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For broadcast on CBS Radio Network stations July 24-25, 2004:
Something strange in your mail.
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries.
Some day you may find a shark in your mailbox -- or a steering wheel. Under new postal
regulations, advertisers can mail odd-shapped items that grab your attention.
"This is the first time that anybody's been allowed to send irregular-shaped mail...so
our pieces are all cut out into the shapes of the products they represent"
RUNS :08
Tom Becker of Ship-Shapes, a company that makes and mails these promotional pieces, says
regular advertising mail -- marketers don't like to call it JUNK mail -- is boring.
"Most mail that you receive is very easily identifiable as, as standard mail, and
therefore people don't tend to open the envelopes and look at what's inside."
RUNS :10
One company used a shark to advertise a pool-cleaning chemical. Other pieces have included
a motorcycle and a dartboard. One of the first pieces, for Krispy Kreme doughnuts, may be
displayed at the Smithsonian. Stamp collectors are sure to look for these -- as what they
call "postal history."
And that's Stamp Collecting this week.
I'm Lloyd de Vries, CBS News.
*********************************************************
Special Longer Version:
Download this report as an MP3 sound file.
<You could find something strange in your mail soon. I'm Lloyd de Vries, and I'll have
the story.>
Some day you may find a shark in your mail -- or a steering wheel or a box of doughnuts.
Under new postal regulations, advertisers can mail odd-shapped items that grab your
attention.
"This is the first time that anybody's been allowed to send irregular-shaped mail...so our
pieces are all cut out into the shapes of the products they represent"
RUNS :08
Tom Becker of Ship-Shapes, a company that makes and mails these promotional pieces, says
regular advertising mail -- direct marketers don't like to call it JUNK mail -- is boring.
"Most mail that you receive is very easily identifiable as, as standard mail, and therefore
people don't tend to open the envelopes and look at what's inside."
RUNS :10
And e-mail doesn't always get the job done, either.
"With all the spam out there, that gets kind of lost in the clutter, as well as direct mail
does."
RUNS :05
One company used a shark to advertise a pool-cleaning chemical.
"I think it was real effective because you're not used to seeing something like that in the
mail."
RUNS :04
To avoid mangling in the postal automation, the pieces are made of plastic and shipped
directly to local post offices for delivery. So far, it's all been business-to-business mail,
but some day...
"If it fits in a 12 by 15 by 3/4 of an inch space, it's allowed to go under this
classification of mail, so we see this product getting more sophisticated as we move forward."
RUNS :10
Other pieces have included a motorcycle and a dartboard. One of the first pieces, for
Krispy Kreme doughnuts, may be displayed at the Smithsonian. Stamp collectors are sure to
look for these -- as what they call "postal history."
I'm Lloyd de Vries
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