Five years ago, if you had suggested to most DTC founders that direct mail would become one of their highest-performing acquisition channels, the response would have been skeptical at best. Direct mail carried the associations of another era: catalogs, postcards competing for attention alongside takeout menus, campaigns that were expensive to produce and nearly impossible to measure with any precision. It represented everything that performance marketing had moved away from, and most operators were happy to leave it behind.
That perception has not held up well against what is actually happening in the market.

Neal Goyal, SVP at PostPilot, has spent the past several years working at the center of a shift that is quietly changing how growth-focused eCommerce brands think about their channel mix. The case he makes is not built on nostalgia for an older medium. It is built on how the medium actually functions today and what that means for brands actively looking for reliable acquisition channels in a more difficult environment.
“The way most people picture direct mail has very little to do with how it works now,” Goyal says. “We are not talking about printing a large batch of generic pieces and hoping the right people open them. We are talking about triggering a personalized postcard to a high-intent shopper within hours of a specific behavior, a browse, an abandoned cart, a lapse in purchase frequency. When you frame it that way, the conversation changes.”
The infrastructure behind this approach has evolved considerably. PostPilot operates at the intersection of behavioral data and physical media, giving brands the ability to target, trigger, and measure direct mail campaigns with the same precision they expect from digital platforms. The result is a channel that reaches customers in a less saturated environment, where the physical nature of the medium creates a different quality of engagement than a digital ad that disappears in a scroll.
For Goyal, the timing of this shift is directly connected to what has happened across paid digital channels. As Meta and similar platforms have become more expensive and less predictable, eCommerce brands have been under increasing pressure to identify channels that can deliver measurable, reliable growth. The brands that have started treating direct mail as a performance channel, not a seasonal brand tactic or a supplementary awareness play but a trigger-based, data-driven component of their acquisition and retention stack, are producing results that are difficult to attribute to coincidence.
“The brands doing this well are not replacing digital,” Goyal says. “They are reaching customers that digital can no longer reach effectively. There are shoppers who have been retargeted so many times across the same platforms that the ads have essentially stopped registering. A physical piece of mail to that same customer, timed precisely to something they just did on the site, lands in a completely different way.”
The measurement question, which has historically been the most common objection to direct mail investment, has also matured significantly. Holdout testing, match-back analysis, and behavioral attribution methods have made it possible to quantify the incremental impact of a direct mail campaign with a level of rigor that simply was not available a decade ago. The channel that was once dismissed for being unmeasurable is now being evaluated by the same standards as any other performance investment.
What Goyal observes across the brands he works with is a channel that consistently rewards operators who are willing to set aside inherited assumptions about what direct mail is and engage seriously with what it has become. The economics are different from digital, the creative considerations are different, and the cadence requires a different kind of planning. But for the brands that make those adjustments, the result is a growth lever that most of their competitors have not yet figured out how to use. In an industry where finding the next reliable channel is an ongoing priority, that is a meaningful position to be in.








