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Can Social Marketing Change the World?

September 30, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Social marketing

Social marketing is the juice of social change

Communications is the orange juice of the nonprofit world: it’s not just for fundraising any more.  Many organizations are using social marketing to change the way people behave.

  • Cigarettes used to be cool and sexy.  Now they are seen as a public health hazard.
  • Drunk driving was the topic of jokes.  Now it’s seen as criminal behavior.
  • Binge drinking is currently being redefined from college hijinks to a serious problem with alcohol.

Are you using social marketing?  How?  What results have you seen?

 

Social Marketing: Good for Your Health

Social marketing is “the systematic application of marketing, along with other concepts and techniques, to achieve specific behavioral goals for a social good.”  If getting a lot of people to change their individual behavior over time will let you reach your goals, then social marketing may be a powerful tool for you.

How powerful?  In her book Robin Hood Marketing, Katya Andresen tells the story of how a nonprofit in Cambodia–a country known for its sex industry–convinced men to wear condoms.  Beth Kanter summarizes:

A journalist, [Andresen] was covering a World AIDS Day event in Phnom Penh.  She saw how the giant condom-shaped balloon emblazoned with the words “Number One” was attracting attention and scores of people were grabbing up free samples of condoms….

As she writes in the introduction of her book, “For once, I heard no doom-filled message of fear or shame.  In its place was an appealing sense of pride and fun.”  As it turned out the giant condom was part of a business-minded marketing approach by a nonprofit organization, Population Services International (PSI)….

She points out that PSI condoms are now available in virtually every brothel in Cambodia, helped by a law that has since mandated condom use in sex establishments.

Social marketing can change something as personal and ingrained as sexual behavior.  What problem are you tackling that’s more difficult than that?

 

How Social Marketing Works

People buy a product for many reasons besides the product itself.  They may like the image they think it gives them, or the people or values associated with the product.  “Think different” is not a feature of Apple computers.  It’s a vision of the kind of person who uses Apple computers.  Wanting to be that kind of person has made a lot of people buy Apple.

People “buy into” your social marketing campaign for many reasons, too.  The American Legacy Foundation’s truth campaign

tapped into adolescents’ need for independence, rebellion, and personal control by presenting appealing social images of a nonsmoking lifestyle–cool kids living without tobacco. According to research, the decline in youth smoking attributable to this campaign equates to some 300,000 fewer youth smokers and thus millions of added life years as well as tremendous reductions in health care and social costs.

One technique that I find appealing is simply showing your target audience, “No, everybody isn’t doing it.”  Spreading the message that the vast majority of college students are moderate drinkers, not binge drinkers, has gone a long way toward stigmatizing the extreme behavior of the few.

 

Should You Be Using Social Marketing?

The easiest examples of social marketing to find are in the field of health.  That is certainly not the only area in which it can be useful.  In the U.S., the Washington D.C.-based organization “Men Can Stop Rape” anti-rape movement have successfully used social marketing in posters and other media targeting a rape-prevention message at boys and young men.  And it can also work for more affirmative goals, like getting people to enroll in literacy courses.

Has your organization ever used a social marketing campaign?  What results did you see?

Are you considering using social marketing to change behavior in your community?  What would you like to learn before you start?

 

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Six Ways Nonprofits Succeed on Social Media

August 13, 2013 by Dennis Fischman 5 Comments

It’s easy for a business to know whether or not they’re succeeding on social media.  After a reasonable amount of time on social media, the business makes more money.  For a business, that’s the meaning of success.  End of story.

Image

For nonprofits, it’s not so simple.  Nonprofits are mission-based organizations.  They need money to do their work, but the purpose of their work is not to make money.  When your “business” is arts, health, the environment, rights, or justice, what counts as success on social media?  Here are six signs of success.

  1. Mobilizing.  If your mission involves changing policy or institutions, you need people power to achieve it.  From calling Congress to getting out in the streets, getting people to take action is a measure of success for your social media efforts.
  2. Organizing. There’s power in numbers, and people taking direct action can succeed in changing things directly.  Boycotts can change the behavior of companies. Sit-down strikes can prevent foreclosures.  On the constructive side, people can get together to build houses, or to assist survivors of natural disasters.  Social media  have been indispensable in situations as varied as Occupy Wall Street and Superstorm Sandy.
  3. Changing the culture.  Some nonprofits work to change the way we think and behave.  In an earlier era, social marketing turned smoking from a widely accepted habit into a public health threat.  Today, social media are full of ongoing discussions aimed at changing our ideas about rape culture and body image.
  4. Sharing.  More people are seeing works of art online than in museums.  More get their news online than from newspapers.  Freecycle and similar email lists allow people to pick up goods they need for free, and every giveaway prevents a throwaway and reduces the waste stream. If your nonprofit is concerned with arts, public information, or the environment, social media may be part of how you do your work.
  5. Building assets.  A nonprofit’s greatest asset is often its reputation. As Nir Kossovsky has pointed out, your reputation may actually be worth money.  You may spend less on recruitment and purchase of services because the people with whom you do business know and trust your organization.  Employees may tolerate the low salaries typical of the nonprofit sector because they are proud to work for you, and you may acquire partners and funders because they want to be associated with you.  Social media are part of your brand, and they help build your reputation.
  6. And yes, making money!  Just because you’re a nonprofit doesn’t mean you can lose money.  As Robert Covitz writes, a nonprofit is “an organization that reinvests profits and donations into its programs, services, and personnel so as to better fulfill its mission and goals.” To reinvest, you must make a surplus to begin with.  Giving via social media is on the rise, and even the check in the mail is increasingly likely to arrive after the donor has learned about you on social media.

 

So, is your nonprofit succeeding on social media? Comment to tell us your success stories and the challenges you face.

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