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Social Marketing Strategy: What I learned about giving from #saveteecycle and a Jewel song

I’ve seen people say before that in social media “You have to give to get.” And to that, I say, AMEN. For most marketers, this is of course a complete and utter disconnect from how they are used to thinking. Yet, I contend, for many it would be the most effective social media/marketing/business strategy they could possibly implement.

Of course, in the past few years, myriad marketers have jumped on the cause marketing bandwagon. And, while rare companies are launching ambitious programs like Kohl’s Cares, and The Pepsi Refresh Project and the like, to be honest, in my experience, most companies I talk to about strategies like this don’t yet understand how giving can benefit them. I could tell a couple of stories here about companies I have pitched this strategy to in the past three months that just didn’t get it at all, but that would be very uncool. They get really excited about it in the initial meeting, because they can see how it would improve perception of their brand and create media interest and online engagement. Then they get cold feet and decide to just keep running some radio or TV spots. And I know why it falls apart. It falls apart because:

1. It is not a “proven” strategy. I can present research on the topic but I cannot prove that it will drive sales. (Of course, no one can prove that radio or TV will drive sales, either. It’s just “safer”.)
2. The company is not “really” driven by community at a DNA level; I am feeling out what they are made of, and it’s not this.

Here’s the personal side of this, the background on why I am thinking a lot about it. I’ve spent, oh, a couple of decades now marketing airlines, computers, motorcycles, clothing, etc. and sadly little of it has ever involved the strategy of giving something back. Until recently. A few weeks ago I was thinking about how it would be super rewarding to use my mad social media skills (yes, I am being facetious) to do something good, give something back.

Enter #saveteecycle and www.saveteecycle.org. Thanks to amazing co-conspirators like @bootyp and Craig Vermeulen from William Ryan Homes and numerous amazing supporters we are all well on our way to rebuilding at least one family’s home after the Brew City Flood. And, honestly, what I have gotten back from this effort in terms of 1) pride and pure enjoyment 2) deeper social engagement (more followers, and more importantly, more followers who actually know me/talk to me and I them) 3) good karma e.g. a really exciting new future possibility for something that makes a difference – all huge. To be clear, none of those are why I am doing it; just an observation of the outcomes. Repeat after me: you have to give to get.

There’s a Jewel song called Life Uncommon that is really powerful and crystallizes this, at least for me. If you don’t know it, check it out and think happy thoughts for @teecycletim and @teecyclejess. Or if you want to cut to the points about branding and strategy and stuff jump down to below the video and lyrics.

And here are the lyrics, just because they ROCK:

Don’t worry, Mother
It’ll be all right
Don’t worry, Sister
Say your prayers and sleep tight
It’ll be fine
Lover of mine
It’ll be just fine.

And lend your voices only to sounds of freedom
No longer lend your strength to that which you wish to be free from
Fill your lives with love and bravery and you shall lead
A life uncommon.

I’ve heard your anguish
I’ve heard your hearts cry out
We are tired, we are weary
But we aren’t worn out
Set down your chains
‘Til only faith remains
Set down your chains.

And lend your voices only to sounds of freedom
No longer lend your strength to that which you wish to be free from
Fill your lives with love and bravery and you shall lead
A life uncommon.

There are plenty of people who pray for peace
But if praying were enough, it would have come to be
Let your words enslave no one
The heavens will hush themselves to hear
Our voices ring out clear with sounds of freedom
Sounds of freedom

C’mon you unbelievers
Move out of the way
There is a new army coming
And we are armed with faith

To live we must give
To live.

And lend your voices only to sounds of freedom
No longer lend your strength to that which you wish to be free from
Fill your lives with love and bravery and you shall lead
A life uncommon.

*end of song*

There are a veritable ton of rhetorical questions we could debate on the topic of cause marketing and corporate social integrity strategies.

Why are more marketers really jumping on this strategy? Is it because, as one study indicated, 87% of consumers are likely to switch from one product to another – price and quality being equal – if one product is associated with a good cause, an increase from 66% in 1993? Do consumers really switch brands because of cause involvement or do they just say they will?

Is it because more companies really have more social integrity, or are more just using this superficially as a strategy to differentiate in a world of sameness?

Will Kohl’s Cares, Pepsi Refresh and the like translate to sales and market share? Or “just” some goodwill and good buzz?

What would happen if more companies had the courage to actually step up in a big way and lead a…gasp…social marketing revolution, if you will…in which most brands actually give a crap about their communities?

What do you think?

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  • http://twitterworks.tv Joe Sorge

    Sue, wow! I’ve shared so many of those feelings, thank you for putting them into words here. Also, repeatedly throughout your post I found myself remembering similar feelings when I participate in something unique and selfless called It Starts with Us. I have a feeling that you and most of your reader would absolutely love participating. Check out: http://ItStartsWith.us

    Nate St. Pierre, the founder of ISWU spends huge amounts of hours working with corporations to drive home many of the same points you’ve made here. Those that “get it” really get it and by that I mean I do believe that Nate would report these companies seeing healthier customer acquisition, retention, and bottom line improvements. Maybe we can get Nate to drop by here and give a report.

    Ironically, it’s @TeeCycleTim that introduced me to Nate @ItStartsWithUs. What comes around,…..you know the rest.

    Thanks again Sue.

  • http://www.spaighttalk.com Sue Spaight

    Thank you, Joe. You know, I’ve seen a few tweets about It Starts With Us and have wanted to look into it. And now, I will. Funny thing, this post was almost about/called “What Can You Start” But It Starts With Us is far better :) I would absolutely LOVE to meet Nate and learn about what he is doing, how we can help. Awesome.

  • http://www.twitter.com/ArtseyC Amy Canada

    Thanks for that post, Sue. One thing I love about small businesses is that they usually are deeply connected their communities and already understand this. And now we try to get more of them to see how these tools called social media can make their efforts more efficient, effective, productive, and have farther reach.

    And inevitably, the findings are that no amount of business success can rival the feeling of changing someone’s life for the better… just because you can. =)

    @Joe: thanks for that link. I heart people like Nate.

  • Linda Neff

    Several weeks ago you wrote about leadership in two posts. My head was nodding up and down in agreement as I read your thoughts and the insights of those who responded.

    Your post today, coupled with meeting two remarkable individuals this week, @DJWillieShakes and Tracey Hagedorn, and a local hipster radio station who broke a contract with our non-profit team, is serving as the big scratch across the record moment that has halted me in my tracks; a crystallized understanding that good leaders are open learners and leadership “best practices” are found and learned outside the privileged playgrounds of traditional business.

    Based on your observations and the Jewel lyrics you shared, it’s not about good or even exceptional leadership, is it? It’s about gutsy leadership and taking the less than desirable road filled with potholes and no guard rails. You and a bunch of other amazing individuals assessed the situation of @teecycletim, Jess and Baby Clara, and then went to work. You thought with leadership and have taken action as leaders. You skipped the hours of meetings discussing ROI or whether or not these efforts would make a deposit or withdrawal into the brand’s equity account, or any number of other riveting topics that we as marketers meet about for hours. So many times it’s these very conversations that render ineffective leadership resulting in water downed strategies and programs powered by a wishbone rather than a backbone.

    While Captains of Industry make the headlines and make the heart of Wall Street beat or not beat, there’s a another rank of leaders who are marching through less travelled roads riddled with pot holes and leading for good: Tracey Hagedorn with No Condom? No Way! http://www.milwaukee.gov/nocondomnoway and @DJWillieShakes with his Put Down the Guns festival; these leaders have sky rocketed past Captains of Industry and knowingly or unknowingly have become Captains of Destiny. Captains of Destiny not only understand how to be a trusted leader and lead effectively, every fiber of their being understands that implementing positive change replaces ignorance with knowledge, blight with possibilities, road blocks with opportunities, fear with hope and in the end drives commerce and builds a stronger bottom line.

    In our community the need is significant whether it’s unemployment, poverty, education, homelessness, hunger, natural disaster, access to health care – the list goes on and on and is reverberated throughout our state, our country and world. In order to create positive change en masse it will take established brands and companies (as you say Sue, those who actually give a crap about their communities) four-wheelin’ through the pot holes of the meaty and sometimes socially unpopular issues of the day. It will take recognized Captains of Industries with guts and moxie (unlike the leaders of the local hipster radio station), to eschew traditional ROI on the front end to insure that new campaigns and marketing programs make it out of the board room and into the marketplace in order to address the social needs of the day. It will be the Captains who have the intellect, heart and backbone for adventure who can help shape positive destiny implementing “doing good” as part of their ongoing business model.

    The time is now to push beyond great programs like Kohl’s and Pepsi’s and get at the root causes of the social issues of the day. As marketers we have the opportunity to be great leaders like @DJWillieShakes, Tracey Hagedorn and Sue Spaight by acting upon the “give to get” model for both the socially acceptable and gritty issues of the day including poverty, violence, teen pregnancy, childhood obesity, STDs and hunger. Taking the road filled with potholes requires a leadership style of giving fueled by fortitude and authenticity. In the end it is the giving that begets the deposits to brands’ bottom lines and equity accounts. It’s a business model that works and along the way fills in some of those potholes ultimately paving the way for new generations.

    Be courageous and be a Captain of Destiny who gives to get!

  • http://www.spaighttalk.com Sue Spaight

    Hi, Amy.

    Welcome – thanks for reading and commenting. I agree that small businesses may be more inclined to “get” community; but I am running into a disappointing number of small businesses who don’t. And, I think it’s even harder for larger corporations to get their heads around. Granted, these are tough times for so many retailers, and I am thinking in particular of some recent experiences I’ve had in that category.

    I love your point about helping them see how these tools called social media can make their efforts more efficient, effective, productive and have farther reach; that is a great way of summing up the amazing facilitation effect that these tools have had. It’s actually shocking at times how quickly we, together, can spread the word and have an impact. It’s a beautiful thing to be a part of and difficult to explain to a marketer who hasn’t had the firsthand experience. That in and of itself is a great challenge for us all to tackle.

    Sue

  • http://www.spaighttalk.com Sue Spaight

    Linda,

    Wow. I’m rendered a bit speechless (in a good way of course) by your comment, which really should be a post unto itself. First of all, it’s just so great to hear your inspiring voice here. You make a heck of a revolutionary or Captain of Destiny yourself. You are right, so much of it is just wanting more marketers to be courageous and avoid the programs “powered by a wishbone instead of a backbone.” Love that. There ARE so many needs in our communities, and I am truly encouraged and inspired by you and Joe pointing out some more of the folks who are stepping up, raising their hand, and saying “We can do something about this.” It’s going to take a whole lot more of that, to get things back on track, so it’s a good thing we have a toolset now that can empower us and make it easier to spread the positive word. And yes, ultimately, it will take more established brands and mega-organizations to step up, too, and as you wisely point out, not just on “safe” issues. Fortunately, there seem to be many of us here with the mission of converting them, one person, one company, one issue at a time.

    For the rest of you here, if you don’t know Linda, she is @maxpaige on Twitter and she is brilliant. Give her a follow.

    P.S. Note to my boss: I want new business cards that say “Captain of Destiny” : )

    Sue

  • http://jeffreygallen.com/2010/08/riding-the-wheels-of-change/ Riding the Wheels of Change | Jeffrey G. Allen

    [...] was reading Sue Spaight’s (@SueSpaight) most recent post Social Marketing Strategy: What I learned about giving from #saveteecycle and a Jewel song and I think she has managed to bring words to something a lot of us have felt. So much so for me in [...]

  • Craig Vermeulen

    Sue- you are spot on with this. More companies do need to give back and actually give a crap about the people who actually keep them in business.

    Now that I have been put in charge at William Ryan here in Wisconsin that is a huge push for me personaly to have the company I’m now driving to give more back.

    Since I’m still relatively new to the Social media for my company, I would love to talk and get thoughts on what we can be doing better to engage the public.

    Craig

  • http://www.spaighttalk.com Sue Spaight

    ***RAUCOUS APPLAUSE*** Craig, it is so great to hear those words come out of the mouth of management, I could kiss you. Except then your wife would be mad. You know what I mean. I would be so delighted to talk about how William Ryan Homes can engage; you are off to a hell of a great start. Let’s schedule those beers-in-East-Tosa. -Sue

  • http://www.tommartin.typepad.com Tom Martin

    nice post Sue. So true… but I’d go farther than just saying you have to give to get.

    Think the give has to be true — not a quid pro quo — just giving in an honest, human way. Karma takes care of the rest.

    @TomMartin

  • http://www.spaighttalk.com Sue Spaight

    Great add, Tom and I agree. Giving without the expectation of return is more powerful. Harder to sell in, but more powerful by far.

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