Why Direct Mail Still Dominates Home Service Marketing (Dan Harlacher)
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Valpak starts with data science and customer segmentation, analyzing a client's sold-customer records to build avatars of who actually pays rather than who owners assume their customer is.
Dan argues the mailbox is still 'sexy' because true net-sales purchasers of home services skew older - often 60-plus - and direct mail reaches that high-value, aging demographic effectively.
Creative is tailored by avatar age and geography, then tested to measure lift, so messaging aimed at a 65-year-old differs deliberately from a 52-year-old.
Beyond the classic Valpak envelope, the 'plus one' standalone postcard mails to the same 10,000-household zone but lands outside the envelope for a second impression.
Neighborhood targeting after a completed job - mailing the best ~100 homes around a recent install with 'friends and family' offers - turns one job into local saturation.
New movers are a prime window: 6-to-12 months after settling in, homeowners build their short list of home-service providers, making timing central to acquisition.
Attribution is rigorous - Valpak's CRM tracking measures net dollars against spend for ROAS, and falls back to lift analysis when direct tracking isn't available.
Direct mail's edge is a high open/look-through rate, and Dan's parting advice is to deeply understand your avatars and zip-code performance, since some zones deliver 5x the clientele and ticket averages.
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