eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 

Your Online Guide » Internet » Marketing Strategies

[C295]Cause Related Marketing Examples
by Kevin Mcleod, Kev
Imagine if goodwill could be ordered online and delivered to a company’s doorstep, like office supplies. But it’s not that easy. Goodwill has to be earned and nurtured. It develops over time. So when companies adopt a social cause because they think it will win them instant trust and credibility, as measured by increased revenue, they often end up disappointed.

Whether it’s underwriting a public-service television campaign, hosting an event to benefit the local community, or sponsoring a fundraiser to support a worthy cause, companies have no shortage of opportunities to be good Corporate citizens. But consumers are smart they can tell the difference between companies whose motives are sincere and those whose real cause is to sell more products. When a company shows genuine, long-term commitment to its customers and to the larger community, by way of its business practices and public service, then goodwill will follow and the business will benefit. Bernie & Phyl’s Furniture is a prime example of a hometown company that has solidified its reputation by giving back to the local community.

Started by the husband-and-wife team of Bernie and Phyllis (“Phyl") Rubin in 1983, Bernie & Phyl’s Furniture has evolved from a small single storefront into one of the largest retailers in New England, with six stores, $87 million in sales, and 450 employees.
Bernie and Phyl Rubin built their company and their brand around the idea of family because family is what they value most.

Building a Family-Oriented Brand

When our agency first started working with Bernie & Phyl’s on their advertising campaign nearly 14 years ago, they understood that in order to create a brand name for their stores, advertising had to be a top priority. As result of their TV commercials, Bernie & Phyl’s Furniture enjoys almost universal brand-name awareness in the market, and Bernie and Phyllis Rubin are recognized practically everywhere they go. They have leveraged their company’s reputation and their own popularity as a vehicle to help build strong, healthy families. Public-service sponsorships are an integral part of Bernie and Phyl’s annual advertising buys.

Goodwill Can't Be Quantified

Goodwill isn’t tangible, like retail stores or equipment. It can’t be appraised like physical assets or measured in the way that sales revenue and profits can. Clients can’t always quantify the “results’ of their community outreach. Community outreach needs to be viewed as a necessary and important part of doing business. Earned consumer goodwill is reflected in a healthy percentage of repeat sales, in annual growth, and in positive feedback from customers. (Especially when they want to thank your company for doing the right thing, and ask how they, too, can get involved).

Recommendations for Advertisers

Get involved in things you believe in. Consumers can distinguish between a true believer and a cause dabbler; your cause should be something near and dear to you.

Focus on activities that are consistent with your business and brand. How does your effort relate to your business and industry? Does the alignment make sense?

Build community outreach around a central theme. If you keep changing your focus, you’re communicating that you don’t know who you are.
Educate and engage your employees. Making sure they know what you are doing and why will invoke pride in the company and a sense of belonging. Weekly management meetings and company newsletters keep your staff informed about community-related projects and encourage their involvement.

Keep public service separate from product advertising and marketing. They go together like a plaid shirt and a polka-dot tie.
Make a long-term commitment. The goodwill you will generate will be worth more than all of your physical assets combined.


Did you ever ask yourself “Why should someone buy from me and not from my competitors?” If not you should consider how your offering is different from those of the many competitors who are vying for the same customers as you are. One of the ways to make your business stand out from the crowd is to link your business with charity work and non-profit public service.

Everybody is chasing after the all-mighty buck, but only a few firms really do more than pay lip service to social service. Let's take a look at how charity work can help your firm as well as the wider society around it.

1. It will give your business an extra edge

As mentioned above, when you become involved in social work in a significant way, then you begin to stand out from the crowd. It gives you that something special, which may be the difference when your potential customer makes up her mind and decides which firm to go with. I have had customers confide to me that one of the reasons that they chose to do business with my firm is that they know that some of their money will be allocated to charity.

2. It increases your credibility

Credibility and trust are vital if you are going to sell anything. If someone is going to part with their scare resources they want to be sure that they are doing business with the right people. When you show that your firm is doing something meaningful for society in addition to the normal work of making money, then you and your whole team are viewed in another light.

3. Charity work is inexpensive

It doesn't take any money to set aside part of your website to explain your company's participation in charitable activities. Similarly, it doesn't cost you anything to mention your charitable activities along with your primary information in other media. Messages in your firm's internal bulletins and media are likewise easy and inexpensive to implement.

4. It helps you to convince people whom you would otherwise not reach

Charity work appeals to the nobler side of human nature, and, believe it or not, deep down inside of every one of us is the desire to do something that is good. When you get involved in charitable work you will reach civic minded individuals who are oftentimes community leaders and prominent in social, economic and political sectors of society. It might take you years of normal business activity to make contact with people like that and in fact, you might, like most people, never connect with them.

5. It lifts the morale of your staff and your clients

High morale is one of the intangible factors that can be the difference between great success and mediocrity and even complete failure. Your team will in fact become a team when it works not only for financial gain but also for civic betterment. Your customers will also feel good about the charitable aspect of your company and will be more likely to refer you to others.

6. It builds your legacy to society

A successful financier told me recently, “In a hundred years who will remember the hotels that I built? But, they will still be attending and benefiting from the university that I am now helping.” We have to take care of our core business, no doubt, but we should also have an eye on leaving a lasting mark on the world around us.

So, take a look at your marketing tools and do whatever you can to incorporate charitable activity into your overall plan of action. You, your company and society will be the winners.

Work Goal

The foolish work for money,
Not other values, so they get only money.

The clever work for improvement,
They gain success and money.

The wise work for goodness and charity,
They receive friends, success, money,
And happiness.

Article Source : Pg. 6

About Author
Both Kevin Mcleod & Darrell Berg-smith are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Kevin Mcleod has sinced written about articles on various topics from Marketing Strategies. Kevin McLeod is founder and president of, an advertising and design firm based in Winchester, Massachusetts.. Kevin Mcleod's top article generates over 480 views. to your Favourites.

Darrell Berg-smith has sinced written about articles on various topics from Advertising Guide, Marketing Strategies. . Darrell Berg-smith's top article generates over 2400 views. to your Favourites.
EditorialToday Internet has 4 sub sections. Such as Blogging, Affiliate Marketing, Work from Home and Online Marketing. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors