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Archive for January, 2012

Reduce costs. Increase profits. Save the planet. That’s how you sell green!

If your green business solution can create a win, win, win for a customer, you can’t lose.

That’s my obvious answer to Korey Baker’s question on LinkedIn today: “What attracts business owners to the idea of “going green”?

To give my position credence, just look at McDonald’s 2011 Sustainability Scorecard. Of their 13 stated goals in five areas, they only met one:

“Increase energy awareness and education across the System to continue to realize savings to the bottom line and benefits to the environment.”

While they’re making progress in other CSR areas, including sustainable supply chain, employee experience, nutrition & well being, and community, it’s no surprise that the big savings are in environmental responsibility.

As I mentioned in the American marketing Association article about the sustainability scorecard, McDonald’s wins by reducing operating costs, increasing net profits, and creating a story about their sustainability that they can share with the world.

That’s how you sell “green” to a company. What’s your answer?

New Burning Man film celebrates the places you can go

Creativity either touches a person or pushes them away. Rarely is there a middle ground.

Our son Parker, with his friends Will Walsh and Teddy Saunders, just posted their documentary of Burning Man as seen through Dr. Seuss goggles. I’m proud of their accomplishment in producing such an ambitious project and obviously connecting with so many viewers. On Facebook, Burning Man is already calling it one of the top festival films for 2011.

I’m also amazed by the comments this short film is receiving on YouTube and Redit video. The reactions are an interesting study at how people embrace or fear creativity.

Where does this film take you?

New TV spots for Goodwill of Central AZ explore your donation options

The heros in our new 30 second TV spots for Goodwill of Central Arizona are people donating their clothing and household items. We follow their journeys navigating the many tempting options to dispose of their goods, including the convenience of throwing them away or dumping them in curbside donations bins – many owned by questionable for-profit entities that take your items out of state.

Our first spot follows a boy as he finds a new home for his Teddy Bear. The second spot features empty-nesting parents as they collect the items from their grown daughter’s room and relive the memories. Michele and I can especially relate to the second spot, having two of our three kids now on their own.

The theme throughout is that you have choices when giving away your clothing and household items, and we’re hoping you will choose to donate them to a nonprofit that will put them to good use helping others. Obviously, we would like your story to conclude at Goodwill.

Did you know that 90 cents of every dollar worth of items you donate to Goodwill funds workforce development programs that help put people to work in your community?

We’re also pleased that the print portion of this campaign is featured on Ads of the World.

What is your Goodwill journey? What treasure have you found and what have you donated to help put people back to work?

Coca-Cola’s polar bear white cans: Marketing blunder or brilliance?

Everything you read about Coca-Cola’s festive white soda can introduced during the holidays to help save polar bears say it was a colossal marketing failure. I think not.

Look at Coke’s publicity stunt for the World Wildlife Fund with your conscious mind – and the backlash it ignited among its loyal customers – and it seems the world’s most recognizable brand blew it. Now, consider the disruption this white can created in the collective subconscious – and the attention that resulted – and you’ll see the brilliance that drives this campaign.

For more than 125 years, Coca-Cola has burned its logo and red can into our collective mental circuitry. In his book, Incognito, the secret lives of our brains, David Eagleman describes how the enormous subconscious architecture of our brain is markedly faster and more efficient – and more powerful – than our conscious mind. We think we’re in control, but we’re really not.

We’re hardwired to learn, imprint and do things without thinking, so that our clodhopping conscious self isn’t hobbled with automatic tasks. Do something often enough, and it becomes rote. If you’re even a moderate Coke drinker and you get thirsty for a soda, or you’re in the soft drink aisle at your grocer, you reach for that red can without thinking.

Now, the makers of your favorite soft drink disrupts that process by surprising your subconscious with the exact opposite of what it expects – a white can – and they’ve just triggered significant cognitive dissonance.

Your inner self is saying, “What the hell?” while your conscious brain tries to create a rational narrative around the surprise. You might not even know why you’re agitated, but one thing is for sure, it gets you actively thinking about the product and acting upon your impulses.

It’s the oldest storytelling trick in the book. Everyone from the likes of Greek mythologists, Bach, Shakespeare, Spielberg, and global marketers worth their spit have used cognitive dissonance to elicit a reaction by tweaking their audience’s implicit memory to cause an explicit reaction.

Even Coke said they were trying to be disruptive with its marketing. And it worked. Everyone carried the story, including Time, Wallstreet Journal, ABC NewsHuffington Post, and multitudes of bloggers and the so-called social media elite, with alarming headlines that included words like, “consumer backlash,” “resentment,” “fiasco,” “trickery,” and even “blasphemy.”

To be fair, there’s even a Save the White Polar Bear Coca Cola Cans Facebook page.

Are you kidding me? Is any of this rational? Of course not.

Coca-Cola and the World Wildlife Fund pulled off a miraculous marketing campaign that brought greater attention to an issue that is melting in public sentiment as steadily as the disappearing ice caps, while whipping up a whirling dervish of visceral attention for a ubiquitous brand during the most competitive time of the year for consumer mindshare.

Kudos to Coke. Like the street corner magician, they pulled off a marketing slight-of-hand that everyone talked about, but nobody got.