Every few years, marketing declares direct mail dead. Email was supposed to replace it. Social media was supposed to make it irrelevant. Now AI is reshaping how consumers discover brands altogether.
And yet, people are still opening their mail.
A recent USPS whitepaper on how millennials respond to direct mail includes a statistic that deserves attention: 62% say they read the advertising mail they receive instead of tossing it immediately.
That may sound surprising at first, but maybe it shouldn’t. The average person spends hours staring at screens while ads pile up in search results, social feeds, streaming platforms, news sites, and inboxes. Some estimates suggest the average person sees around 4,000 digital ads every day. After a while, most of them simply blur together.
Marketing emails face the same crowded reality. Click-through rates below 2% are common across many industries. That doesn’t mean email isn’t valuable, of course. It absolutely is. But it does mean earning attention has become harder.
There’s no endless scroll or algorithm deciding what disappears beneath the next notification. A printed piece has to be picked up, handled, and considered, even if only for a moment. Maybe it sits on the counter for a day or two. Either way, it occupies physical space in a way digital rarely does.
That matters more than marketers sometimes give it credit for. Being seen is often the first step toward being remembered.
Another finding from the USPS report makes the point even clearer: 52% of millennials say they’re more likely to buy from brands that use both direct mail and digital marketing.
That feels especially relevant now because the customer journey has become messy. Very few people discover, research, compare, and buy in one clean sequence anymore.
Someone might see an Instagram Reel on Monday, visit the brand’s website on Wednesday, add something to a cart Friday night, then forget about it over the weekend.
This is where retargeted direct mail may earn its place. The shopper has already shown interest, so the postcard isn’t arriving cold. It can reflect the product they viewed, remind them of the cart they left behind, or bring the brand back into focus at the right moment. Instead of adding another message to a crowded inbox, it creates a second chance somewhere the shopper is more likely to notice.
If every follow-up lands in the inbox, there’s a good chance it gets buried with everything else. A well-timed postcard doesn’t replace email. It simply picks up the conversation somewhere less crowded.
And maybe that’s the real takeaway from the USPS report. It isn’t just that millennials respond to direct mail. It’s that marketers may have written off a channel that still has real power to reach them.
Younger consumers don’t live entirely inside digital channels. They move between screens and physical spaces all day, usually without stopping to think about the difference.
Perhaps marketers shouldn’t draw such a hard line between them either.
The strongest campaigns don’t ask customers to choose between the mailbox and the inbox. They use each one to make the other harder to ignore.