Support

“Is it common to receive promotional information via the building listserv (from which you can’t unsubscribe)?”


Photo by PoPville flickr user LaTur

“Dear PoPville,

I’m looking for some input from the PoP community about their experiences with or knowledge of policies for advertisements/promotions sent via condo building listservs or allowing promotional material in the condo lobby/shared areas.

I live in a medium-sized condo building in NW DC where the board has a contract with a management company to staff the front desk and handle building maintenance and upkeep, etc. In mid-November on the building listserv (managed by the front desk and the central office of the management company and used to send out notices about construction, etc), we received a somewhat lengthy email advertising a promotional deal from “Company X.” Then, in early December, we received another email on the listserv saying that the same Company X had asked us to participate in their holiday food drive and that they’d left a box in our lobby to collect food donations. The box in the lobby was accompanied by a sign about Company X as well as a stack of postcards detailing their promotional deals.

When I inquired about why Company X was advertised to our captive-audience residents via the building listserv, I was told that “a few of my neighbors had a good experience with that company” and some others had asked for referrals for that kind of company, so it was sent out to the whole building (instead of just to those who had asked for referrals). And when I asked why Company X was being given free advertising in our lobby for a few weeks under the guise of a holiday food drive, I was told that the management company thought “it would be nice to participate” and that the board had agreed. Sorry, but I can only see it as a shameless marketing ploy, especially because the email announcement for it had marketing campaign trackers attached to the link to Company X’s website (so that they can track how much traffic they get from those food donation announcement emails). The front desk insists that they were not paid to send out the advertisement and that they do not receive any incentives/commission if our building residents do business with Company X.

Anyway, all that being said — what are PoP reader experiences with promotional information on the building listserv or allowing advertisements in the building lobby? Is it common to receive promotional information via the building listserv (from which you can’t unsubscribe)? My current position is that I don’t want unsolicited advertisements on a list I have to be on, and I don’t want advertisements inside my building… but maybe I’m not in the majority and common practice is the reverse.

Recent Stories

From an email: “We’re thrilled to host the Make It Mount Pleasant! Spring Arts and Crafts Market on Sunday, April 28! The market will feature more than 50 local artists…

Sweet City Rolls Rides

Thanks to Jeff for sending this beautiful convertible Rolls Royce Corniche II:

2444 Wisconsin Avenue, NW Mario’s Trattoria opened in the former Surfside space in Glover Park in 2022. Just noticed the sad sign in the window:

If you have any animal/pet photos you’d like to share please send an email to princeofpetworth(at)gmail(dot)com with ‘Animal Fix’ in the title and say the name of your pet and…

For many remote workers, a messy home is distracting.

You’re getting pulled into meetings, and your unread emails keep ticking up. But you can’t focus because pet hair tumbleweeds keep floating across the floor, your desk has a fine layer of dust and you keep your video off in meetings so no one sees the chaos behind you.

It’s no secret a dirty home is distracting and even adds stress to your life. And who has the energy to clean after work? That’s why it’s smart to enlist the help of professionals, like Well-Paid Maids.

Read More

Submit your own Announcement here.

Metropolitan Beer Trail Passport

The Metropolitan Beer Trail free passport links 11 of Washington, DC’s most popular local craft breweries and bars. Starting on April 27 – December 31, 2024, Metropolitan Beer Trail passport holders will earn 100 points when checking in at the

DC Day of Archaeology Festival

The annual DC Day of Archaeology Festival gathers archaeologists from Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia together to talk about our local history and heritage. Talk to archaeologists in person and learn more about archaeological science and the past of our

×

Subscribe to our mailing list