Home    Identity Theft    Scams & Fraud    Telemarketing & Junk Mail    Credit    Identity Theft Laws
 

Fight Identity Theft Blog   Blog Home
The latest news and commentary on identity theft, scams, privacy, and technology.


Junk Mailers Getting Smarter
  
Posted Wednesday, January 11, 2006   |   Permalink   |    Email this Article

Now that more of you are ignoring, shredding, or opting out of the junk mail that arrives in your mailbox every day, the Direct Mail departments in companies around the world are having to get smarter and sneakier in order to survive.

Here are a few examples of what they’ll do to get you to open up that steaming piece of junk mail:

From the blog, Joel on Software “How Many Lies Can You Find in One Direct Mail Piece?

Junk Mail from Earthlink

Joel dissects a direct mail piece from Earthlink, disguised to look like an overnight letter from FedEx. He quickly finds a dozen lies and distortions without even opening up the package!


From the excellent Signal to Noise blog “Fatalist Junk Mail“:

Jason shows off a new direct mail piece with a fake credit card showing through the envelope window along with the words “REMOVE CONTENTS before you discard.”

Apparently they’re trying to exploit the training you’ve received to shred credit offers in order to get you to open their lame offer.

Sounds desperate to me…

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...



Stumble it!

Save to del.icio.us


Add a Comment


Special Offers

Only Solution that Proves It Stops ID Theft


Prevention

  • Prevention Tips - Learn the simple things that will help protect your identity.
  • Your Mailbox - Eliminate credit offers and protect your mail.
  • Paper Shredders - Learn what to shred. Find a good shredder.
  • Scams - Learn how to recognize "phishing" and other common scams.
  • Credit Freeze - Is one available in your state?
  • Fraud Alerts - Take 30 seconds today and place a fraud alert on your credit.

Detection

Recovery

  • Emergency Help - Learn what to do if you believe you are a victim of identity theft.