Creative Tips & Advice ↓
March 20th, 2008 — Creative Tips & Advice


Many clients come to us with an existing corporate identity that is limited to one or two pantone colors contained in their logo.
When designing 4/color work for these clients, it is helpful to “expand” the palette.
Using their existing color chips as the core for the primary palette, arrange additional chips which expand this primary palette to 4-6 colors.
These should match the core colors in balance and intensity.
Lastly, find swatches that compliment one another and envision this palette working within your design.
March 6th, 2008 — Creative Tips & Advice


There was a great article in the current issue of Inside Direct Mail (written by Alan Rosenspan) titled “50 New Ways To Improve Response”.
The article divided the tips up among 5 categories:
- The Outer Envelope
- The Letter
- The Brochure
- The Reply Device
- Miscellaneous
We thought it would make for an interesting and helpful blog post if we shared with you 1 tip from each category.
Here they are…
The Outer Envelope
Use a window with a color tint. We’ve used both yellow and red, sometimes tinting the cellophane, sometimes just using color on the window to give the appearance of a tint. It makes the envelope stand out more.
The Letter
Test an unusual salutation. If you can’t personalize it, why settle for “Dear Colleague” or “Dear Friend”? An antique magazine began its winning letter with, “Dear Lover of Beautiful Things.”
The Brochure
Show a photograph of your target market on the cover, but remember the 20 percent rule. Show photos of people who are 20 percent younger than your target market, 20 percent more attractive, 20 percent better dressed — because that’s how most people see themselves.
The Reply Device
Make the boxes big enough. If you want people to give you their credit card information, their phone numbers or anything else — make sure they have enough room. And don’t use glossy paper. Their pens will smear and they may decide not to respond.
Miscellaneous
Test frequency. Some clients say, “I can’t mail again — I just sent a mailing last month!” Do you remember what you received in the mail last month? Last week? Yesterday? As David Ogilvy said, “You’re not advertising to a standing army. You’re advertising to a passing parade.” People who don’t need you one week might need you the next.
October 26th, 2007 — Creative Tips & Advice
The July 2007 issue of Inside Direct Mail featured our client E Magazine.
Here’s the story…
They were having trouble getting direct mail to work for them to acquire new subscribers…they tested both a voucher package and a double-postcard, but both were not effective.
Circulation Specialists, Inc. – E Magazine’s circulation management provider (we handle the printing and mailing) – recommended trying brand new creative, pricing and formats…the end result was a response rate that almost doubled.
You can view the campaign details here.
E Magazine was about to give up on direct mail…but they put money towards really excellent creative and completely revived their acquisition efforts.
Recommending to you that you should invest in new creative before throwing in the towel on direct mail isn’t something you haven’t heard before…but this success story proves that it’s an investment worth considering.