Public ire over “junk” mail should spur direct marketers on
I was lucky enough to appear on BBC Radio Wales last week. The producer of the station’s afternoon phone-in had seen my coverage of the deal struck between Royal Mail and the Communication Workers Union (CWU) to end their six-month long dispute and felt me capable of “expert” insight into the world of direct mail, or “junk” mail as he unhelpfully insisted on calling it.

Russell Parsons
The finer details of the peace deal that was covered in Marketing Week and the subject of the phone-in was the decision to abolish the three items of unaddressed mail per household limit the Royal Mail had been restricted to.
Or, as per the premise of the phone-in and the utterings of the nation’s moral guardians in the press, the decision will lead to mountains of junk mail piling up in the homes of vulnerable, unsuspecting and helpless consumers while hastening environmental ruin.
My job was not to present the case for the defence as such but I was quizzed as to why marketers would continue to send direct mail, addressed or unaddressed, in the face of such seemingly overwhelming public ire.
First thing to point out about the change in rules, but not one I had the opportunity to make in the phone-in, is the decision will not necessarily lead to a spike in unaddressed mail. It will, however, allow Royal Mail to compete on a level playing field with the likes of TNT Post and grab a larger slice of the £500m market without necessarily inflating it any further.
However, reality has rarely got in the way of an opportunity for the good people of this Sceptred Isle to come forth and express their views. “Junk” mail has long been on a par with traffic wardens as a prime candidate for the UK’s Room 101. The decision to lift the restrictions previously placed on Royal Mail proved to be a starting gun for people to vent their anger about the receipt of unsolicited mail.
To return to the question I was asked during the phone-in, it is clear what the advantages of direct mail are - targeted, relatively inexpensive and accountable to name but three - but the level of anger that accompanies developments such as the one we saw last week pointedly illustrate the channel’s disadvantages: it angers many consumers.
The great strides made in database analytics and targeting need to continue to ensure that better prospects are reached, and there remains a huge responsibility on marketers and their industry representatives to ensure that accusations of wastefulness are not so easily bandied around.
More companies need to seek the PAS2020 certification, an environmental standard for the marketing industry that aims to target and reduce waste, to demonstrate and act like they are good corporate citizens.
And more needs to be done to ensure that consumers are aware of opt-outs such as the Mailing Preference Service for addressed mailings and its unaddressed cousin Your Choice.
Making prospective consumers aware of an option to cut mail out of their lives might appear counter productive, especially when mail volumes are in decline, but marketers and the Direct Marketing Association should look upon it as an opportunity to be left with the willing and bypass the reluctant.







Readers' comments (3)
Moral Guardian | Mon, 15 Mar 2010 1:48 pm
Russell, isn't the problem that marketers are reluctant to bypass the reluctant? If Royal Mail would simply make its D2D Opt-Out a bit more customer-friendly and effective (or maybe start advertising the existence of the scheme) there probably wouldn't have been such a fuss.
There seems to be an enormous gap between rhetoric and practice. A scheme like Your Choice, for instance, is a poor service by any standard; people can't register online and will never be able to judge whether or not signing up is at all effective (how are householders supposed to know if a leaflet was delivered by a member of the DMA?).
Similarly, none of the paper directories delivered door-to-door in the UK tell people that they can opt-out. Yet, they all write big reports on how environmentally sound their book are. It just doesn't seem to add up.
As one of the nations "moral guardians" I agree that more needs to be done to raise awareness of the existence of opt-out schemes (how can it be that less than 1% of UK households is registered with the D2D Opt-Out?). At the moment I'm doing just that; via my Junk Buster website (www.junkbuster.org.uk) people can find out about and contact up to six opt-out schemes. Maybe the industry could follow this example?
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jimmy morgan | Mon, 15 Mar 2010 3:13 pm
What no-one has ever countered in this 'junk mail' argument is that, without business mail there is no Royal Mail. The Universal Service of which the public is so fond loses the postal operator millions of pounds a year. Why oh why Royal Mail refuses to highlight this is beyond me. If people realised that the few items of so-called junk pay for their beloved daily delivery service then they might not complain quite so much. Then again...
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Tim Little | Thu, 18 Mar 2010 0:59 am
I think it is "survival" of the fittest. Sloppy Direct Marketers mass mailing non-relevant mail will not survive because of the high costs of mailing. The US is in a recession and the United States Postal Service will raising rates next year and cutting services since they're on the brink of bankruptcy.
I think the current economy will slim the ranks of in-competent mailers.
Tim Little
Publisher, www.marketinglistbroker.com
Direct marketers are
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