How to Mail Postcards for 12 Cents Each
by Richard Roop
You can deliver a mailing piece up to 3.3 ounces for between 11.6 and 12.9 cents
each. You probably receive "junk mail" delivered at this rate. I get postcards,
self-mailers, brochures, flyers, coupon books and local store catalogs on a
regular basis delivered using the US postal service's Enhanced Carrier Route
(ECR) rates.
As a real estate investor, you can get more sellers calling you and sell your
houses fast using the lowest postage rates available. It works when you want to
concentrate a mailing to all homes in a certain neighborhood or area.
We already mailed an oversized postcard to sell 6 of our houses and next week
will deliver my famous "advertorial" to homeowners convincing them to call if
they want to sell their house quickly and easily.
After showing other investors how to use this low cost, direct mail approach, I
have figured out the best way for you to research it and use it yourself. Look
in your phonebook under "mailing services." You'll also find print shops and
letter shops that can help. Tell them you want to saturate several neighborhoods
with a postcard. You want to use their "standard Mail" permit or you can get
your own. The cost for your own is $125 to setup and $125 a year. But the
mailing house may prefer or require you use theirs. That's good.
Tell the vendor you want to mail to all residents. This is also known as a
SATURATION mailing. In some areas, instead of an address label, you can have
POSTAL CUSTOMER or BOXHOLDER or RESIDENT preprinted on your postcard. In other
areas you'll need to buy a RESIDENT LIST which includes all the addresses in a
certain zip code or carrier route, but not names. We checked several sources for
lists and were quoted 1 cent to 3 cents each. Do pay more than 1 cent each. If
you can't get it locally then you can get it from a national company. In fact,
it's possible to do the entire job (print, address and mail) with a national
company.
If addresses are required, one source you can look into is
www.melissadata.com. In
fact, if you go to their site, you can get a count of the number of addresses
and carrier routes for any zip code you enter. Their cost is about 1 cent each
for online download, CD-ROM or labels.
The key postal term to mention is Enhanced Carrier Route Walk Sequence
Saturation (ECRWSS). When prepared properly, the mail carrier will deliver one
mail piece to each address on the route. That is a minimum requirement, all
addresses on a route.
My next mailing will be to an entire zip code has 17 carrier routes, and about
8,000 addresses. If I wanted to I could further target my project to selected
carrier routes only.
The cost on my last mailing was 11.6 cent postage each. To get that rate we
delivered (to each respective post office) presorted stacks of cards, one for
each carrier route with the number of cards needed for each route.
If you do not deliver the cards to each individual post office, then the rate is
12.1 or 12.6 cents. I have found that the easiest way to do it is to let the
mailing houses do it all. Tell them what you want and let them figure it out.
Get several bids.
I suggest you put your marketing message on a double-sided 4.25" x 8.5" (half
sheet) postcard. That way your printing cost will only be 3 or 4 cents each. Use
yellow or bright yellow card stock. Your "message" should be filled with reasons
why they should respond...what's in it for them.
My first mailing was to a rural area so no labels were required. We just put
POSTAL CUSTOMER below the permit imprint. That saved us from buying a list and
addressing the cards. Our next mailing to a city area which requires addressing.
A mailing to rural routes or postal box holders only should not require labels.
Your local mailing house or letter shop should have experience with these types
of mailings and can help you plan your campaign and design your postcard (i.e.
the position of the permit and address info).
For more info you can search
http://pe.usps.gov/ for "enhanced carrier route walk sequence saturation."
Bio:
Full-time investor Richard Roop has been called The Marketing Consultant for
Real Estate Entrepreneurs. He is the President of Bottom Line Results, Inc., a
real estate acquisition company located in Woodland Park, Colorado since 1996.
As a successful marketing consultant since 1984, Richard specializes in
providing innovative business and marketing advice to real estate entrepreneurs.
He is the author of the "How to Sell Your Home in 9 Days" book. Richard Roop's
articles have appeared in various entrepreneurial, real estate and marketing
newsletters across the nation.