Physical mail takes up tangible space. It’s not another email. It’s something different.
That’s why it commands the attention of your audience.
Direct mail, door drops and prospects provide a tangible asset for your marketing messages. However, sending it to your customers doesn’t guarantee success. The decisions that are made before anything goes to print – like who receives it, when, and why – determine the results.
This guide covers the key components of effective direct mail and door drop campaigns. We’ll be looking at the differences between addressed and unaddressed mail, how to plan and target mail campaigns effectively, what drives a response, how physical mail can integrate with, and complement your digital activities, and how to measure what’s working.
What is direct mail?
Direct mail — or DM — is an addressed physical communication sent to a defined audience. Each piece is matched to a named recipient at a specific address, making it a data-driven, personalised channel at its core.
Typical direct mail formats include letters, postcards, self-mailers and multi-component packs. The format you choose depends on the complexity of your message, your budget and what action you’d like the recipient to take after receiving your DM.
Because DM is addressed, it can be tracked, segmented and measured in ways that unaddressed distribution can’t.
What are door drops?
Door drops — sometimes referred to as unaddressed mail — are distributed to households within a defined geographic area, without requiring personal data. Every property within a postcode sector, such as W1A or M5, receives the same piece.
Door drops are better suited to awareness-led campaigns, where broad reach matters more than individual targeting. They’re commonly used by retailers, local service providers and businesses entering a new location to promote products, services or special offers.
What is Partially Addressed Mail?
Partially Addressed Mail (PAM) sits between fully targeted direct mail and door drops. PAM is a GDPR-compliant Royal Mail marketing service that uses geographic and demographic data to identify relevant households. It doesn’t require a named individual or personal contact record; PAM can simply be addressed to “The Homeowner”.
PAM is a useful medium for targeting likely new customers based on analysis of existing customers within full postcodes. For example, if you have historically transacted with two or more households within a full postcode of twenty households, it may be reasonable to assume that the remaining households share similar demographic characteristics and could be good prospects. You’re looking for new customers where you know they are, rather than where they might be.
What is signpost marketing?
Signpost marketing directs customers to a website where considerably more information can be shared about a product or service. It’s an opportunity to gather more data, register interest or allow the prospect to request a call back from a sales representative.
When is physical mail the right channel?
Physical mail tends to perform well in certain situations, including:
- When a purchase is high-value and the recipient could benefit from having something physical to refer to
- Local or regional campaigns that require geographic precision
- Re-engagement campaigns targeting lapsed customers
- Brand-led activity where the quality of the print reinforces the values of the business
Related reading: New to direct mail? Your step-by-step guide to campaign success
Choosing the right approach
Direct mail and door drops serve different campaign objectives. The right choice depends on what you’re trying to achieve, who you want to reach and the data available to you.
At its core, neither approach is inherently better than the other. They’re simply better suited to different situations.
| Personalised direct mail | Door drops | Partially Addressed Mail | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Targeting depth | Individual or account level | Geographic or demographic | Full postcodes to 10,000 households or more |
| Data requirement | Personal contact data required | No personal data required | No personal data required |
| Personalisation | High | Low | Medium to high, at household level |
| Cost per piece | Higher | Lower | Medium to high, with good targeting |
| Cost per response | Lower, with good targeting | Higher | Medium to high |
| Tracking accuracy | High | Moderate | Medium to high |
| Best for | Conversion, retention and reactivation | Awareness, acquisition and local reach | Customer acquisition |
When should you use targeted direct mail?
Targeted direct mail works best when you have an existing database of prospects or customers, and when the value of a conversion justifies a higher cost per unit. These pieces can be personalised, which adds extra commercial value to the message. Responses can also be tracked at an individual or segment level.
When door drops are the better fit
Door drops are often better suited to geographical awareness campaigns, new market or area entry, and businesses in leisure, care or local services. If broad household reach is the objective, door drops provide a practical option when personal data isn’t available or the cost of acquiring a targeted list outweighs the benefit.
When PAM is the better channel
PAM is a strong customer-acquisition tool when used for both geographically specific and demographically aligned households. A good example might be home grocery deliveries. If you knew that 10% of a full postcode uses this service, the other households are likely to share similar demographic characteristics and may also be good prospects.
Hybrid campaign strategies
Like most campaigns, direct mail and door drops have the best chance of delivering results when they aren’t used alone.
A common approach combines door drops for initial awareness across a defined area, followed by targeted direct mail to higher-value prospects within that same geography.
Combining the two can further reinforce your brand and its presence within a household. The door drop establishes familiarity, which can make the addressed mail more likely to drive a direct response.
Planning a direct mail campaign
The decisions made before anything goes to print can make or break the efficacy of your campaign. Having clear objectives, a realistic budget and an accurate timeline will have more impact on your results than how it looks — although that helps too.
Defining clear objectives
Every piece of direct mail you send should have a defined primary objective. Common objectives include:
- Lead generation
- Sales conversion
- Increased footfall
- Customer retention or reactivation
- Event attendance
- Product launch support
The objective you set determines the activity that follows, from who you target to the format you use and how you measure success. Campaigns that try to achieve too much at once tend to achieve very little, so choose carefully.
Budget planning
Like all print activity, the cost of a direct mail campaign goes beyond the price per unit. To make sure your budget is realistic, account for all of the following:
- Creative development and copywriting
- Print production
- Data acquisition or list cleaning
- Postage and distribution
- Tracking infrastructure, including unique URLs, campaign codes and dedicated phone numbers
- Response management
Understanding the cost per piece — and the cost per response needed to make the campaign commercially viable — should inform every subsequent decision, from format to audience size.
Timeline planning
As direct mail typically has more moving parts than a digital campaign, it requires more lead time. As a general guide, we recommend:
- Short-form pieces, such as postcards or leaflets: allow up to eight weeks
- Standard letters or self-mailers: allow up to twelve weeks
- Multi-component packs or complex formats: allow up to sixteen weeks or more
The timeline from project commencement to posting is determined by several variables. Data readiness, the number of approval stages, print complexity and postage can all affect how quickly your direct mail gets out of the door.
Reactive campaigns are still possible and can be executed effectively, but compressing timelines can increase the risk of mistakes in your collateral and limit your options for formats and finishes.
Planning in advance — or in collaboration with your print management partner — may also help secure better supplier rates while giving you time to proof everything properly before anything is printed.
Targeting, data and compliance
If the decisions you make before your piece goes to print are the most important, then who receives it comes a close second. A well-targeted campaign sent to a smaller, relevant audience will almost always outperform a broad send to a poorly qualified list.
Types of data and targeting methods
There are several ways to build or acquire an audience for a direct mail campaign:
| Data source | Description | Best used for |
|---|---|---|
| First-party data | Your existing customer or prospect database | Retention, reactivation, upsell and cross-sell, and high-conversion campaigns where a prior relationship exists |
| Geographic targeting | Audience selection by postcode, postal sector or proximity to a location | Door drop and PAM campaigns where broad local reach is the objective |
| B2B account-based targeting | Targeting specific businesses or job functions as named recipients | Higher-value B2B campaigns where precision and personalisation are more important |
How to segment your audience
Segmentation improves relevance, and relevance improves response.
You can segment your audience based on several factors, including:
- Demographic: age, household type and income band
- Geographic: region, postcode and proximity
- Behavioural: purchase history and engagement level
- Value-based: high-value customers, lapsed prospects and cold acquisition
Your approach to segmentation should depend on the objective of your send and the data available. Not every campaign requires complex segmentation, but every send should have some level of audience qualification.
Data quality and deliverability
Poor data quality will have a detrimental effect on your campaign’s performance.
Inaccurate or outdated addresses increase print and postage waste, reduce deliverability and skew your response rate. Before any campaign goes to print, your data should be cleaned and verified. Remove duplicates, correct address formatting, suppress opted-out contacts and process the data against mortality and gone-away files.
Running a smaller test send before a full rollout is a practical way to validate your data and gain an indication of what wider response tracking might look like before committing to a larger print run.
GDPR and the lawful use of data
Like any other form of marketing communication, a direct mail campaign must be built on a lawful basis for processing personal data under UK GDPR.
For most direct mail activity, this means either consent to receiving communication by post or legitimate interests. The appropriate basis will depend on your audience and the nature of your communication.
Any campaign using purchased or rented data should have its GDPR compliance verified by the data provider. Recipients should have a clear way to opt out of future sends, and suppression lists should be applied before distribution.
We’ve covered the key principles of data compliance here. For more detailed guidance, refer to the ICO’s guidance on direct marketing.
How creative and format shape responses
In direct mail, creative execution and format are commercial decisions as much as they are design decisions. The right format depends on your objectives, the complexity of your message and what you want the recipient to do next.
Choosing a format
A format that’s more complex than your messaging requires adds cost but not value. Equally, under-formatting a high-consideration campaign can undermine the signals your brand needs to convey before someone takes the desired next step.
| Format | Ideal for |
|---|---|
| Postcard | Short, single-message campaigns. High visibility and low production complexity |
| Letter | Personalised, considered communications. Works well for high-value prospects or formal offers |
| Self-mailer | Multi-message campaigns without the need for an envelope. Cost-effective for mid-complexity content |
| Brochure or multi-page pack | Higher-consideration purchases where the recipient benefits from detailed information they can return to |
First impressions matter
In addressed mail, the envelope or outer is the first creative decision. Some details need to be clear, including who has sent the piece and where it can be returned. A well-designed envelope could make the difference between the piece being opened or ignored. For self-mailers and postcards, the front panel carries the same responsibility.
Once opened, visual hierarchy is equally important. The recipient should be able to understand the core message, the offer and the next step almost immediately. A single, clear call to action is enough; avoid multiple competing actions.
Paper stock and finish also communicate quality. A well-produced piece on an appropriate stock says something about your brand before the recipient reads a word.
Personalisation and variable data
Personalisation in direct mail can range from basic name and address details to advanced tailored offers, product recommendations or location-specific content. Where personalisation is relevant to the message, it can consistently improve response rates.
The risk with variable data is its accuracy. An error in a personalised field — a misspelled name, incorrect product reference or wrong offer — is more damaging than no personalisation at all. Any data used should be validated before it populates variable print fields, and physical proofs should be reviewed before a full run goes to press.
Integrating direct mail with digital marketing
Direct mail and digital channels work better together than in isolation.
Physical mail builds attention and brand recall. Digital extends reach and keeps your brand present before and after the piece lands.
Bridging the gap between physical and digital
Every direct mail campaign should have a mechanism for tracking the transition from physical to digital responses. These can include:
| Tool | How it works |
|---|---|
| QR codes | Direct recipients to a specific landing page. Trackable at scan level and easy to include in most formats |
| Personalised URLs | Unique URLs generated per recipient or segment. Provide precise response tracking and enable personalised landing-page experiences |
| Campaign landing pages | Dedicated pages aligned to the campaign message and separate from your main website. Reduce friction and improve conversion tracking |
| Unique promo codes | Offer-based tracking that works across online and in-store redemption |
| Trackable phone numbers | Dedicated inbound numbers that attribute calls directly to the campaign |
Tracking methods should be decided before creative development begins, not as an afterthought. They affect design, copy and how results are reported.
An omnichannel approach
The most effective campaigns use digital activity to reinforce the physical mail. Digital can play a pivotal role at three key stages:
- Pre-launch: use email or organic social media to build familiarity with your brand and message before the mail lands. Recipients who have already encountered your brand are more likely to engage with the physical piece
- During the campaign: maintain consistent messaging across digital channels so the experience feels connected rather than coincidental
- Follow-up: use email marketing or paid social media to reach non-responders. This extends the life of the campaign without additional print spend
Related reading: Direct mail case studies
Production and distribution logistics
A campaign is only as successful as the planning that goes into it. A well-targeted, well-crafted piece that arrives late, looks poor in print or contains errors will undermine everything that came before it.
Print production factors
Several factors contribute to both production and postage rates. Non-standard sizes can increase both. While a custom format may feel distinctive, the commercial case needs to justify the additional expense.
Paper stock and finish influence how a piece is perceived before it’s read. Heavier stocks signal quality, while uncoated stocks can add a more personal feel. Lamination, spot UV and other finishes add impact, but also increase cost and production time.
These decisions should be made in the context of your brand, audience and budget rather than treated as default choices.
Postage and distribution strategy
For addressed mail in the UK, Royal Mail remains the primary distribution network, with options across first and second class and bulk mailing services for larger volumes.
For door drops, Royal Mail’s Door to Door service and specialist door drop distributors offer coverage by postcode sector, drive time or radius from a location.
Mailing schedules should account for known high-volume postal periods, particularly around peak retail seasons, when delivery windows can extend. Arrival timing should be planned around the duration of your campaign, not simply the dispatch date.
Quality control and proofing
Quality control in direct mail follows the same principles as any print production project, with the added complexities of variable data and postal compliance.
Key checks before any campaign goes to distribution include:
- Content accuracy across all variable fields
- Correct address formatting for postal compliance
- Physical proofing of the finished piece before a full print run
- A test send to validate tracking mechanisms and delivery for larger campaigns
Errors that reach print at scale are expensive. A reprint on a large direct mail campaign is one of the most avoidable costs in direct mail production and is almost always the result of a skipped proofing stage.
Related reading: Print management: strategy, production and quality control for effective outputs
Measuring success and campaign performance
Direct mail is a measurable channel. While the means for tracking responses need to be in place before dispatch, it is possible to determine the return from a campaign.
Core performance metrics
| Metric | What it measures |
|---|---|
| Response rate | The percentage of recipients who take a defined action |
| Cost per response (CPR) | Total campaign cost divided by the number of responses |
| Cost per acquisition (CPA) | Total campaign cost divided by the number of conversions |
| ROI | Revenue generated relative to total campaign investment |
| Customer lifetime value impact | The long-term revenue contribution of customers acquired through the campaign |
Response rate alone is a limited measure of success. A campaign with a low response rate but a higher average order value may deliver a stronger ROI than one with a higher response rate but lower conversion value.
Defining your success metrics before launch ensures they align with your wider marketing strategy and commercial outcomes.
How long does it take to see results from a direct mail campaign?
There isn’t a single, exact timeframe for seeing results from a direct mail campaign.
Results can be immediate when the objective is callbacks or website traffic, or take longer when you’re nurturing a higher-value purchase. Final reporting should account for this, and attribution windows should be adjusted where necessary.
Common direct mail and door drop questions
How much does a direct mail campaign cost in the UK?
Campaign costs vary significantly depending on the format, volume, data requirements and distribution method.
As a broad guide, a simple postcard campaign sent to a small list might cost a few hundred pounds end to end. A multi-component pack sent to thousands of recipients will cost significantly more.
The most useful way to approach budget planning is to work backwards from your cost-per-acquisition target rather than starting with a fixed print spend.
What response rate should we expect?
Industry benchmarks from JICMAIL suggest average response rates for direct mail sit between 1% and 5%, with well-targeted campaigns sent to warm audiences performing considerably higher.
Response rate is a useful indicator, but cost per acquisition and ROI are more meaningful measures of commercial performance.
Do we need our own data to run direct mail?
Not necessarily. If you don’t have an existing database, mailing lists can be purchased or rented from data providers, and door drops require no personal data at all.
That said, first-party data — your own customer and prospect records — consistently delivers the strongest campaign performance. If building a first-party database is a longer-term goal, door drops and PAM campaigns can support awareness and acquisition in the interim.
Can direct mail be tracked accurately?
Yes, although attribution requires the right tracking infrastructure to be in place before the campaign launches.
QR codes, UTM strings, personalised URLs, unique promo codes and dedicated phone numbers can all provide measurable response data.
The key is deciding on your tracking approach during planning, not after the piece has gone to print.
Making direct mail and door drops work for your business
Despite the understandable preference for digital collateral, direct mail and door drops remain effective and measurable marketing activities. While customers continue to be bombarded with emails and notifications, physical mail will remain compelling — providing the campaign is well executed.
An effective direct mail campaign starts with clear objectives and a qualified audience, not with the desired format or creative. Data quality determines deliverability and response, and integrating physical mail with digital channels can improve overall campaign performance.
Next steps
Before committing to your next direct mail or door drop campaign, work through the following steps in order:
- Define your campaign objective and primary success metric
- Identify your audience and assess the data available to reach them
- Choose the right distribution method for your objective
- Plan your tracking infrastructure before creative development begins
- Align creative, data and production timelines early
- If needed, work with an experienced production partner to maintain quality and consistency at scale
Book a Direct Mail consultation
Discuss your campaign objectives, audience, data and production requirements with our team. We’ll help you choose the right approach and plan a direct mail or door drop campaign that is measurable, commercially focused and built to deliver.
Contents
- What is direct mail?
- Choosing the right approach
- Planning a direct mail campaign
- Targeting, data and compliance
- How creative and format shape responses
- Integrating direct mail with digital marketing
- Production and distribution logistics
- Measuring success and campaign performance
- Common direct mail and door drop questions
- Making direct mail and door drops work for your business
- Book a Direct Mail consultation