Start Here: The Four Steps That Stop Catalog Mail Three opt-out steps cover roughly 80% of the catalog senders filling your mailbox, and a fourth clears the stragglers. No single button stops everything because catalogs reach you through separate channels: mail-preference registries, each retailer's own customer list, …
Read MoreThree Services, Three Different Jobs DMAchoice covers member mailers through a single registry; Catalog Choice covers individual senders you name one by one; PaperKarma covers anything you can photograph. They sound like competitors, but they actually solve different parts of the same problem — which is why the people …
Read MoreWhy the L.L.Bean Catalog Keeps Arriving Your address lands on the L.L.Bean mailing list the moment you place an order, request a catalog, or buy a gift card — and once you're an active customer, the registry-based opt-outs that work on most mailers don't touch it. More importantly, L.L.Bean no longer honors third-party …
Read MoreOne List, Several Catalogs Pottery Barn is part of the Williams-Sonoma family, which means a single purchase can put you on the mailing lists for Pottery Barn, Pottery Barn Kids, PBteen, West Elm, and Williams-Sonoma all at once. That's why opting out of "the Pottery Barn catalog" alone rarely fixes a home-goods …
Read MoreWithin 90 Days of Moving, Two Catalog Floods Hit at Once A move triggers two separate streams of catalog mail, and most people only think about one of them. The first is your own mail, dragged to the new address — and your USPS change-of-address filing actually makes it worse, because that data feeds the National …
Read MoreA Single Mailing Can Weigh 17 Pounds A full Restoration Hardware mailing is not a catalog in the ordinary sense — it's a shrink-wrapped stack of "Source Books" that has been reported to weigh as much as 17 pounds, dropped on doorsteps whether or not the recipient asked for it. The volume was severe enough to spark …
Read MoreWhy Charity Mail Is the Hardest Kind to Stop The opt-out tools that work on commercial catalogs have a blind spot: nonprofits operate largely outside the rules that bind retailers. There's no statutory "do-not-mail" right against a charity the way there is against prescreened credit offers, and many charities actively …
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