|
Previous
Post...Next Post...Information on Reprints...2010
Blog
JANUARY 25, 2009 "Wasting
Trees: Why I Hate Junk Mail "
I know I'm not alone when I say that
junk mail really irritates me--not only for the unsolicited mailings
that waste obscene amounts of paper, but also because someone
out there to which I entrusted my personal information is trading
or selling it without my consent. With nearly all my correspondence
done through email, a trip to the mailbox is no longer filled
with anticipation of invitations, announcements and good tidings.
I know what to expect in my mail box these days, and that has
me wishing for less mail.
Junk mail consumes 100 million
trees annually, according to The Sierra Club, but the companies that churn
it out could care less. Companies using ad mail to solicit business
know full well the abysmal response rate of direct mail; their
persistent use of it amounts to willful support of the removal
of trees for the purpose of producing, essentially, garbage.
Nearly all junk mail--97% to 99%--is ineffective at soliciting
a response and more than half of it doesn't even get recycled.
Even if everyone could and did
recycle their junk mail, the damage has already been done by
the time the mail reaches our mailboxes. The trees lost, energy
consumed and pollution created to produce 5.4 million extra tons
of paper just for junk mail cannot be recouped through recycling.
The only way to reduce the damaging effects of junk mail is to
reduce how much is created in the first place. You could sign-up
with a service that assists in getting your name removed from
key mailing lists, but these services cost money and sometimes
create more paper than is necessary to accomplish the task. They
also aren't helpful when it comes to proactive measures to reduce
unwanted mail that only you can initiate.
1. Be proactive. Every
time you charge a purchase, join an organization, subscribe to
a catalog or sign up for something, you unwittingly invite a
new deluge of junk mail to the address you provided. To avoid
new junk mail from following on the heels of your every transaction,
tell sales people taking your information that you do not want
to receive advertising offers, and that you deny them permission
to sell or trade your information to anyone else.
2. Call the sender. As soon as you get a catalog or offer
you don't want again, call the toll free number provided and
ask to be removed from the mailing list. This method is really
only manageable if you make calls before junk mail starts to
pile up. Making one or two phone calls a day will only take a
few minutes and is something that can be done on speaker phone
while you're doing something else.
3. Opt out. Fill out the brief forms at the following
websites to eliminate specific types of junk mail.
a. Direct mail from DMA members: dmaconsumers.org/offmailinglist.html
b. Insurance and credit offers from major credit agencies: optoutprescreen.com/?rf=t
c. All catalogs from Abacus Cooperatives: abacusoptout.com
d. Specific catalogs: catalogchoice.org
4. Change the law. Support new legislation that would
enable people to opt out of unsolicited ad mail by going to donotmail.org
and signing onto their campaign.
|
2009 BLOG INDEX
Posts by Topic
Air Quality
6/8/09, Leaf Blowers:
An Environmental Nightmare
Cleaning
4/14/09, Dont
Be So Quick to Blame the Low-Phosphate Detergent
Energy
7/6/09, Its Summer
Time and the Livin is Green!
4/7/09, Window Films Can Lower Your
Cooling Bills and Your Tax Liability
3/14/09, Bundle Your
Gadgets
Food
10/27/09, Super
Freakonomics Authors Come Down Hard on Local Food
10/22/09, Hey Foodies, What
Are You Feeding Your Pets?
Green Terms
5/26/09, A Closer Look
at the Definition of Recycled and Some Other Re
Words
Plastic, and other Trash
7/13/09, Will a
Ban on Bottled Water Lad to Bad Beverage Choices?
4/22/09, Bottled Water
Gets Reinvented
3/2/09, Inefficient Packaging
Awards (No. 1)
Perspectives
9/14/09, Gullibility
is Derailing Progress
8/24/09, Check
Your Lifestyle Before Bragging About Recycling
8/19/09, Simple
Solutions Wont Work Alone: Comprehensive is the True Agent
of Change
2/22/09, The Unhappiest Generation
2/12/09, Inauguration
Attendees Fail to Demonstrate Change
Reduce
8/5/09, Direct
Mail Marketers Want to Force Junk Mail on Us
3/21/09, Better
Yard Sales
1/25/09, Wasting Trees:
Why I Hate Junk Mail
Reuse
10/14/09, Wrapping
with Your Butcher
5/7/09, Craigslist
Buyers are A Flakey Bunch on the Whole
Recycling
6/22/09, Not
Separating Your Recyclables from Your Trash Can Hurt
3/4/09, Recycle Your
Water Filters
Transportation
6/15/09, Avoid
Hot Car Syndrome to Reduce Emissions
and Discomfort
Water
3/27/09,
Water, Water Everywhere, but Not a
Drop
Blog Archives
2008
2007
2006
2005
|