing several hundred million dollars of direct response testing in all channels, he brings with him the knowledge accumulated from seeing what tends to work and what does not. Having worked on both the agency and client side of direct marketing, Ted understands the unique challenges faced by agencies and their clients. Agencies need to sell themselves and deliver sales results. And clients not only require results, but need ideas they can implement while focusing on tracking response using a relational database. If Ted brings nothing else to the table, by profiling customer databases and creating response propensity models, he quickly becomes the clients’ expert on their own customers. His formal training includes a BA from Abilene Christian University and two years of graduate work at Texas Tech University. For a national direct-to-consumer insurance company, Ted developed a revolutionary direct mail format that beat most standing direct mail controls for this company. He also generated more profitable business for this firm by expanding compiled list circulation of less than 10% to more than 30% of total direct mail circulation within a year. (Insurance business generated by direct mail demonstrated higher persistency than customers coming from other media such as print and DRTV.) Ted’s plan and implementation of Medicare lead generation campaigns for over 60 regional and national HMO/PPO organizations combined multiple channels that surpassed some sales projections by as much as 60%. Additional industry experience over the last 30 years includes B2B or B2C for finance, securities, home security, healthcare, insurance, manufacturing, government, technology, nonprofit, retail, transportation, communications, and multiple categories in the services industry. As the founder of Wyse Direct (a division for Wyse Advertising in Cleveland, OH), he successfully launched and branded a new technology product for Seiko-Mead by supporting a nationwide sales team with a predictable flow of qualified sales leads. While a VP of new business development for the Grizzard Agency, Ted acted as the direct marketing strategist who refocused the agency’s culture to attract new commercial and fundraising accounts. At the time, Grizzard was essentially a direct mail fund raising production operation. His leadership and team building effectiveness prepared Grizzard for the eventual Omnicom acquisition and Grizzard’s successful integration into Omnicom’s large group of advertising agencies. An independent DM consultant, Ted continues to write numerous articles and conduct webinars on direct marketing techniques. He also wrote The HMO/PPO Marketing Plan — A Step-by-Step Guide publishing it through Executive Enterprises in New York City. During his youth, Ted was raised in Lille, France with his missionary family attending French schools becoming fluent in reading and writing French. Away from the job, Ted is a computer geek, blogger and science fiction buff!
http://www.dmcgresults.com
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