Tag: direct mail

Selekt Mail predicts profits in 2003

Selekt Mail, the Netherlands based postal services compnay established in mid 2002 as a joint venture between Deutsche Poste and Dutch publisher Wegener, anticipates 2003 profits it it meets its target of processing 80 million items in 2003. Selekt Mail plans to achieve a 10 to 20% share of the Dutch unadressed mail market within 3 to 5 years.

Read More

Direct Mail league tables

In the first of a new series of league tables, Peter Crush looks at the Top 20 companies in the fast-growing direct mail sector.

Failing companies, margins being squeezed and new business being hunted like vultures to a carcass. It’s a familiar story in many areas of print, but perhaps not direct mail, which many believe to be exempt from stagnation. Of all print’s sectors, direct mail has – on the surface, at least – remained just about as solid as it ever has been. According to the latest census from the Direct Marketing Association (DMA), expenditure on mail grew by 6% during 2002, rising to pounds 2.2bn, which is equivalent to nearly 5bn items of post.

This money is all feeding its way through to printers one way or another.

And that’s why PrintWeek is launching its first Top 20 League Table by sales for the biggest direct mail printers (we’ve done our best to extract the DM turnover from the total sales of the larger print groups, though in some cases this has not been specified), but the picture is not quite so harmonious as some figures seem to suggest. The battle between the one-stop-shops and the specialists is intensifying. There is fear of jobs being lost to overseas printers, and then there is the involvement of the middlemen, driving down margins, and all looking for a nibble of the spend too. As a spokesman for third-placed Communisis sums it up: ‘We’re battling, we’re chasing everything that moves. These are very lean times.’

The incongruity of the market (high mailing volumes, but unsettled times for its printers) is demonstrated by two of the largest printers, Polestar Direct and Vertis, both seeing dents in sales (the former by over pounds 12m), while the smaller companies below are beginning to build volume.

While the DM industry is blooming, it seems that in the drive to cut the cost of mailpacks, it is the printers who are left to bear the brunt.

‘Last year we were experiencing cuts in our margins in direct mail print by 15-20 says Kevan Coleman, chairman of K2. ‘Today we are seeing the full impact of what we call ‘reverse auctions’ – where you start off with a figure, but instead of it going up, it is going down. It’s setting new rules for pricing, and I think ultimately, the client is missing out on added value.’

Rise of the intermediary

Coleman says the rise of dedicated procurement businesses is having a dramatic effect, particularly on direct mail print, where there are many more processes involved that can suit going to different houses to complete the job. According to David Laybourne, managing director of DPS Direct Mail, the rise of the intermediary has been one of the factors that has seen the company working 70% through agencies and 30% direct. That said though, he argues that if the model is there, nimble printers will work their way around it.

‘Because we print less than 2m mailers at a time, the average being more like 250,000, we can offer lots more segmentation services – printing variations of the mailings with different messages, and the buying departments seem to like this,’ he says. DPS has won several large DM contracts – Esure, Vodafone and The Teacher’s Council – all through the procurement pitches, and Laybourne believes that while the process is a draining one, once you have won the business, the working relationship does settle down after that, and everyone in the process is after a long-term commitment.

Just how the bigger printers are suited to this is debatable. According to some, the problems of the larger houses (or at least the decline in sales) is indicative of the fact that their prices are no longer as competitive as other suppliers. Peter Frings, managing director of Target Direct, says: ‘A few years ago, you’d be going to the likes of Vertis to take away the uncertainty, but I’m much more interested in the likes of the smaller specialists – Howard Hunt and John Blackburn.’ Frings says he will place work with printers like Mail Solutions if

Read More

Challenging new targets set for direct mail

Tough new targets for more collection and recycling of direct (“junk”) mail were agreed today in an initiative that should also cut the amount of direct mail delivered to British homes. Government and industry have signed an historic agreement after many months of negotiation to increase the amount of junk mail that is recycled. Nearly 550,000 tonnes of paper are used in direct mail and promotions every year in the form of direct mail, door-to-door advertising material and newspaper inserts. As a result of discussions with the Direct Marketing Association (DMA), the paper and printing industries, the Royal Mail and local authorities, the Government and the DMA have signed an agreement that sets rising recycling targets.

Read More

DM and e-Mail Marketing Growing in UK

Direct mail marketing has lost none of its popularity, especially for financial services companies. But are they going to take up digital? In the face of an advertising recession, direct mail has been showing continual growth, with spending in the UK rising 4.6% in the first quarter of 2003 and total expenditure at GBP658.2 million, according to the DMIS, which provides direct mail figures for Royal Mail. But that’s not necessarily bad news for digital marketing. Again, according to Royal Mail, 42% of marketers using direct mail also use email marketing, and this figure rises to 50% among the top 500 advertisers. More marketers and agencies are realising that digital media, such as SMS and email, can enhance their use of direct mail in an integrated campaign. ‘We see email and SMS as complementary to the established strengths of mail media,’ says Tim Rivett, head of advertising markets at Royal Mail.

Read More

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

P&P Poll

Loading

What's the future of the postal USO?

Thank you for voting
You have already voted on this poll!
Please select an option!



Post & Parcel Magazine


Post & Parcel Magazine is our print publication, released 3 times a year. Packed with original content and thought-provoking features, Post & Parcel Magazine is a must-read for those who want the inside track on the industry.

 

Pin It on Pinterest