Home   | News   | Events   | Careers   | Library   | Topics   | Members   | Vendor Directory   
Growth Trends Continue for Direct Marketing

Growth Trends Continue for Direct Marketing

This year, companies will spend more than $161 billion dollars on direct marketing in the United States, according to an independent study commissioned by The Direct Marketing Association.

Measured against total U.S. sales, these advertising expenditures are expected to generate $1.85 trillion in increased sales in 2005, or 7% of the $26 trillion in total sales in the U.S. economy (which includes intermediate sales).

All together, direct marketing will account for 10.3% of total U.S. GDP in 2005. And according to The Direct Marketing Association’s latest report on the economic contributions of direct marketing, there are many positive indications for continued future growth.

The DMA today previewed findings from U.S. Direct Marketing Today: Economic Impact 2005.

A Buyer's Guide to CRM Functionality

whitepaper
Answer a few questions to download a FREE whitepaper now.
What features are you looking for in a CRM Solution?
Lead tracking/management     Marking campaign tracking and reporting
Contract tracking/management Call center tracking and reporting
Sales pipeline forecasting/analysis
How many employees will work with this system? 
When do you need to have a CRM solution in place?
The study reports the top-line results from The DMA/Global Insight econometric model of U.S. direct marketing activity for the nation as a whole, the B-to-C and B-to-B markets, the major direct marketing media, and for the economy’s 52 industry groups.

Among the study’s findings:

"In recent years, the dramatic growth of the Internet and the increasing sophistication of database technologies have contributed to an extraordinary expansion of direct marketing and a seismic shift in what it is, how it’s used, and who uses it," said DMA president & CEO John A. Greco, Jr. "Direct marketing today is best described as a sophisticated, multi-channel process that spans virtually all media and is used by most industries. Its contribution continues to be substantial in absolute terms, and its impact is growing over time and relative to other economic activity, including mass advertising."

Other Latest News of this Category: