According to progressive direct mail guru Mal Warwick,
Meanwhile, according to academic researchers who study electoral campaigns, direct mail has negligible effects on voter turnout....direct mail spending in the 2008 election will run from $800 million to $1 billion. That compares with $648 million in the 2004 election.
Maybe it's persuasive -- that is, instead of influencing whether people vote, it influences who they vote for? Apparently not. For example, according to a tightly designed study in a hotly contested primary that turned on a nasty "wedge" issue (abortion), direct mail only helped the pro-choice candidate when coupled with intensive phone contacts.
So what is direct mail good for? Perhaps for making profits for mail "experts" and fundraisers? This seems to be a campaign method whose time has come -- and gone.A chi-square test of the differences of support between subjects in the control and treatment groups indicates that the results are not statistically significant.
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