HOW TO CODE YOUR ADS WITHOUT ADDING WORDS TO YOUR
CLASSIFIEDS
Coding
advertising is not the big secret or the involved process many would have you
believe.
A
great many firms sell reports on how to code your advertising for $3 or more,
when it's nothing you can't learn with a little study of a few mail order
publications.
Coding
advertisements is simply a means of determining where your orders come from,
and in cases where you don't use coupons or separate order forms for several
different products, a method of double checking on what the customer actually
requested.
For
the purpose of demonstration, let's assume you have a company called JONDO
COMPANY, your name is JOHN DOE, and you market publications by PRINTCO and
PUB-GUYS. You decide to run ads for
different products in three publications and teaser ads for your catalogs in
two others, one for each publisher's catalog.
Coding the
latter two is easy.
For
simplicity, where you put the name and address of the company when offering Printco's catalog, mark the name as PC JONDO, ADDRESS, ZIP CODE. When the
envelope arrives and no indication is given of what was requested, you can tell
at a glance what was requested.
Now
Printco and Pub-Guys sound and look alike, so for the
second ad, mark it JONDO-PG. If you're
advertising the same catalog in three different magazines, use different codes
for each to see which one gives you the best response, for example JONDO-PG,
JOHN DOE PG AND P.G. JOHN. You can
easily separate them as you receive them.
The
permutations are endless: P.G. DOE, P.
DOE, G. DOE, DPG, JPG, JDPG, and if that's not enough, code the address,
perhaps BOX 99, DEPT. PG, BOX 99-PG, BOX 99 DESK PG, BOX PG-99, and so on.
The
person ordering wants to be sure you get his request and almost always
faithfully reproduces whatever is listed as the correct address right down to
the last comma. You can never run out of
ways to code. PG is the obvious code for
PUB-GUYS, but you could use an arbitrary number code chosen by you and in fact,
number codes are invaluable codes for making dates on the ads, to see how many
trickle-in orders you get long after the ad stops running, and what months and
season are most productive for selling your products.
Date
coding involves using numbers in sequence to indicate magazine issue number,
sequence number, or date published.
This
coding is virtually essential in later campaigns. Once you've got a fair-sized mailing list, it
will be far easier to use advertising codes to indicate their interests than to
keep a complete ledger of every person and what they purchased. It also makes computer entry a snap,
especially with a good filing program.
One
thing that scares people about coding is receiving checks or money orders coded
like the ads. People become somewhat afraid
that they won't be able to deposit them because their account is registered to
JONDO, not JDPG or whatever. Have no
fear. Your company will be registered to
your mailing address. By showing the
clerk a copy of the advertisement with the address, there will be little doubt
as to who should rightfully receive the money, and your checks or money orders
will clear like clockwork. If by chance
you do encounter a bank that won't accommodate this requirement, bank somewhere
else where they understand the workings of mail marketers.