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G’s cause of the month: Food Fight MKE

G’s cause of the month: Food Fight MKE...

Here’s an easy way to do your good deed for the month: just Text FOOD to 52000. Let me explain.

We recently put ourselves on a new family budget, which includes a little bit each month to donate to a great cause. I’ve asked G (my 6-year-old son, Griffin) to help pick the cause each month. During this month of Thanksgiving, we’re giving what we can to help BEAT HUNGER. Which, here in Milwaukee, I’m sorry to say includes the HALF of children who live below poverty level. That just can’t be acceptable, right? So please do what you can to do something about it. If we all do, we can make it right.

G and I have chosen to donate through Food Fight MKE, a movement initiated by young adults to educate, engage, energize and inspire citizens to help beat hunger in Milwaukee. (Disclosure: the young ‘uns powering Food Fight MKE are part of the OrangeAid internship program at Jigsaw, the agency that pays for my family’s food. This post, I promise you, is purely my personal opinion/beliefs.)

To participate, just text FOOD to 52000 and $10 will be donated to Hunger Task Force, which is expert at making money go as far as it possibly can to help local families. You can donate this way up to three times, and I strongly encourage you to do so. I did.

Semi-secret tip: You can also have some fun and help kick off Food Fight MKE by coming to the Bradley Center this Friday, November 11th at 6:30 PM and participating in a Beat Hunger flash mob. Hope to see you there.

What are you doing to help BEAT HUNGER during Thanksgiving month?

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Please do all you can to help the 3 on 3 for Niebs Cancer Sucks fundraiser

Please do all you can to help the 3 on 3 for Niebs...

Imagine your 12-year-old has cancer. You’d want help, right? SO LET’S HELP.

Imagine that you’re at a pool party at your friends’ house with your son, a full-of-life, baseball-loving 12-year-old. Next thing you know, he is very ill and in extreme pain. A day or two later, he’s taken into brain surgery and diagnosed as having Medullablastoma, which according to Children’s Hospital of Boston is the “most common central nervous system tumor of childhood“. The tumors have been removed. But a month later, your child starts radiation, five days a week for six straight weeks along with weekly chemotherapy. A month after that, your son endures numerous cycles of chemo. By this point, he is incredibly weak and needs leg braces to get around. At the end of the last chemo cycle, you receive the horrific news that the tumors have returned and spread throughout his brain and spine. So your beloved child starts a different type of chemo. But, a few weeks later, an MRI reveals that it is not working as it should be.

Tumor of childhood” has to be one of most awful phrases ever, don’t you think? These are three words that should never be together. For any parent, really any human being with a beating heart, it’s positively unthinkable. Not for the Niebler family of Waukesha, Wisconsin, the family for which this story is excruciatingly real, because they have been living it for just over a year. Meet Andy Niebler, the 12-year-old about whom we are speaking. People who know Andy personally describe him as a great kid with a smile that lights up a room and brings joy to those around him. They say his whole family is warm, and caring, and funny with a fun-loving, optimistic attitude and a tremendous love for life.

Six key ways you can help Andy and his family through the 3 on 3 for Niebs Cancer Sucks fundraiser

Again, imagine if this story was YOU or YOUR CHILD. You’d want help, right? An incredible, caring, dedicated group of The Nieblers’ friends and neighbors have organized a basketball tournament - 3 on 3 for Niebs – as a fundraiser for Andy and his family, to help defray medical expenses. The event is on Sunday, August 7 at Center Court in Waukesha. Here’s a map to the event. ALL PROCEEDS from this event (except food concessions) are going directly to Andy and his family.

1. Register a team for the tournament. Have some fun and get some exercise for a great cause. Team registration closes on Saturday, July 16, so do it now!

2. Attend the event. It only costs $2, and in addition to the basketball tournament, there will be a silent auction, raffle and family fun like clowns, face painting and balloon artists.

3. Donate an item to the silent auction. E-mail 3on3forNiebs@gmail.com or find @3on3forNiebs on Twitter.

4. If you can’t make the event, you can still make a contribution through the event website. Every donation, regardless of size, is extremely appreciated by the Niebler family and the the organizers.

5. Become a sponsor: E-mail 3on3forNiebs@gmail.com or find @3on3forNiebs on Twitter.

6. Volunteer: Refs and scorekeepers are needed, along with other day-of-event support. E-mail 3on3forNiebs@gmail.com or find @3on3forNiebs on Twitter.

And, of course, continue spreading the word and offering #prayers4andy (the hashtag on Twitter). I know we’re all pulling and praying for Andy and his family. So let’s pull together and offer them as much support as we possibly can. Liking them on Facebook and tweeting and retweeting and blogging and above all, praying, are FANTASTIC. But we can do more.

Give a few bucks. Show up at the event. Donate an auction item, or become a sponsor. Please. Do. All. You. Can.

Peace and love – Spaight

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This one’s for you, Anne.

This one’s for you, Anne....

Over the past couple of years, those of you who read this blog (and I thank you from the bottom of my heart) have seen some difficult topics. The choice to euthanize a beloved dog. Miscarriage. Ovarian lumps. Why Klout is silly :] But this story is the hardest, because it is on behalf of someone who has become a dear friend, someone who has done a TON for our community over the years, and someone we need to do proud. That someone is Anne Sprecher.

The Story, In Anne’s Words.

I’d like to share with you (with Anne’s blessing) an email that she recently shared with some of her close friends:

Good Morning Dear Friends,

Please regard this as a cautionary tale. Late in May while lying on my bed I discovered a golf ball sized lump on my left abdomen near my hip bone. Because it was large and the area tender, I went to a doctor thinking I might have an inflamed lymph node or cyst. A few days before my appointment I couldn’t feel the lump anymore—it seemed to have disappeared or migrated elsewhere–but I decided to go anyway. The proactive Nurse Practitioner felt the lump and sent me for a blood test and ultra sound. She called me the next day to say she set up an appt for me with a very good gyn. One week later the gyn gave me a vaginal and rectal exam, the latter much to my surprise as it was something I’d never had before. He then issued orders for an MRI which I got a few days later. A week after the MRI results were in I saw the gyn again. His diagnosis: ovarian cancer, possibly early, stage two. His recommendation: get an appt with a gyn-oncologist. Yesterday I saw Dr. Hoogerland, who also gave me a vaginal and rectal exam and came to the same conclusion. I’m scheduled for tumor removal surgery July 6th, and then will undergo chemo about 3 weeks afterwards. If this cancer is in fact stage 2, if we caught it before it got to stage 3, I consider myself very, very lucky. As my oncologist friend at Stanford said, I dodged a bullet. Of course, we won’t know anything until the surgery but I’m betting on a positive outcome (stage 2). What I want to emphasize, as my friend Sue Spaight says: Know Your Lumps. If something feels odd, go to your doctor. Most signs for ovarian cancer are non-specific, eg, bloating, limited appetite, gas. The other important point I want to share with you is the importance of having your doctor or gyn give you both a vaginal and rectal exam annually. If I had had both previously, chances are the cancer would have been detected much earlier. Remember, you know your body better than anyone. Pay attention to even the most minute signs, and never, ever feel like you’re asking too much of your doctor if you think something’s wrong.

Cheers,
Anne

Get Involved. We Need to Support the People Who Support Us.

Anne has been incredibly strong and good-humored; if you know Anne personally, that won’t surprise you. But her surgery today, and the weeks that follow, are going to be difficult. Your support will mean so much. If you’re someone who pitches in to help regularly, bless you. And if you are someone who’s been sitting on the sidelines, thinking about getting more involved, I urge you to please take action now.

You may not realize how much Sprecher does in our community. They have supported, among many other causes, #SaveTeecycle, Gilda’s Club of Southeastern Wisconsin, Wisconsin Breast Cancer Coalition, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and the Burn Camp for Injured Youth. They are also supporting the American Liver Foundation’s 2011 Liver Walk, and I am asking you to please help me support Team Sprecher, and Anne Sprecher, this month.

Support Team Sprecher! There are several ways you can participate.

The first is to sign up to walk with Team Sprecher on July 30 at the Milwaukee lakefront. Your individual fundraising goal will be a modest $150, or whatever you want it to be.

The second, if you can’t walk that day, is to make a donation through Team Sprecher here.

Soon, we hope to have some great T-shirts for you to buy and other ways to get involved. But for now, please join the team and make a donation.  Team Sprecher’s goal is $5,000. Let’s put a big smile on Anne’s face and blow that goal out of the water!!!

If you can’t donate cash, but have an item you could donate for a Twitter auction, that works, too!

I’m also trying to organize a nice little surprise for Anne, so please drop me an email through this blog or drop your email addy in the comments if you want to help.

Please, everyone, let’s show how much we care. Thanks so much for your support. Drop your comments, thoughts, questions, ideas below.

Peace and love. -Spaight

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Announcing the winners of the Sprecher beer.

Announcing the winners of the Sprecher beer....

Ooooookay. Thanks to all who played along in the effort to name my two ovarian cysts without (or with) thinking I’m a whackjob. It definitely helped raise awareness of ovarian cyst/cancer symptoms; at least two women have made doctor appointments because of the post which makes me super happy; extra thanks to all of you who shared that crazy-ass post with your friends and family. And it also most definitely helped keep me entertained while waiting for surgery to be scheduled. It’s tomorrow morning at 7:30, so, time to name these bad girls and get them ooooooooout.

Between votes here on the blog and on Facebook, it was a close race between two suggestions. So, Sprecher Brewery has generously provided a second free case of beer so there could be two winners.

In the category of “the people’s favorite“, the winner is: Steve Farr @purpleonioninc for his entry “Boom” and “Bah”…as in Cyst Boom Bah.

In the category of “my favorite” (I mean, they are part of my person at present, so my vote has to count for something), the winner is: Steve Hawthorne @stonecreeksteve for his entry, “Chuck” and “Norris”.

While Cyst Boom Bah perfectly captures the spirit of celebration I will feel when these mutants are GONE, at the moment, I prefer to think of getting in there and kicking some ass.

Steve and Steve, you can pick up your free case of Sprecher at their gift shop whenever you like. The gift shop hours are here.

You might want to consider trying Sprecher’s new Summer Czech-style Pils; it’s getting really good reviews. Here’s how Sprecher describes it: “Brewed with imported malt, soft water and Saaz noble hops, this Czech-style Pilsner is the perfect summer beer. Its rich golden color complements the mild, earthy, spicy hop aromas and well balanced malt profile for a crisp, clean beer with subtle bitterness.” Yum. I’m salivating now and will be reaching for one of these as soon as I’m through surgery and off the pain meds.

Thanks again to all of you for playing along. Much love. -Spaight

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Know your ovarian lumps.

Know your ovarian lumps....

Know the symptoms of ovarian cancer and ovarian cysts so they don’t go undiagnosed.

Feels like lately this blog has been turning into what the Discovery Health Network used to be…I called it the “train wreck” channel. Every time you tuned in, it would be the-man-with-the-100-pound-tumor or the-man-who-is-turning-into-a-tree. Today, we bring you…anthropomorphized ovarian cysts. Ta-Da!

Amazing art by Stu. www.stunamidraws.com

I offered some vagaries about my health sitch a few days ago, you were kind enough to offer replies, and I know enough now to share the deets. There are two golf-ball-sized mutated lumps in my abdomen. More specifically, on my right ovary. My objective here is not to totally gross you out, though that may be a side effect. Nor is it to throw myself a proverbial pity party. Quite the contrary. My objective is to discuss the symptoms of ovarian cysts and ovarian cancer so you or your loved ones don’t do what I did and wait several months to go to the doctor because you never put it together. And maybe, just maybe, find a little levity in the process while I wait for surgery.

Cancer is, obviously, serious and not to be made light of (though I certainly share the recent sentiments of friends who have told it to {redacted} off). Trust me…I do know this. I lost my Mom to it. Her Mom had it. Two of her sisters each had multiple cancers. I am quite fully in touch with the insensitivity of making cancer into any sort of joke. Thankfully (understatement), it seems, in my case, I likely don’t have ovarian cancer (though it’s not 100% certain until after surgery and biopsy), but *just* some ginormous ovarian cysts. They are painful and they suck but they are (probably) not cancer.

So, first, symptoms you need to be aware of, which can be signs of either ovarian cancer or cysts. For several months now, I’ve had a backache and leg pain. I never in a million years would have attributed it to ovarian lumps, but it is in fact a common symptom. I’ve also had symptoms similar to pregnancy, painful boobs, nausea, the whole nine yards of too much information. Also very common with ovarian problems. I thought I was just, well, 42. Digestive problems…also a symptom, but I’ve had those forever. Fortunately, I started bleeding, which finally clued me into the fact that something is wrong. But, they don’t call ovarian cancer “the silent killer” for nothing…it is not unusual for it to go undiagnosed, as it did for over a year in Gilda’s Radner‘s case. Which is why I want you to be aware and able to potentially self-diagnose. Here is more information about the similar symptoms of ovarian cysts and ovarian cancer.

Also, please, please, PLEASE do not put off your annual exam. No one looks forward to being poked (hat tip to @bootyp) and prodded, but DO IT. I was six months late, and that is just stupid.

If you’d like to join me in gratitude and in making a donation to Gilda’s Club of Southeastern Wisconsin, which really needs more support to continue providing services to people with cancer of all kinds and their families, I’ve started a Gilda’s Club fundraising page here.

Finally, while I wait, and try to keep my mind busy and free from worry, I had this random notion that I should probably name my two mutated ovarian lumps. Then someone told me that Gilda named her ovarian tumors (or maybe her ovaries, I’m not sure) Rosanna and Danna. HA! Classic. Suggestions thus far for mine have included things like: Rosanna and Danna, in honor of Gilda. Sid and Nancy (love). Itchy and Scratchy. You get the idea. Leave your suggested names in the comments and the one with the most “likes” when I go in for surgery (next week?) gets a case of Sprecher beer, on me and “the girls.” Update: Sprecher Brewery has generously offered to donate the beer, in honor of the “evil cystahs”. Thanks Sprecher!

Thanks for your support, playing along, and making us laugh. Right now, it really is the best medicine.

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What’s Next?

What’s Next?...

I’m reading Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide after recently seeing one of its authors, Sheryl WuDunn, speak at a Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin luncheon. Simultaneously painful and inspiring, it’s really got me thinking about what’s next, specifically, who we should help next. With #saveteecycle, we collectively raised about $12,000 and rebuilt a family’s home. For $13,000, a school can be built in a Cambodian village through Rural School Project, helping keep young girls out of brothels.

In Half the Sky, WuDunn and Nicholas Kristof share this Hawaiian parable, which I adore:

A man goes out on the beach and sees that it is covered with starfish that have washed up in the tide. A little boy is walking along, picking them up and throwing them back into the water.

“What are you doing, son?” the man asks. “You see how many starfish there are? You’ll never make a difference.”

The boy paused thoughtfully, and picked up another starfish and threw it into the ocean.

“It sure made a difference to that one,” he said.

So. What’s next? Think about it with me, won’t you?

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What do you mean by “Activate”?  The house that Twitter built.

What do you mean by “Activate”? The h...

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Flickr Photo Set: Tracy Apps

This post is a preview of a section of The Social CMO Book which I’ve been asked to write (just a section, not a book), about activation and what that means. Coincidentally, the story of #saveteecycle seems to me to play right into this topic. Consider it a work in progress.

What do you mean by “Activate”?

To activate something means to set it in motion, to make it active or more active. In chemistry, it means to accelerate a reaction in something, as by heat. That is exactly what we’re talking about here. Once you have established a social network and begun to engage, you need to determine ways to set it in motion, light it on fire, add catalysts. In other words, get it actively working towards your goal.

To illustrate the concept of activation, I’d like to share a story.

This is The House that Twitter Built

On July 22, 2010, torrential rains hit Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the USA, flooding neighborhoods and destroying homes. One family that lost its home was that of Tim and Jess Cigelske and their baby, Clara. For more backstory, here’s Tim’s original post with the story of their loss, The (Not So) Great Milwaukee Flood of 2010.

Tim and Jess were the owners of www.teecycle.org, a website they created to sell used, reclaimed T-shirts and donate a portion of the proceeds to urban trail restoration. This, in part, had helped them build strong social networks in their community, both online and offline. And, thankfully, it also set up an engine for them to quickly start generating funds.

So, when their home was destroyed, they were highly engaged, but not yet activated. Katie Klein-Murphy, (@bootyp on Twitter) one of their engaged Twitter followers, and I “overheard” a conversation Tim was having on Twitter about their situation and asked how we could help. We thought of a fundraiser including a T-shirt sale and a silent auction. And then, we set it on fire, or more accurately, we created ways for our community to set it on fire, and offered facilitation. (I had met Tim once or twice, before the flood, and he and Katie had never met.)

With the help of Tracy Apps, a brilliant local designer engaged in the cause, we launched a website, www.saveteecycle.org, to serve as the hub of activity. Our unwritten strategy centered on providing as many ways as possible for people to take action. They could donate online, buy a T-shirt, contribute space, drink or food for the event, donate an item for the silent auction, volunteer to help the day of the fundraiser, or simply raise their hand as someone who wanted to help as the cause moved forward.

Once the hub was in place, not only did donations start coming in, members of the community began taking the initiative to pour gasoline on the fire. They began creating beautiful original artworks for the auction, and tweeting their progress. They auctioned off sports tickets on Twitter to raise money. They launched promotions through which they would donate a percentage of sales to the cause. They created a spinoff fundraiser run – the Runraiser – which the Cigelskes paid forward to their neighbor because so much was happening on their behalf.

It was amazing, and beautiful, and golden.

In a nutshell, all we did was activate the activists.

Another strategy was to ask local businesses to get involved as sponsors to add to our resources. Some of them joined us mainly due to prior relationships with Tim Cigelske, the homeowner. This included Sprecher Brewery, a prominent microbrewery that learned about the situation via blogs and Twitter and provided event space free of charge, and Kashou Carpets, which provided lovely new rugs for the home. Others miraculously said “yes” due to prior relationships with us that were originally forged through social media channels including Twitter and blogs. This included COA restaurant, a popular Mexican eatery that provided all of the food free of charge. We asked Renewal by Andersen of Milwaukee to provide all new windows for the house, and miraculously they said “yes” too.

Sprecher and COA activated themselves to help promote the event through posters and flyers. And, one local business was exceptionally activated. Craig Vermuelen of William Ryan Homes knew Tim Cigelske from www.teecycle.org and Twitter. They had never met in person. A natural activist, Craig took it upon himself to start getting materials to restore the Cigelske home at low or no-cost, and donated the labor to do most of the restoration. When we asked Craig why he decided to help, his reply was: “Because I could.” That, my friends, is the true spirit of social marketing, or at least what it should be.

All of this activity also activated the media. We did no media outreach other than organically occurring media conversations on Twitter, yet the effort was featured on television several times in the weeks leading up to the fundraiser.

Eight weeks after the flood, the main fundraising event occurred. More than 200 people attended. Including online donations, online and offline T-shirt sales, and proceeds from the silent auction, the activism raised more than $10,000. Due to costs being lowered by William Ryan Homes, this was enough to restore the Cigelske home to even better than its original condition.

At the fundraiser, we live streamed video of the restored house so all could see.

Happy ending: Tim, Jess and Baby Clara moved back home on Sunday, September 19th, 2010. : )

A million thanks, again, to every one who helped activate #saveteecycle. We all wish we could do this same thing for every single person that was devastated by the flood. Let’s continue doing our best to help, one person, one family at a time.

As a marketer, ask yourself: how can I activate my (brand) activists? Hint: it requires encouraging participation. And participating as an organization or brand. Activation and activism go hand in hand. More about this topic in the days to come.

Comments?

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

Social Marketing Strategy: What I learned about gi...

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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Milwaukee Flood Fundraiser for @TeecycleTim and @TeecycleJess – Raise Your Hand

Milwaukee Flood Fundraiser for @TeecycleTim and @T...

Have you seen the @TeecycleTim post on the not-so-great Milwaukee flood of 2010? If not, please do. Their home is unlivable, and Katie @bootyp and I are organizing a fundraiser.

Milwaukee is an amazing community, and so is Twitter. Folks have started raising their hand and offering help. Will you help us raise some money to rebuild 12-week-old baby Clara’s room and the rest of the house? The unsinkable @bootyp said it best: Tim and Jess bring smiles to so many faces, it’s our turn to bring smiles for them to wear.

The date and place of the event will be announced very soon. If you want to help, and/or if you have a specific idea for what you might be able to offer, let us know. We’re close on a place, but still open to suggestions; needs to be able to provide room for a silent auction and a band and some other stuff. We’re close on a band, but in case the date doesn’t work for them, are open to suggestions. We need more silent auction items for sure; if you know celebrities who will autograph stuff for auction, that’s cool. We’re working on getting a flooring company and a window company involved to provide discounted floors and windows for the rebuild; if you have connections there, by all means, let us know.

If you want to help right now, please buy a Teecycle t-shirt and stay tuned for more information about the event.

You can make a difference. After all, as they say, it takes a village. Raise your hand, here or on Twitter.

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