Tag Archive for 'Ariba'

Our most successful piece of direct marketing, ever

70% response? Impossible! (or not?)

70% response? Impossible! (or not?)

This direct marketing campaign happened when B2B eCommerce was the really sexy thing in IT.
Everyone was talking about it, and Ariba were the hot company within this particular technology.
The problem was that Ariba wanted to sell to big companies (Times Top 200, typically), their software was a big ticket item (for large companies it would have been a fairly substantial investment) and Ariba were new to the UK. They also wanted to talk at a high level (Finance Director).
Over a period, we jointly devised the idea of a remote-control car, branded and boxed, and a theme – ‘You can’t have power without control’ – to link the creative to the Ariba product. (‘Control your spending, get better value from every pound you spend’).
WildWest sourced the car via a German company who manufactured in Hong Kong. We sent artwork for them to brand the car, which included the Ariba phone no. We thought we would have done a job even if we got the car onto an office shelf.
The key idea though, (the ‘sting’, if you like) was that the recipient didn’t get the controller for the car until he returned a card – didn’t have to do anything else, though there were options to sign up for a seminar or request a meeting. The controller was similarly packaged and as soon as the card came back, it was sent off.
All this happened pre-Christmas (November) and there was a fantastic response – something like 60% in three days! There was telephone follow up just in case anyone was embarassed or had guidelines that didn’t allow them to accept (we would then send a donation to charity on their behalf). That allowed us to check whether the message had got across, if they remembered Ariba and what business they were in – all were great numbers.
We sent out about 240 of the cars. Final response was over 70%.
It wasn’t cheap. The whole exercise cost about 45k, but that was about the price of a dps in the FT – which was one of the other options considered.
Best of all was that Ariba got six sales direct from the campaign which paid for itself many times over.

Direct response – time to forget email and go back to print?

an exclusive dm package

an exclusive dm package

A lot of people are saying to us these days that email is over-used as a marketing medium, that their spam filters have (at last) caught up with sorting out the desirable from the unwanted, and that they are turning back to print in a bid to get response rates back to where they once were.

It’s certainly true that e-marketing is over-used. We all have rafts of spam that is ill-directed and ill-targeted (and not very imaginative either, if it comes to that).

So, could I right now make a plea to all those who want to spam me in Russian or German not to bother? My Russian is non-existent, and my German is limited to asking for a loaf of bread and some onions. So, trying to interest me in your products (whether web-hosting or viagra) in either of those languages probably isn’t going to work.

Email is cheap, quick and available and probably that’s why it often isn’t working. It’s too easy to do without too much thought, and consequently can be counter-productive – sometimes, you’d be better off doing nothing than doing that.

Meanwhile, print campaigns, especially when well thought through, well targeted (ie they are sent to the right people) and thoughtfully followed up, DO work, even in these slightly straighened times.

Our campaign for Citroen Sport last year was a case in point. (In conjunction with our friends at Sports Media International, we helped to find the new sponsor they were looking for). And we’ve done it before, very effectively for Flying Pictures, a company whose business is concerned with hot-air balloons (!), and spectacularly for a software company called Ariba, who really gave us the scope (both budget and time) to do something effective.

Get in touch if you’d like to find out more about that Ariba initiative – it’s not often that a campaign directed at senior decision-makers gets a 60% response rate (and we only cheated a little!)