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Archive for March, 2010

CMOs, Are You Telling Your CSR Story as Well as You Can?

Why are so many companies not telling their CSR story to their customers? Image by Ben Heine

Why are so many companies not telling their CSR story to their customers? Image by Ben Heine

What if I told you that three out of four of your potential customers want to embrace companies that are socially responsible? Don’t believe me? How about that little P.R. shop, Burson-Marsteller? They just published their Second Annual Corporate Social Responsibility Perceptions Survey.

The survey tested consumer views of companies in 14 industries, and found that 75% are big believers in corporate social responsibility. Despite the recession, 70 percent are willing to pay more for a $100 product from a company they regard as responsible.

Companies Aren’t Effectively Telling Their CSR Stories

From the report: “Companies are not communicating their CSR efforts with consumers as effectively as they could. Only 13 percent of consumers report having read about a company’s social responsibility agenda on its website. If companies are have to better communicate their CSR efforts, they may have the opportunity to influence consumer perceptions seeing as 75 percent of consumers who have read about a company’s social responsibility agenda on its website indicated that it made them more likely to purchase products or services from that company.”

So which industries are doing well and which are not? Thumbs up goes to the Food, Consumer Goods and Retail industries, while Financial Services, Healthcare and Media are a resounding thumbs down.

Here are three companies that are doing a great job of telling their CSR stories by making their causes part of their business DNA. Essentially, they’re not just creating campaigns. They’re marshaling movements. And who benefits? Everyone!

  1. Adelante Healthcare and its “Sustainable Healthcare” model
  2. Frito-Lays and its “Sun Chips” product line
  3. Patagonia, as demonstrated through its “Footprint Chronicles”

Here’s the report:

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What a Paper Coffee Cup can Teach Green Marketers About Social Media Strategy

Sketch by Erin Beachy, Creative Commons

Sketch by Erin Beachy, Creative Commons

Yes, online social media takes a lot of time and effort.

No, like everything, there are no guarantees of success: It’s not a silver bullet for your marketing.

Yes, it’s OK and natural to feel trepidatious about baring your sole online.

Absolutely, you have to be authentic, warts and all.

No, you don’t have to do it just because everyone else seems to be online.

Yes, you’re right, it’s not necessarily easy to measure.

Of course, you would be wise to start with a strategy on every communications tactic you add to your marketing mix.

That’s right, online social media is a communications tactic, not a strategy.

I feel your pain. It can be overwhelming. So start slowly with a channel you’re comfortable with, be it Facebook, LinkedIn, your personal blog.

No, Twitter is not going to save the world.

These are just a few of the answers to the many wonderful questions we discussed today during our online social media workshop for our friends of Social Venture Partners of Arizona. These are remarkably accomplished business people who are fairly new, or are wanting to stick their big toe into social media. Much of their interest is in helping to build momentum for causes they are associated with, as well as prospecting for their own business.

The best advice I can give them and you is to keep it simple. Start slow and build from there.

Here’s a great example that I just happened upon following today’s social media workshop. It’s called BetaCup.com. They started following me on Twitter, I was intrigued and clicked through on their link. That’s called, “Conversion,” and is one metric of success.

I took a sip from BetaCup and liked what I found. Tody Daniels, their co-founder and community organizer, greeted me with this simple, believable video, that told an interesting story about their singular goal:

“Find the best ideas to eliminate paper cup consumption and help bring these ideas to life.”

Betacup from the betacup on Vimeo.

And they made it easy for me to share it with you.

BetaCup also makes its easy for you to submit your ideas on an open source platform that allows everyone to see and comment on your invention. The best idea, judged by a jury, wins $10,000, and the five runners up received $2,000 each. Easy idea submission plus cash = more conversion windows.

Their resources page makes it fun to do your research with links to cool stuff like how-to origami cups.

BetaCup’s blog shares tales about the coffee cup mission and related stories. I thought this video was interesting as their sponsor, Starbucks, created a tree from coffee cups in New York’s Madison Square Park. They keep hammering home the theme both online and off.

And they offer some great, easily digestible, background info on their cause, including:

  • 58 billion paper cups are thrown away (not recycled) every year
  • 20 million trees are cut down in the process of manufacturing paper cups
  • Amount of water used in the process is approximately 12 billion gallons

BetaCup is a terrific example of the power of not over-thinking your online social media project. I suppose the real effort and brilliance is in keeping it simple. The contest begins April 1, 2010, so this is a great program to follow and watch how they roll out their campaign. I think you can learn a lot here.

And remember, it all starts by telling better stories.

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FREE National Geographic Download for World Water Day

Click on the issue for your FREE interactive download

Click on the issue for your FREE interactive download

Today marks “World Water Day,” and National Geographic is offering a free download of its extraordinary water issue. The pictures are nothing short of phenomenal. But download it for the articles.

Drink up.

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Sustainable Storytelling and Other Tall Tales Featured on Our Agency’s New Website.

My favorite exchange from No Country for Old Men:

“You know what date is on this coin?”

“No.”

“1958. It’s been traveling twenty-two years to get here. And now it’s here.”

Our new agency website didn’t take twenty-two years to complete. In fact, it took only about 4 months. That’s near-record time for an agency website. It only felt like twenty-two years. There’s just so much to think about. Like, what pieces do you show in your work section? Do you show that great campaign from back in the day… the one you built with Pagemaker? In what order do you list your services?  Oh, and by the way, how do you portray and position yourself online?

“For Park&Co, the experience was daunting, rewarding, agonizing, puzzling, cathartic and fun as hell…”

…And that was just the home page. In the end, we arrived at a site that was far different than its predecessor, a site with no images on the home page, no bullets in the copy. We forsook all the social media silliness in favor of storytelling. We broke rules and bucked trends left and right, and we’ll probably hear about it from some.

Because it’s the online expression of an agency that’s constantly on the move, our website will never feel quite “done” to us. But you know what? Today we love it. For us, it’s the right site at the right time, and it does the one thing it had to do above everything else: tell our story.

We have also launched a new and quixotic blog to go with our site called, Extra Cuts.

But enough about us. What’s your two cents?

The above post was written by our creative director, Luis Medina.

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FREE Cup of Joe on Us!

Celebrate Friday – and Our 15th Anniversary – with a FREE Starbucks

Cup of Joe on Us for Our 15th Anniversary from ParkHowell.com on Vimeo.

I don’t care if you’re a venti-double-shot-skinny-hold-the-foam latte, or a tall-drip-with-room, I’d like to buy you a cup of coffee. Just pop in here, today only, and ask for a  “Park&Co.” Our friendly neighborhood baristas will gladly pour you the coffee of your choice on us. And please, let’s not be piggy. Just one cup per person, because we have a limited number of pours on our card. So hurry over and help us celebrate our 15th anniversary.

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