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Classic Direct Mail Marketing Technique #3: The Power of Pink

Let’s think about the connotation of the color of pink:

Pretty_in_pink






PINK NEUTRAL

  • pink is for girls
  • real men wear pink
  • Pink, the singer
  • And a favorite movie of mine :=)

PINK GOOD

  • "in the pink" means you feel well
  • cheeks "pink up" when we’re feeling better
  • pink is the color of the good fight against breast cancer

PINK BAD

  • "pink slip" means you’re fired
  • pink is the color of the "late payment notice"

Want someone’s attention? Use an official-looking "snap pack" format and make it pink!

This was the approach used by some magazine promotional company several weeks ago. The pink really caught my eye because pink in the mail means something important. The mailer also had some interesting touches which also made it seem very important:

  • Preprinted indicia was very light, must have been up to the maximum allowed by the post office
  • It said, Important Delivery, in red and blue - patriotic
  • It used the sort of old-fashioned but government-like dot-matrix impact printing for the name/address box as well as repeated OFFICIAL NOTICE with the same treatment
  • Had a nice red DO NOT FOLD
  • Had a huge black rectangle for the "too important for other eyes to see" area
  • In the inset, we had an Open for Instructions/ID will expire and adjacent, in the same impact printing, an ID number, date and time
  • Final touch, handwritten name, initials for company name, address, city, state, and zip written on the fill-in lines in the corner card area

Of course, I had to open it. Inside was a matching pink sheet touting a sweepstakes offer, call the 1-800 number, etc. Nothing all that different than promotions we’ve seen before. But this one used Shape Magazine’s logo prominently. In the small print, it said the publisher allowed its logo to be used for promotional purposes.

This could work for the mailer or against them. The mailing was addressed to my husband, but Shape is generally considered a women’s magazine, so affiliation between brand and prospect gets fuzzy.

This is the kind of mailing reeks with the low-class, deceptive junk mail tactics that give our profession such a big black eye. But the pink color, snap pack format, the impact printing all worked to get me and I’m sure thousands into the envelope.

Consider how you could use the power of pink for your next campaign!

Maven’s Maxim
Pink isn’t a just a color, it’s an attitude loaded with meaning. Use it to catch someone’s attention, rouse their curiosity, even passion and just sometimes, up their "uh oh" anxiety level.

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  1. Elizabeth M. Johnson | Jun 22, 2007 | Reply

    I love this post! I use pink in all of my campaigns-p.r. or otherwise since pink and brown are my brand colors. For example, I send most, if not all, of my correspondance to clients and others in a pink legal envelope. I handwrite the “to” and “from” addresses and choose an interesting stamp that reflects my message somehow.

    Using pink is also a great qualifier for me. The women who respond to it and email me how much they love my website or my business cards are ones that I want. Those who aren’t interested or feel the pink is over the top are ones that I know immediately will be headaches and/or problem clients.

  2. Kirsti A Dyer | Jun 22, 2007 | Reply

    My first thought when I saw the title was the the article was going to be on the power of pink in marketing - namely breast cancer awareness.

    There are also all of the “Think Pink” campaigns (mostly for breast cancer) and the Code Pink campaign for peace http://www.codepink4peace.org/.

    Personally I like purple or violet better. :)

  3. Copywriting Maven | Jun 22, 2007 | Reply

    Hi Kristi, remember it’s not about the colors we like or don’t like - pink isn’t one of my favorite colors, actually. But it IS about what our prospects associate with the color pink that makes it effective for certain kinds of promotions.

    Whether it’s for breast cancer, peace or a dunning notice, pink gets our attention and then “colors” the context for our marketing message and action.

  4. alicia | Jun 23, 2007 | Reply

    I love pink so much :) It’s funny you should post this. My b5media blog, Mental Health Notes, is in the process of a color change. I chose to avoid pink because I thought it would scare off male readers…hmm…

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