Direct mail response rates are outperforming email by nearly 9-to-1, according to the Data & Marketing Association‘s recent benchmarking work. Meanwhile, indie zines are selling out at pop-ups faster than brands can restock them. The direct mail resurgence isn’t nostalgia. It’s a rational response to a generation drowning in notifications.
If your media plan hasn’t accounted for physical, print-adjacent formats yet, you’re not being contrarian by ignoring them — you’re being late.
Why Gen Z Is Suddenly Nostalgic for Something They Never Lived Through
Here’s the paradox: the most digitally native generation in history is the one driving demand for tactile, offline media. Not because they’re rejecting digital wholesale, but because scarcity creates value. When every brand experience lives inside a feed, a postcard in a mailbox reads as an event.
Piper Sandler’s teen consumer surveys have shown rising interest in physical media formats — vinyl, film cameras, printed zines — among consumers under 25. Marketers dismissed this as a niche aesthetic trend for a while. That dismissal is getting expensive. Brands like Glossier, Chamberlain Coffee, and even legacy players like Patagonia have quietly rebuilt print components into their acquisition and retention funnels, and they’re not doing it for vibes. They’re doing it because open rates and dwell time on physical formats now beat most digital channels by a wide margin.
A mailed piece competes with almost nothing else in that moment. A push notification competes with forty other push notifications.
The Attention Economics Behind the Shift
Let’s talk numbers, because that’s what gets budget approved.
- Response rate: Direct mail averages 4.4% for house lists versus roughly 0.6% for email, per DMA/ANA benchmarking data cited widely across the industry.
- Attention span: Physical mail gets an average dwell time measured in minutes, not milliseconds. Compare that to the sub-two-second average scroll-past rate on paid social creative.
- Trust signal: Consumers increasingly associate print with legitimacy. A brand willing to invest in a printed piece, in an era where anyone can spin up an AI-generated ad in minutes, signals durability and intent.
That last point matters more than marketers give it credit for. We’ve written before about how AI ad trust is falling, and print’s advantage right now is partly a trust arbitrage. It’s expensive to fake. It’s expensive to scale carelessly. That friction reads as authenticity to a skeptical buyer.
This ties directly into broader skepticism trends among younger cohorts. Gen Alpha and younger Gen Z consumers are showing measurable ad fatigue and distrust toward algorithmically optimized content, a pattern well documented in our coverage of Gen Alpha ad skepticism. Physical formats sidestep that skepticism because they don’t feel targeted in the same invasive way. A zine feels like a discovery. A retargeted ad feels like surveillance.
Zines Aren’t a Gimmick. They’re a Distribution Channel.
Zines specifically deserve their own conversation, because they operate differently than direct mail. Direct mail is a push channel — you’re interrupting someone’s day. Zines are a pull channel, distributed through independent bookstores, coffee shops, record stores, and creator-run pop-ups. They function more like earned media than paid media.
Brands experimenting with zine formats — Glossier’s early “into the gloss” print runs, Aesop’s in-store reading material, or smaller DTC skincare and streetwear labels producing quarterly print drops — are essentially building owned media that doubles as merchandise. People keep zines. They display them. They pass them to friends. Try getting that kind of behavior out of a promotional email.
The production economics have also shifted in brands’ favor. Print-on-demand services and small-batch riso printing have collapsed the cost of short runs. You no longer need a 10,000-unit minimum to make print viable. A 500-unit zine run tied to a product launch or creator collaboration can now be produced for a fraction of what a mid-tier paid social campaign costs, and it generates an asset that lives well beyond a 24-hour ad flight.
Where This Fits in the Budget, Realistically
Nobody’s suggesting you pull spend from performance channels wholesale. That would be reckless, and frankly it misunderstands what physical formats are good for. Print-adjacent marketing works best as a complement to digital retention and acquisition efforts, not a replacement.
Think of it in three practical use cases:
- High-value customer retention. A printed piece mailed to your top 5-10% of customers by LTV outperforms another email in the inbox. Loyalty and reactivation programs are the easiest place to test budget reallocation.
- Launch moments. Zines, printed lookbooks, or mailer sequences tied to a product drop create a collectible artifact that extends campaign life well past launch week.
- Community and creator tie-ins. Brands running ambassador or creator programs can use print as a co-branded deliverable — something a creator can physically show on camera, unbox, or gift to their own audience.
This last point connects to something we’ve flagged before: live creator events are back, and physical collateral is a natural extension of that same offline-craving behavior. If audiences want in-person experiences again, they want tangible takeaways from those experiences too.
The Measurement Problem Nobody Wants to Admit
Here’s the uncomfortable part. Print doesn’t measure like digital, and any brand pitching this internally needs to be honest about that upfront.
You can track response through unique promo codes, QR codes, dedicated landing pages, or personalized URLs (PURLs), but you won’t get the granular, real-time attribution that paid social dashboards provide. This is a real limitation for teams that have built their entire reporting culture around decision intelligence and real-time dashboards.
The workaround: treat print tests like incrementality studies, not last-click attribution exercises. Run a holdout group. Compare lift in the mailed cohort against a matched control group that received only digital touchpoints. This is standard practice in direct response marketing and it’s how catalog retailers have justified print spend for decades — it’s not a new methodology, just one that’s been out of fashion.
If your measurement framework can’t accommodate a channel that takes five to seven days to land, the problem isn’t the channel — it’s the framework.
Brands still building out analytics capability for multi-channel attribution should read our coverage on the marketing analytics talent shortage, since incrementality testing requires a different skill set than dashboard monitoring.
Compliance and Data Considerations You Can’t Skip
Direct mail still requires customer address data, which means privacy and compliance teams need a seat at this table from day one. Depending on your market, you’re dealing with different rules around data sourcing, opt-outs, and cross-border mailing regulations. Teams operating internationally should already be tracking global ad regulation divergence, since direct mail compliance often varies as much by jurisdiction as digital ad compliance does.
In the US, the Federal Trade Commission maintains guidance on mail marketing and data use that’s worth a compliance review before scaling any program. In the UK and EU, the Information Commissioner’s Office has specific requirements around using purchased or third-party mailing lists that trip up brands moving fast without legal review.
None of this should scare you off. It should just be baked into the pilot plan rather than discovered after your first 50,000-piece mail drop bounces back on compliance grounds.
What This Means for Budget Planning
Marketing budgets are already in flux. Ad spend growth has slowed across most categories, and teams are hunting for channels that offer differentiated reach rather than more of the same saturated inventory. We’ve covered this dynamic extensively, including in our analysis of where to move budget now given flattening digital returns.
Print-adjacent formats won’t solve reach problems at scale — you’re not going to mail your way to millions of impressions cost-effectively. But for retention, loyalty, and high-intent moments, the ROI math is increasingly hard to ignore. A test budget of 3-5% of a retention program’s spend, measured through proper incrementality testing over one to two quarters, is a reasonable starting point for most mid-market and enterprise brands.
Agencies and in-house teams that treat this as a serious channel — with proper briefs, measurement plans, and compliance review — will have a real advantage over competitors still treating print as a legacy afterthought or a one-off stunt.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQs
Is the direct mail resurgence actually driven by younger consumers, or is this an older demographic trend?
Data increasingly points to younger consumers, particularly those under 30, as a growing segment of direct mail responders. This group has less lifetime exposure to print marketing, which makes it feel novel rather than routine, unlike older consumers who may associate mail with decades of catalogs and coupon books.
How much should a brand budget for a print-adjacent test campaign?
Most marketers running initial pilots allocate somewhere between 3% and 5% of an existing retention or loyalty budget. This keeps the test contained while still generating enough volume for a meaningful incrementality read over one or two quarters.
What’s the difference between using direct mail and zines from a strategy standpoint?
Direct mail is a push channel best suited for retention, reactivation, and high-value customer targeting using existing address data. Zines function more like earned or owned media, distributed through retail partners, pop-ups, or creator collaborations, and work better for brand-building and community engagement than direct response.
How do you measure ROI on print marketing without the attribution tools available in digital channels?
The most reliable method is incrementality testing: mail one cohort, hold out a matched control group, and compare lift in conversion or reactivation rates between the two. Unique promo codes, QR codes, and personalized landing pages also help track response, though they won’t offer the same real-time granularity as digital dashboards.
What compliance issues should marketing teams watch for with direct mail campaigns?
Data sourcing and opt-out mechanisms are the biggest risk areas. Rules vary by jurisdiction, and teams operating across multiple markets should review guidance from bodies like the FTC in the US or the ICO in the UK before scaling a mailing list built from third-party data.
Run one pilot this quarter: pick your top-decile customers by LTV, mail a single well-designed piece with a trackable code, and measure lift against a control group before you scale a dollar further.
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