Here's what seems like good news: The response rate for those annoying credit card offers we get in the mail has been falling. (Learn how to opt out.)
According to Curtis Arnold of cardratings.com: "In 1998, credit card issuers could count on a response rate of 1.2% to the offers for new cards that they sent out ... The projected response rate this year is only 0.28%, or four times less than what the credit card industry received less than a decade ago ..."
But believe it or not, even a response rate of 0.28% can be well worth it. As Arnold noted, "... 42% of us got our newest card via a piece of mail." So don't expect to see the mailings go away anytime soon -- maybe when the response rate is much closer to zero.
In perspective
The truth is that, in general, response rates to all kinds of advertisements are rather low. In many cases, even a 1% rate is considered a success. Here are some examples I ran across online:
So getting back to our friends at credit card-issuing companies -- their response rates are lousy and getting worse. Still, it's not necessarily likely that they'll scale back their mailings, because in order to get the desired number of responses, they may actually want to increase their mailings. So keep that shredder primed and ready.
© 2007 Universal Press Syndicate.