If you market geographically, the Postal Service has a new tool for you

December 8th, 2011

As an agency, we’ve helped many clients who’s sales depend upon customers walking into their brick and mortar location(s).  Their geographic location(s) heavily influence our marketing strategy.  Oftentimes, to drive traffic we look to various media opportunities where we can place a well-crafted message to entice customers into our client’s businesses.  Particularly if our client has a mass-appeal consumer product that most anyone can utilize, we’ll consider outdoor media (billboards, bus signs, etc.) as well as broadcast like TV and Radio.  Problem is, in some localities outdoor media is almost non-existent due to local ordinances prohibiting billboards. And in many cases TV and Radio may just have too much waste to have a valuable ROI.  Online advertising and social media are all well and good, but with both it’s hard to target by location.  So, direct mail continues to be a powerful part of the marketing mix for a lot of businesses.
Now the United States Postal Service® has a new tool that can help deliver more local leads.  It’s the Every Door Direct Mail™ program that allows businesses to generate mailing lists for surrounding areas without needing to have names or addresses. This is as they say, “a marketer’s dream”.  The program allows you to:

  • Use an online tool to target areas you want to saturate with mailings — choose routes by neighborhood, ZIP Code™, or city.
  • Get your mailing to every mailbox along the chosen routes.
  • Spend as little as 14.2 cents per piece on postage.

This is a huge upgrade from the tried and true zip code sort that marketers had available previously, and by using newer technology, the targeting is vastly improved.

The USPS has a very informative website devoted to the EDDM™ including some well made overview videos.  Take a look at:  www.uspseverydoor.com and when you’re ready for that well-crafted direct mail piece to send out to your prospects, contact us at Rains Marketing for the design and strategy that will stand out in the mailbox.  Give Matt Birchard a call at: 503.297.1791 or via e-mail at: matt@rainsmarketing.com

Agency Compensation Methods - A Common Question

August 26th, 2011

A common question we’re asked when talking with prospective clients is how our services are paid for.  In general terms, we provide professional services that are billed based upon calculations of time spent multiplied by an hourly rate; the same as a lawyer, doctor, plumber or electrician would.  We’re highly skilled in the services we provide to our clients, and our rates are commensurate with our abilities and by and large tend to be on par with industry norms.  But, to someone who has not worked with a marketing or advertising agency before, there are often questions about how we place value on creative work.  This brief overview should answer the basics.

First and foremost, we seek to make financial relationships with clients fair to both the client and the agency, and for them not to get in the way of a positive client/agency relationship.  With that in mind, Rains Marketing employs three primary compensation methods.

Retainer:

Retainers or Fixed Fees have many advantages that have kept them a popular compensation method for professional services.  In many cases, clients will have a fairly consistent level of needs over the course of a year, and the costs to meet these needs can be accurately projected.  Retainer based compensation then allows a client to easily budget for the majority of their marketing expenses while also allowing the agency to forecast revenue.  Retainer fees are set on an annual basis, billed monthly.  In doing so, the agency recognizes that there may be a month or two a year with a high level of activity, a major trade show or event that will cause the level of service the agency delivers to exceed the amount covered by the retainer.  In this case, the agency will seek to recover some costs during slower periods of the year when perhaps the level of service is slightly below the retainer.  This “carryover” method of accounting for time has been shown to be very successful over time.  Retainers also foster positive ongoing relationships between the client and agency by allowing the agency to quickly act upon requests or opportunities for the client without awaiting budget approval.  Because a client is pre-paying for a set block of the agency’s time, that client has priority within the agency over clients who do not have a retainer.  And finally, if a client is willing to commit to a retainer, the agency is often willing to offer somewhat reduced rates in exchange for the commitment.

Project Based:

There are some clients who prefer to work on a project by project basis.  This structure is typically used for a client with a more limited scope of needs.  With a project based method, the agency will prepare cost estimates for each project, based upon client input, and the client must first approve the budget prior to the agency doing any work.  For all estimates, the agency seeks to be accurate within 15% and will maintain a contingency for this purpose.  Thus, a project cost is considered approved by the client +/- 15%.  If changes made by the client will cause the project to exceed the original estimate, the agency will prepare a Change Order for the additional work for the client’s approval.  The additional work will only be preformed upon approval of the Change Order.  This compensation method allows the client to only pay for the work they approve and also assures a fair return to the agency.  However, because the agency cannot perform any tasks without an approved budget, it limits the agency’s ability to have a proactive approach to the client’s marketing.

Time & Materials:

Rains Marketing follows a process of accurate, daily employee timesheets that record work done against specific client jobs by the quarter hour increment.  If a client so chooses, the agency can follow a time and materials billing process for compensation.  In this case, the agency will perform the work required to complete a project for a client and bill the time plus any outside costs such as printing or postage for each project.  The client only pays the agency when it is working for them, and the agency is assured a fair return.

Blended Methods:

A combination of methods tends to be the norm for most of the clients Rains Marketing works with.  We typically have some retainer relationship with each client, then perform both project based and time & materials work as needed.  This flexibility allows us to provide a high level of service to our clients while keeping the payment for our services easy to understand.

Do you have a marketing challenge you’d like to discuss with Rains Marketing?  Give Matt Birchard a call at: 503.297.1791 or via e-mail at: matt@rainsmarketing.com