Two-minute ad campaign
How to turn soaring gas prices and a sputtering economy into new subscribers.
How to turn soaring gas prices and a sputtering economy into new subscribers.
…and Passover, too, somehow escaped as an excuse for the slowdown.
The publisher is the “24th richest person in the world.” And he resisted the urge to call it “Prokhorov.”
A zero-cost, all-profit newsletter for presidents to give free to their board of directors. And a renewal program with frequent-flier rewards in exchange for long, long flights with the magazine. Two ideas for the “Monday Morning Expert” column in Circulation Management magazine whose Associate Editor, Chandra Johnson-Greene, has asked me to contribute once or twice a month.
BOOK RECOMMENDATION

A new book by Dan Ariely. Useful if true.

Condé Nast, the man, “was noted for his innovative publishing theories and flair for nurturing readers and advertisers…one of the most powerful purveyors of popular culture.” He started a magazine empire later made legendary by brilliant, billionaire publisher S.I. Newhouse. Proving again the rich are different from you and me. Which brings us to the launch of Condé Nast Portfolio…
Lessons from our latest in the quest to sell subscriptions on behalf of “The Wall Street Journal of Jewish newspapers.”
This is the BBDO Discipline, a useful four-step method for creating effective advertising and marketing. Learned while I worked at the Boston office of BBDO in the era of Phil Dusenberry and Allen Rosenshine (a golden time despite the fact the agency became better known to the general public as the outfit that set Michael Jackson’s hair on fire).

An ad campaign on behalf of junk mail … ah, circulation marketing … make that “audience development.”
Google: Grim reaper? Or savior of a dying industry? Let the fear, loathing and speculation begin.
What do you need to know to beat your control? The answers to this list of questions will provide a good start when working with outside creatives. Or—and especially—if you attempt to do it yourself.
Costs are up. Response is down. Circulation is falling. Lists are exhausted. Offers are fatigued. Rules are changing. Subscribers are wary. Has there ever been a better time for new ideas in circulation? Here are some things you can do now to survive the tough times so you can positively thrive when — if ever — the going gets good.

Do you like this award-winning cover? It was famous and infamous all at the same time. Raising contentious issues about what works best on newsstands. And who best to create — and control — the covers. I have some strong opinions of my own. But you make the call for yourself.
PROOF BOOK
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Raise your hand: Subscribers getting old fast? Dwindling universe of prospects who even read print, much less subscribe to it? Two common circulation complaints. So what can you do to turn back the marketing clock? Study THE WEEK’s strategy to enroll young readers.
Here’s a list of tips, techniques, and truths to help you create winning subscription promotions. Do you know them all? Know a few more I should add? Reply before midnight.
OPEN LETTER

The myth of subscription direct mail is it gets very little response. In fact, it gets 100% response. Readers either love it or hate it. Remember it or forget it. Open it or throw it away. And to a degree far greater than you might imagine, how customers respond to your marketing is controlled by you.
© 2007
Richard Riccelli, Inc.
All rights reserved.