Internet Sales Rise and Fall With Catalog Mailings

The DMA (Direct marketing Association) recently released their annual report on the catalog industry. 

The report indicated that in 2007, 36% of sales [for the catalog industry] were conducted online.  What is shocking is that this statistic is a decrease from 2006, when it stood at 40%.  In fact 2007's percentage was lower than both 2005 and 2004.  To find a lower number, we need to go back to 2003, when it was a mere 29%.

What's the deal?  Is there a backlash against online buying? 

No, seemingly it was a postage increase!  This convincing theory blames the huge postage increase in May of 2007 as the culprit.  Many catalogers drastically scaled back their mailings when their postage costs jumped 40%.  Although some Internet buyers function strictly online, others are driven online when they receive a catalog or other direct mail piece.  Ergo, less mailings equal less orders and a decrease in sales.

I, too, feel the pain of the catalogers, as I experienced similar increases in postage for my magazines: Connections Magazine's postage increased 39% and AnswerStat, 41%.  As a result, I began scrutinizing my subscriber list much more closely.  Some magazines were pushed to e-publishing, dropping their print versions altogether. 

So it should not be at all surprising that the USPS is seeing a drop in mail volume, which caused them to suffer a $1.1 billion loss for the third quarter.  As a result, next year's postage increase is expected to be the maximum legal amount.  Experts predict that could mean magazines and catalogs will face a 5 to 6% bump.

Of course that means the affected mailers will scale back more, further lowering mail volume, and necessitating another maximum increase in 2010 — as mailing costs and post office efficacy spiral further out of control.

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

 Name (required)

 Email (will not be published) (required)

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.