ADVERTISE WITH CIRCULARS
DISTRIBUTE 81/2 X 11" CIRCULARS
Co-op Mailing (short for co-operative) means that two or more businesses
share in the cost and distribution of a direct mail
campaign. It's kind of
like having you and another non-competing business split the
cost of
printing, assembling and mailing an advertising flyer to a
shared (same)
marketbase.
Co-op dealing is very beneficial (and usually safe) for
everyone involved.
One example of co-op dealing in mail order is to send your 8
1/2x11 camera-
ready circular to a co-op printer and they'll print your ad
on one side,
their ad on the back side and ship them back to you for a
low cost of around
$10 per 1,000. You get your printing almost free and the
other dealer gets
his or her flyers mailed on the back of yours free.
But what do you do with them when they are mailed back to
you? If you're new
to mail order it's doubtful you have a mailing list to
distribute them to.
Plus, postage costs alone would run you about $290.00
first-class. At this
rate it would have been cheaper to send the camera-ready to
a tabloid or
adsheet publisher rather than by a co-op. But don't despair.
Simply have the printer ship your copies to a co-op circular
mailer instead
of sending them to you. A couple good circular mailers we
recommend are BMG
Services, PO
Box 429 , Johnson KS 67855
(your cost is only 1c for 8 1/2x11
pre-printed circular) or Thorn Gifts, 1807 Stillwater #5, St Paul MN 55119
(your cost is only 5c for each 8 1/2x11 pre-printed
circular.) Why the
difference in price? BMG mails by bulk rate and Thorn mails
by first-class.
Either method is effective and sure beats paying 29c each.
In addition, you benefit from the mailing list of the
circular mailer. If
this particular mailer sells a mailing list, having them do
a 1,000 or 5,000
"test" mailing for you would be a way to test
their names. You should get a
few responses from a mailing of this size but it all depends
on "what" you
are offering and the "price" you are offering it
for. It's very difficult to
sell any item for more than $50 on a 8 1/2x11"
circular. For items costing
more than $50, you need to use the two-step approach. In
other words, use
the 8 1/2x11" circular to generate inquiries and
follow-up with the complete
sales materials that constitute the higher price the
customer may decide to
pay.
Another idea is that you could contact a dealer with
products and services
not conflicting with your own and ask them to co-op mail for
you. In this
deal, you would pay for the 2-sided printing (with the
mailer's ad on back
of yours) and he/she would mail them for you free of charge.
It works!
Another way to co-op deal in mail order is by co-op
advertising. High
Mountain Advertiser and Popular Advertiser are both long
running co-op
publications. You place your ad the first time through a
dealer and all
future ads are 50% less. Then you have the option of mailing
pre-printed
copies with your name in the publisher's block as an
authorized dealer.
When other people order advertising, they will send their
orders to you.
You keep 50% of the money and send the rest (along with the
order) back to
the publisher. This way, you can have your 8 1/2x11
circulars printed and
mailed in a publication at a 50% savings.
Coal Publishing, 27
South 4th Avenue , Highland Park NJ 08904
also offers
co-op advertising in their "Small Business Keeps
America Growing" tabloid.
For the low cost of $35 per tabloid-size page, you can have
your 8 1/2x11"
circular along with four 2-inch ads printed and mailed to a
whopping 5,000
circulation. All you are responsible for is the mailing of
200 of them.
Any beginner can handle mailing 50 per week to a mailing
list or to their
own customers. Besides, no one can offer you a 5,000 honest
circulation for
this price. This is a real money-saver!
If you market the direct mail method, it's a good idea to
send a good
circular you plan to keep around for awhile to a mail order
printer and
have 1,000 printed on 1 side. Then, you can use the back of
100 or so for
testing purposes of other circulars. Run down to the copy
shop and run the
circulars through the copier by printing on the back side.
Only run 100 or
less and send them to the best names you can find. If they
pull orders, you
may have a winner and can have 1,000 printed. Nothing is
more annoying than
being stuck with 1,000 circulars with something you want to
mail on one side
and something outdated on the back.
NOTICE: Rates and prices shown here were current at the time
of writing.
Call for quotes.
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