Why Taradel is betting on the future of marketing being both physical and digital
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For years, marketers have operated under a simple assumption: digital advertising is the most efficient way to reach customers. As platforms like Meta and Google became the dominant channels for customer acquisition, many businesses shifted more of their budgets online in pursuit of measurable results and scalable growth.
But as digital advertising costs continue to rise and consumer attention becomes increasingly fragmented, some marketers are revisiting a channel many once considered outdated: direct mail.
That’s where Taradel has thrived. The marketing technology company has built a platform that combines direct mail and digital advertising into a single omnichannel solution designed specifically for small and midsize businesses. By helping clients manage everything from postcard campaigns to social media advertising under one roof, Taradel is positioning itself at the intersection of traditional marketing and modern data-driven advertising.
Challenging conventional marketing wisdom
According to Taradel CEO Eric Goodstadt, one of the biggest misconceptions in marketing today is that digital advertising is always more efficient than offline channels.
While digital platforms offer convenience and scale, rising costs have changed the economics. Search advertising frequently exceeds several dollars per click, while social media campaigns often struggle with low engagement rates and significant audience waste. Businesses may pay for traffic that never converts into customers.
Direct mail, by contrast, continues to generate response rates that often rival or exceed many digital campaigns when properly targeted.
“The assumption that digital is always cheaper or more effective simply isn’t true anymore,” says Goodstadt. “When businesses look at actual response rates and customer acquisition costs, direct mail often performs far better than they expect.”
The key, he says, is relevance and targeting.
Bringing attribution to direct mail
Historically, one of direct mail’s greatest challenges has been attribution.
Unlike digital advertising, where clicks and conversions can be measured instantly, marketers often struggled to connect a mailed piece directly to a sale.
Taradel has spent years addressing that problem.
The company offers tracking tools such as QR codes, unique phone numbers, coupon codes, and increasingly sophisticated integrations with point-of-sale systems that allow businesses to connect individual mail pieces to actual customer transactions.
These closed-loop reporting capabilities provide businesses with the kind of return-on-investment visibility that was once reserved primarily for digital advertising.
For small business owners, that means direct mail no longer has to be a leap of faith.
The power of the omnichannel effect
Rather than viewing direct mail and digital marketing as competing strategies, Taradel sees them as complementary channels.
Consumers today encounter thousands of marketing messages every day across social media, streaming platforms, websites, email inboxes, and physical environments. Capturing attention often requires multiple touchpoints.
A homeowner might receive a postcard from a local contractor, later see that company’s Facebook advertisement, and ultimately conduct a search before making a purchasing decision.
Each interaction reinforces the others.
By combining direct mail with digital advertising, businesses create multiple pathways to conversion while increasing brand recall throughout the customer journey.
This “omnichannel multiplier effect” has become a central pillar of Taradel’s approach.
“We live in a multi-channel world,” Goodstadt explains. “If you’re relying on a single advertising channel, you’re likely missing opportunities to engage your customer at critical moments.”
Why younger consumers are embracing mail
One of the more surprising trends Taradel has observed is the growing effectiveness of direct mail among younger demographics.
Millennials and Gen Z consumers spend much of their lives navigating crowded digital environments filled with endless notifications, emails, and advertisements. Physical mail offers something different: a tangible experience.
For many younger consumers, a well-designed mail piece stands out precisely because it is uncommon.
Goodstadt believes this creates an opportunity for marketers willing to move beyond generic postcards and invest in more creative, personalized experiences.
The challenge, however, remains relevance.
Consumers of any age are unlikely to engage with messages that fail to address their specific interests or needs. Effective targeting remains the foundation of successful campaigns.
Simplifying marketing for small businesses
While technology remains central to Taradel’s platform, the company’s leadership believes human expertise remains equally important.
Many small business owners lack the time or resources to coordinate multiple marketing vendors, analyze advertising data, or optimize campaigns across numerous platforms.
Taradel was designed to eliminate that complexity.
The company combines marketing technology, campaign execution, strategic consulting, and performance reporting within a single platform. Rather than forcing clients to manage direct mail, social media advertising, targeting, creative development, and analytics separately, Taradel handles the process end-to-end.
That combination of software and human guidance has become a key differentiator in an increasingly crowded marketing technology landscape.
“Every business owner starts with a vision,” says Goodstadt. “Our job is to help make that vision happen.”
Building marketing intelligence at scale
Behind the platform is one of Taradel’s most valuable assets: data.
After managing campaigns for tens of thousands of businesses across numerous industries, the company has accumulated a substantial repository of first-party marketing intelligence.
That data helps Taradel identify emerging trends, shifting consumer behaviors, and campaign performance patterns that can be used to improve future results.
As artificial intelligence and predictive analytics continue reshaping marketing, Taradel believes this proprietary data advantage will become even more valuable.
The platform continuously learns from campaign outcomes, enabling businesses to make smarter marketing decisions while maintaining visibility into return on investment.
For a company built on the idea that traditional and digital marketing work better together than apart, the future appears less about choosing one channel over another—and more about integrating both into a cohesive customer acquisition strategy.
In a marketing landscape increasingly defined by complexity, Taradel is betting that simplicity, accountability, and omnichannel execution will continue to resonate with the businesses it serves.
Why Taradel is betting on the future of marketing being both physical and digital
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