Mass mailings, the bane of small and mid-sized businesses lacking the means to outsource, just got a whole lot simpler — and cheaper, says an Internet start-up seeking to tap into the multi-billion-dollar annual market.
Noticed the article is dated May 11, 1999.
I just tried to log onto the eLetter.com Website and it appears to be gone...
Hey, does anyone know who took over for eletter?
I was using them for quite some time, then stopped doing mailings, now we want to get started again and I didn't save a single email from the guy that took over. I appreciate it.
Eric
email me, [email protected]
I was a former eletter customer (and also a creditor because they owed me some money :-) ) , and I got one of those emails too.
A reliable internal source told me that the company that sent those emails after the ELetter shutdown did not take over the company. Instead, it stole ELetter's customer list through a former ELetter sales person and used it for mass emails.
You make your own judgement about whether to trust such a company with your direct mail.
ELetter.com to Automate Mass (Snail) Mailing
Posted by: Gary Gately May 11, 1999 12:00 AMMass mailings, the bane of small and mid-sized businesses lacking the means to outsource, just got a whole lot simpler — and cheaper, says an Internet start-up seeking to tap into the multi-billion-dollar annual market.
I just tried to log onto the eLetter.com Website and it appears to be gone...
Josh
I was using them for quite some time, then stopped doing mailings, now we want to get started again and I didn't save a single email from the guy that took over. I appreciate it.
Eric
email me, [email protected]
A reliable internal source told me that the company that sent those emails after the ELetter shutdown did not take over the company. Instead, it stole ELetter's customer list through a former ELetter sales person and used it for mass emails.
You make your own judgement about whether to trust such a company with your direct mail.
I am not trusting them with my own customer list.