- eMarketer Staff

Retailers
have various marketing tools at their disposal to generate sales,
with each seeing different results.
The ROI from catalog marketing is low relative to other online and
offline media, including e-mail, Internet search and
direct-response newspaper ads. The reason is that catalogs are
expensive to produce.
Catalogs are forecast to generate $7.34 in sales for every dollar
spent to make and mail them in 2010, according to the Direct
Marketing Association (DMA). This is a slight increase over 2009
and, in turn, 2008. Catalog ROI could be understated since it is
difficult to track online sales that are influenced by catalog
shopping.
Delving deeper, the DMA data reveals the toll of high costs on
cataloging.
In 2009, retailers spent $15.1 billion on catalogs to produce
$110.5 billion in sales for a $7.32 ROI. By comparison, retailers
spent only $600 million on e-mail to generate $26 billion in sales
for a $43.62 ROI -- six times higher.
The High Costs of Catalog Retailing
March 31, 2010
- eMarketer Staff

Retailers have various marketing tools at their disposal to generate sales, with each seeing different results.
The ROI from catalog marketing is low relative to other online and offline media, including e-mail, Internet search and direct-response newspaper ads. The reason is that catalogs are expensive to produce.
Catalogs are forecast to generate $7.34 in sales for every dollar spent to make and mail them in 2010, according to the Direct Marketing Association (DMA). This is a slight increase over 2009 and, in turn, 2008. Catalog ROI could be understated since it is difficult to track online sales that are influenced by catalog shopping.
Delving deeper, the DMA data reveals the toll of high costs on cataloging.
In 2009, retailers spent $15.1 billion on catalogs to produce $110.5 billion in sales for a $7.32 ROI. By comparison, retailers spent only $600 million on e-mail to generate $26 billion in sales for a $43.62 ROI -- six times higher.