How Copywriters Can Bounce Back After a Client Messes Up a
Direct Marketing Campaign
Recently a copywriter named Chris asked me what she should do
when a direct marketing campaign fails. "How do you bounce back
in your freelance business after a client royally screws up a DM
campaign?"
The short answer is that no copywriter wins all the time. The
law of averages in the business of marketing won't support it.
Many factors must combine properly to make a winning campaign,
and the degree of your success will depend on the degree to
which EACH element is "right on."
Marketers depend on the copywriter to guide them in the creation
of the campaign. So the copywriter should first have her pulse
on the two most important aspects of any mailing:
1. The list 2. The offer
The list is the most important element of any campaign because
if there's anything wrong with it (poorly targeted, old and
dirty, etc.), it won't matter how great your offer is or how
masterful your copywriting. The campaign will probably do
poorly, or fail.
The offer is the second most important element of a direct
response campaign. An expert copywriter will make sure the offer
is extremely appealing to the target audience before he ever
starts copy. In fact, there are many copywriters (myself
included), who consider exceptional offer development to be the
"secret weapon" behind their winning campaigns.
So setting yourself up for success is the number one rule for
creating winners.
But of course, that's only half the battle. Chris said that the
venerable Dan Kennedy once told her face-to-face that if anyone
was going to screw up a direct marketing campaign, it's the
client.
And while one can't lay 100 percent of the blame on the client
all of the time, clients do have a way of monkey-wrenching the
best laid plans.
In my opinion, many direct response campaigns fall short of
their potential because the marketing team is constrained by
time and/or budget. Often times they agree with the copywriter's
vision for the campaign, but substitute poor offers for good
offers, or push copy too fast, or other types of "corner
cutting" to meet time or money pressures.
Other less obvious elements may be at play as well. Years ago
when I was senior writer for Rosen/Brown Direct, a well-known
direct response agency, we were baffled by a syndrome that
emerged.
Our unique selling proposition what that we could get the client
blockbuster response rates. On that basis we won lots of
clients. But when it came time to execute their campaigns, the
marketing directors would often put roadblocks in the way of our
success. Richard Rosen and I were puzzled as to why.
Years later Richard told me he'd figured it out: Everyone wants
high response rates initially, but if you get high response
rates, it raises the bar for future campaigns.
It was his hypothesis that ultimately, the marketing director
wanted good but not phenomenal success. This would maintain
their job security without setting them up for super-high
expectations in future campaigns.
What does this all means to the copywriter who has suffered a
failed campaign?
First, all copywriters suffer failed campaigns. (You just don't
want it to become the norm.) In fact, if you're doing it right,
you're encouraging your client to test lists, offers, headlines,
and more. Sometimes these tests will fail.
When I promote myself I pretty much offer "guaranteed" success.
But that's only if the client allows me to run the whole
show...and that means having a hand in list selection, and in
creating the all-important offer.
These are the two most important elements of a direct response
campaign...unless you're a mature marketer who's exhausted the
available lists to test and tested enough offers to know what
works best.
Then, and only then, is copy the sole star of the show. So when
making promises, make sure you base your expected success on the
confidence you have in the three crucial elements of any on- or
offline mail campaign: the list, the offer, and the copy, in
that order.
But if everything falls apart, how do you pick up the pieces?
In agencies, and more sophisticated marketing departments, a
meeting will sometimes be called to discuss the results of a
campaign. If anyone ever tells you there will be a
"post-mortem," that's what they're talking about. It's a
negative term, for sure, and I'll be glad when it's no longer
trendy marketing language as I think it implies an expected
negative result.
If the client doesn't call a post-mortem, and the results were
dismal, then I'll call a meeting to go over every element of the
campaign, and offer a write up as to why I think the campaign
failed.
This is a very smart step to take, and for lots of reasons.
First, you may uncover a "buried" influence. I recall one client
who came to me and said "We don't want any response, we just
want them to know we exist." To which I replied, "If we're
making the effort, why not see what we can get? It doesn't cost
us anything more."
When the campaign pulled a 0.7% response rate, the marketing
director was disappointed. But when I reviewed the campaign from
beginning to end and wrote up my analysis, we were all reminded
that the number one objective of the campaign was awareness; any
response would be gravy. On that basis, the campaign was then
seen as a success.
A post-mortem analysis will uncover weak offers, reveal poor
targeting, and sometimes lead to market intelligence you can use
in subsequent campaigns. For instance, a back-end analysis of a
recent campaign for the client I just spoke about revealed that
the extra cost of personalizing does NOT pay off for a segment
of their target audience.
By calling a post-mortem and by offering a written analysis of
the campaign results, you show your client that you're not a
fly-by-nighter. That you believe in your work. And that you're
still their "partner."
I've found that the client is usually willing to work with you
to make the next campaign more successful, by learning from past
mistakes. Slinking away with your tail between your legs tells
them that you were in it only for the paycheck.
Stand up to the situation and see what you (and your client) can
gain from it. Not only is it the professional thing to do, but
it can turn a failure into a learning experience, and provide
value for future campaigns.