GoodBlog

Entries from October 2008

Great Cause Video

October 24, 2008 · Leave a Comment

A couple of weeks ago I wrote a post about how to create a great video for video sharing sites like YouTube and GoodTube. I found a great example to share with everyone.

The video was created by Haagen Daas to raise awareness of their cause- saving bees. Haagen Daas uses honey in almost all of their products so it’s clear why they decided to support this cause.

This video is great!

The best thing about this video is that the message is simple and not  revealed until the end. Users watch this silly video in order to determine what it is all about.

Categories: Uncategorized

Cause Marketing= more sales

October 15, 2008 · 1 Comment

I read an article the other day from, The Center for Media Research from Mediapost, about a consumer study of brands that align with causes vs. those that don’t.

Interestingly enough consumers were more likely to purchase brands that associated themselves with a charitable cause.  I included the entire article below- May be useful for your organization to include in a presentation to a corporate sponsor.

Stay tuned to GoodBlog I found a great video that illustrates a large brand, Haagen Daas, getting behind a cause. The video is also a great example of a cause video that went viral.

Cause Related Marketing Influences Sales

The 2008 Cone/Duke University Behavioral Cause Study, released recently by Cone and Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, confirms that cause-related marketing can exponentially increase sales, in one case as much as 74%, resulting in millions of dollars in potential revenue for brands.

182 participants evaluated a new regional magazine and were exposed to either a cause-related or generic corporate advertisement for one of four focus brands. Afterward, they entered a mock convenience store with nearly 150 SKUs and were given real money to purchase a product in each of the four categories.

Results revealed:

74% increase in actual purchase for a shampoo brand when associated with a cause (47% of participants who saw the cause-related message chose the brand while only 27% of those who saw the generic corporate advertisement chose the brand)
28% increase in actual purchase for a toothpaste brand when associated with a cause (64% of participants who saw the cause message chose the target brand vs. 50% who viewed the generic corporate advertisement)
Modest increases in the other two product categories tested (chips and light bulbs) – Qualitative consumer responses showed that the issue, the nonprofit and the inherent nature of products were key factors in making cause-related purchasing decisions, and helped explain why movement in these categories was not significant.

In the second phase of the research, Cone and Duke validated the sales increases for shampoo and toothpaste by replicating the study online among a nationally projectable sample of more than 1,000 adults. The participants spent nearly twice as long reviewing cause-related ads versus the general corporate advertisements.

This resulted in a 19% sales increase (similar to the lab study for the target toothpaste brand.) Although the shampoo brand increased only by a modest 5 percent, sales among its target audience of women increased by nearly 14 percent.

Gavan Fitzsimons, Duke marketing professor and lead researcher on the study, observes tha “… consumers are paying more attention to cause messages, and… are more likely to purchase… “

Additionally, Cone conducted the 2008 Cause Evolution Study, to better identify what drove substantial product sales for only two of the four brands. The following factors appeared to be important when deciding to support a company’s cause efforts:

84% want to select their own cause
83% say personal relevance is key
80% believe the specific nonprofit associated with the campaign matters
77% say practical incentives for involvement, such as saving money or time, are important
65% find emotional incentives for involvement, such as it making them feel good or alleviating shopping guilt, important

Alison DaSilva, Cone executive vice president, Knowledge Leadership and Insights, said “The findings… show (that)… consumers want to feel a connection to the issue and the nonprofit while fulfilling their personal needs… “

According to the study, the leading issues that Americans want companies to address in their cause programs are consistent with growing domestic and global needs. The issues include:

Education – 80%
Economic development (i.e.: job creation, income generation, wealth accumulation) – 80%
Health and disease – 79%
Access to clean water – 79%
Environment – 77%
Disaster relief – 77%
Hunger – 77%

If you are interested in more media and marketing research check out the research blog at Media Post http://www.mediapost.com/blogs/research_brief/.

Categories: Cause Marketing · Non profit marketing · Research · marketing
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Creating a Video for YouTube or GoodTube

October 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

aster internet speeds mean websites with rich media capabilities.   YouTube, GoodTube and GodTube are all video sharing sites that millions of people visit each day.  The ability to reach a worldwide audience is as simple as uploading. You know the technology is there, you know the audience exists now what to say.

There isn’t a  formula for a successful online video it depends on a number of factors- your message, your audience and your platform.  It is important to lay out a simple plan for the videos you put online considering all of these things.

The first step of any successful campaign is to watch your competition. When considering online video, don’t just watch non profit videos or cause related videos watch all videos. You are competing for the attention of the online audience, everything is game.  Take some time to watch the most popular YouTube videos in all categories. Then take sometime to watch popular videos that relate to your cause on more specific sites like GodTube, GoodTube or DoGooder.tv. Take note of the videos that capture your attention and those that don’t.

Then select five videos from the ones you view and put them in one of the following categories:

Humor- videos that get attention and keep it with something absurd
Dramatic- videos that grab your attention by focusing on the drama of a situation
Edgy- captures your attention by challenging your views
Emotional – video that captures your attention by playing to one of your emotions
Sexual(non pornographic)- captures your attention by appealing to ones sexual nature

After you have categorized the five videos ask yourself, which category could I use to tell the online world about my cause? Then focus on that category, watch the videos you put in that category, watch the first thirty seconds and try to identify what caught your attention. Watch the rest and identify what held your attention.  Now ask how can I incorporate this into my video?

It is also good to take sometime and watch a couple awful videos. Videos that don’t hold your attention, bore you in the first 10 seconds and ones you would never watch again. If you start mentally taking note of the good and the bad in online videos you will teach yourself how to create a great video.

Stay tuned to GoodBlog for more video tips. If you want some sound advice on production check out these simple production tips from the producer of “Profiles In Caring”. An emmy nominated tv series about non profit organizations and volunteering.

Categories: Social Marketing · non profit · non profit videos · videos
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