

Last year, the fact that we received just 71 catalogues in August
seemed unusual to us. But this year, receiving just 61 catalogues in
August came as no surprise. We have been tracking a steady decline in
catalogue volume during the last few months—the only anomaly being
July, when sale activity boosted the number of catalogues to land on
the Catalogue Log desk.
Comparing the catalogues received in
August 2009 with those logged in August 2010, some titles that appear
in both columns, such as Books Direct, House of Bruar and Scotts of Stow.
There also seemed to be an almost equal number of new names this year
to compensate for lists we have been dropped from. This further cements
the theory that cataloguers are mailing smarter, removing unprofitable names from their files.
Cataloguers
are also becoming smarter with their covers. We have been tracking how
many catalogues highlight a sale or discount, free shipping, or a free
gift on their covers since January 2009 and have noted an increasing
trend of using the cover to promote some sort of offer. A staggering
65.6 percent of all the catalogues we received in August featured some
sort of offer on the front cover—in July that figure was 64 percent and
in June it was 60 percent. Among the minority of catalogues without a
special offer were Brora, the Dolls House Emporium, and Lakeland.
The
most popular offer in August was a sale or discount, promoted on 41
percent of the catalogue covers we logged. This is appreciably lower
than July’s record high of 49.5 percent. Gaining favour with
catalo
guers in August was free delivery—the number of catalogues
touting free shipping almost doubled from 12.1 percent in July to 23
percent in August. Catalogues offering free delivery included Bon Prix, Joules and Boden, which repeated its Sunday Times
offer of last year—a 15 percent discount, free delivery, and free
returns. We thought it made Boden look needy last year, but it
obviously works or Boden wouldn’t have used it again.
The number
of catalogues offering a free gift with purchase was 11.5 percent, down
from 12.1 percent in July and from 14.1 percent in August 2009. Free
gifts were mainly promoted by the b-to-b catalogues in the pack
including Viking Direct and Neat Ideas.
Our favourite offer of the month is from gardening catalogue Sarah Raven’s Kitchen & Garden. Among the messages on the cover was this: “Offers
What’s yours? See page 49”. I thought it was a fun way to encourage
customers to flick through the catalogue. It also had a sense of
personalisation—did my catalogue have a different offer to my friend or
neighbour’s? I’d like to think there was some sort of segmentation that
went into deciding which offer to send to which tranche of the
database. Let's put it to the test, I got 15 percent off. What did you
get?
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