Publishers Clearing House

Publishers Clearing House

Infobox_Company
company_name = Publishers Clearing House
company_
company_type = Private
foundation = 1953, Port Washington, New York
location =
key_people = Robin B. Smith, Chairman
Andrew Goldberg, President and CEO
Deborah Holland, Executive Vice President
H.W. Low, Senior Vice President
Todd Sloane, Senior Vice President/Creative
John Princiotta, Senior Vice President/Marketing
Craig Anderson, Senior Vice President/Operations
Rick Busch, Senior Vice President/CFO
num_employees = 420 (2006)
industry = Publishing
revenue = profitUS $$530 Million(2006)
net_income = profitUS $? Million (2006)
homepage = [http://www.pch.com/ www.pch.com]

Publishers Clearing House (or PCH) is a multi-channel direct marketing company, that offers discounted magazine subscriptions and household merchandise to consumers with the chance to enter to win one of many ongoing sweepstakes. As a direct marketing firm, it has no retail offices; its operations are concentrated in several physical offices, including its world headquarters in Port Washington, New York. It reaches consumers through direct mail offers and online communications supported by its web site.

Publishers Clearing House is a limited liability company staffed by 400 employees and is headquartered in Port Washington, Long Island, NY the same town where the company founder Harold Mertz started it all from his garage. The street adjoining the local Post Office in Port Washington, "LuEsther Mertz Plaza", is named after Mr. Mertz's wife. Upon passing of Mertz and his immediate family the company was passed to ownership by a number of charitable trusts.

History

Publishers Clearing House was founded in 1953 by Harold and LuEsther Mertz and their daughter, Joyce Mertz-Gilmore. Mertz had worked for Look magazine and believed that magazine subscriptions could be sold in a more efficient manner by bundling them together in a single mass mailing offering the lowest introductory prices. With mailings offering consumers an array of discounted subscription offers, the company soon became the largest magazine circulation agency in the industry.

Following on the success of the famous Reader's Digest sweepstakes introduced in 1963, Publishers Clearing House launched its own sweepstakes in 1967 as a way to draw attention to the magazine deals in company mailings. In the late 1980s the company began awarding sweepstakes prizes in live recorded moments featuring the "Prize Patrol", a team of PCH employees that travels to locations awarding prizes with balloons, champagne, flowers and a big check with cameras recording the event for commercial use. Starting in 1985, the company’s product offerings were broadened with a wide range of merchandise including household and personal items, home entertainment, collectibles and more. Merchandise now accounts for the majority of Publishers Clearing House sales. The company launched its website in 1999, providing online means to enter the Publishers Clearing House sweepstakes and shop for magazine and product offerings.

By February, 2000 however, amidst bad publicity from lawsuits that would eventually be settled for more than $52 million and an acknowledgement that it had deceived consumers, the company’s magazine and merchandise sales plummeted by more than 30 percent. The plummeting sales, bad publicity and high legal costs, caused the company to lay off a quarter of its 800-person work force. [cite web|author=Robert Walzer|title=PCH cleans house, goes virtual in profit play|publisher=" Long Island Business News"|date=200-02-18|url=http://www.allbusiness.com/human-resources/902436-1.html|accessdate=2008-10-07]

Charitable Giving

The Joyce Theater in New York City was built in 1982 due to the philanthropic efforts of LuEsther Mertz, the wife of Publishers Clearing House founder Harold Mertz. The Theater was named after their daughter Joyce.

Prize Patrol

The Prize Patrol is the team from Publishers Clearing House that knocks on the door of a recent entrant of the company's sweepstakes and surprises them with the news that they have won a large cash prize. The Prize Patrol was founded in 1988 by Todd Sloane and Dave Sayer, two employees of Publishers Clearing House who worked in the company's advertising department.

After test marketing the "real winning moments" campaign in December 1988, a new national TV campaign featuring numerous "winning moments" was rolled out in July 1989. Since this time, the Prize Patrol winner notifications have been a staple of the company's advertising, and has been parodied on late night television shows such as Saturday Night Live and The Tonight Show and referenced in numerous network sitcoms.

Controversy

In the 1990s, controversy arose against the sweepstakes industry with Publishers Clearing House, American Family Publishers, Reader's Digest and Time Inc. all coming under regulatory scrutiny for marketing techniques that were alleged to cause consumers to believe a purchase would increase their chances of winning. Settlements were reached with many of the states requiring that the sweepstakes promoters provide clearer disclosures regarding chances of winning and the fact that a purchase does not increase chances.

In 1994, PCH agreed to pay $490,000 to 14 states to settle allegations that it used deceptive advertising in its annual sweepstakes. The company agreed to stop using the word "finalist" on most solicitations and to employ the phrase "final round" only in the last weeks of the promotions. Some states had reported that all persons receiving sweepstakes entries were identified as finalists. PCH also agreed to explain to consumers that if they were dropped from the mailing list they could write the company to be reincluded in the sweeps and then entitled to all entry mailings produced for the next 12 months. ["Company Histories-Publishers Clearing House". e-Notes.com). Retrieved on 2008-10-06.]

One of these actions was an investigation sparked by a lawsuit against Publishers Clearing House in Iowa determined that “… more than 1,900 Iowans had purchases of $1000 or more from PCH in 1996 or 1997, or possibly both, according to PCH's own records. [Also] 289 Iowans made purchases of $2500 or more in one or both of those years. [Another survey by the same office] of almost half of those Iowans revealed that 83% were age 65 or older.” ["Miller Asks Court to Order Publishers Clearing House to Cooperate with Investigation or Stop Operation in Iowa". Iowa Attorney General (news release (2000-01-28). Retrieved on 2008-02-05] .

In August 2000, Publishers Clearinghouse signed an Agreement with 23 State Attorneys General to pay $18 million in restitution to the 23 states, some to be given back to 15,000 consumers who spent more than $2,500 each trying to win the sweepstakes. ["Spitzer announces landmark settlement with Publishers Clearing House". NY Attorney General (news release) (2000-08-22)|http://www.oag.state.ny.us/media_center/2000/aug/aug22a_00.html Retrieved on 2008-02-02.] It also agreed to:

* include in all mailings a Sweepstakes Facts sheet, that includes odds of winning, deadlines, prize values, and quantity of prizes offered.
* not call a consumer a "winner" unless the consumer has actually won.
* when saying someone could be a winner, state in equal-sized type the conditions necessary to win.
* send "no purchase necessary" notes to consumers spending $1,000 or more a year.
* survey those spending $2,500 or more to make sure they understand they need not buy to enter.
* discontinue sweepstakes mailings to any surveyed recipients who continue to believe that their odds of winning are enhanced by purchases.
* not use a document designed to simulate a check unless the face of the document clearly states it is not a check.

One and a half years later, in June, 2001, in connection with a comprehensive Settlement brought on by a wave of consumer protection lawsuits by Attorneys General from Texas and 25 other States, PCH agreed to pay $34 million in fines, penalties and restitution, including $19 million to be paid as restitution to consumers who were high activity spenders and deceived by PCH. ["Wisconsin’s case against Publishers Clearing House". Wisconsin Dept. of Justice (2001-06-26). Retrieved on 2008-02-02]

Texas Attorney General John Cornyn commenting on this Settlement, stated it contained "An acknowledgment, for the first time, from PCH of the harm done in the past by its deceptive practices," and an apology for that harm. ["Texas, 25 States reach settlement with sweepstakes giant". Texas Attorney General (2001-06-26). http://www.oag.state.tx.us/newspubs/newsarchive/2001/20010626pch2.htm Retrieved on 2008-02-02] .

More recently, in 2003 The Attorney General of Oregon sued Publishers Clearing House, alleging that "conducting promotional sweepstakes, Publishers Clearing House makes wilful misrepresentations to Oregon consumers in order to convince them to participate in sweepstakes, purchase products, or order subscriptions". The matter was resolved by agreement.

PCHSearch&Win

In July 2006, Publishers Clearing House teamed up with internet search engine Blingo, a website that gives away prizes should users enter a search at the "correct time", which is a pre-defined time triggering the awarding of the prize. In June of 2008, Publishers Clearing House launched a PCH branded version of Blingo -- PCHSearch&Win.

References

^ "Miller Asks Court to Order Publishers Clearing House to Cooperate with Investigation or Stop Operation in Iowa". Iowa Attorney General (news release (2000-01-28). Retrieved on 2008-02-05. ^ "Spitzer announces landmark settlement with Publishers Clearing House". NY Attorney General (news release) (2000-08-22). Retrieved on 2008-02-02. ^ "Wisconsin’s case against Publishers Clearing House". Wisconsin Dept. of Justice (2001-06-26). Retrieved on 2008-02-02. ^ "Texas, 25 States reach settlement with sweepstakes giant". Texas Attorney General (2001-06-26). Retrieved on 2008-02-02.

External links

* [http://www.pch.com/ PCH.com Publishers Clearing House official website]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71y45saVqOk/ Winner Reactions]
* [http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=ed+mcmahon+publishers+clearing+house&aq=1&oq=ed+mcmahon+publishers+clearing+house Ed McMahon legend]


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