Category Archive for Book Reviews

The Clean and Green Club, November 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: November 2021

Guerrilla Customer Service as Marketing

I listened to a webinar by John Livesay, who brands himself as “the pitch whisperer.” And I found it interesting that a lot of his pitch secrets had to do with extreme customer service, something I’ve been a fan of for years.John led off by describing Banana Republic’s free secure/guarded phone charging while shopping. Sales went up 15 percent, because people hung out until their phones were charged!

It reminded me of listening to the amazing Jack Mitchell, author of one of my favorite books on extreme service, Hug Your Customers. He describes having a staffer get on a transatlantic plane to deliver a suit the customer needed at an overseas conference. His whole book is full of great examples. It was one of the first books I reviewed in this newsletter, way back in November, 2003.

Brands at the top end, from Ritz-Carlton to Mercedes to Neiman Marcus, have offered legendary customer service for years, and are very aware that their efforts there are part of their overall marketing. But unlike many of companies famous for outrageously customer-centric service, Banana Republic is not a high-end luxury brand. It’s not the bottom end, but the typical middle-class person would be comfortable shopping there.

Another non-luxury brand that offers above-industry-standard is Southwest Airlines—which, interestingly enough, began as a price-leader but built amazing service in from the get-go. It’s not just the only US airline I’m aware of that doesn’t charge for a stowed bag or a ticket-change, and possibly the only one whose flight attendants are encouraged to have a sense of humor. The company also empowers its gate and phone/online agents to make the customer happy. They earned MY loyalty when the one-day closure of my local airport for a snowstorm, somewhere around 2009, meant we would not be able to get on a cruise ship in Tampa. Southwest allowed us to reroute and fly one day later to Fort Lauderdale, the ship’s first stop—so we were able to salvage the cruise. So even though it’s often no longer the price leader, if we can get close to the price and convenience of a different itinerary via Southwest, that’s how we usually fly.

In my one-person service business, I often look for opportunities to help. Sometimes that means sending a media lead to the perfect source—whether or not that person is a client (and I don’t charge for that). Sometimes, it’s looking around a client’s website and making notes on what I could improve (and while I don’t charge for taking those notes if the client hasn’t requested it, I do charge for making the improvements). And sometimes it’s a quick call to answer a client’s or prospect’s question, just as a favor. And I believe this is one reason why I have some clients for years at a time.

How can you up the level of service in your business—and harness the marketing power of the positive impression you make?

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

My interview, How to Write a Book for Social Change, is live on Dan Janal’s Write Your Book in a Flash podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPUoVPp2yP4 . I had a short-term physical issue that day, which explains some of the weird pauses—but the information is really good, and because it’s focused on authors building movements, it’s significantly different material from many of my other interviews.

  • How books have ALREADY changed the world (with examples)

  • How to research to support the point of view you want people to adopt

  • How to leverage your book to widen the audience for your point of view

  • How self-publishing can give you leverage to get a traditional publisher

  • How to use YOUR book to create a movement

It’s worth noting that a lot of my social change consulting practice is book shepherding and book marketing for authors with socially conscious books. In other words, if you’re looking to get a change-the-world book done, published, and/or marketed, please get in touch: https://goingbeyondsustainability.com/contact/

Profiled in this article about (of all things) how I as a rural business owner and activist use broadband. https://www.explorebeyond.org/stories/broadband-powers-entrepreneurship-in-rural-new-england/

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Seducing Strangers

Seducing Strangers: How to Get People to Buy What You’re Selling, by Josh Weltman

Real-life ad man Weltman was a co-producer of the Mad Men TV show for several years. And this book has a lot of good advice for marketers, especially those whose strategies rely heavily on advertising. More importantly, Weltman leads off with excellent lessons in consumer psychology—and to me, those are some of the best insights in the book. A few examples:

  • Happiness is not about what you have, but what you EXPECT to have—and how closely that matches reality (p. 10)
  • Forget “build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door.” The reality is that once you build that mousetrap—and whether it’s better is subjective—you have to TELL the world (p. 11). For every example like Google, where the world actually did beat a path to its virtual door, thousands of businesses foundered with excellent products strangled by poor marketing.
  • Never do a good promotion for a bad product; it will kill your business (p. 12)
  • Solving customer problems is more about DISCOVERY than invention; we’re more curious than creative (p. 13)
  • (My favorite) Advertising (which I would broaden to include marketing generally) is about CONFIRMING, not changing, prospects’ minds (pp. 14-16)
  • Engage both adrenaline (emotional response) and dopamine (explanation); if the main headline confuses, the subhead must explain—or vice-versa (pp 25-28). Emotion cements the brand, while facts cement the sale (pp. 38-40).

Weltman also provides the recipe for a successful advertising developer: keen observer; good listener; endlessly curious; and, interestingly, “pathological inability to lie” in their ads (pp. 15-16, emphasis added). He noted that even Mad Men’s Draper wrote truthful ads, even though truth in other aspects of his life was often lacking.

Advertising [or marketing] is a strange business because different companies (or parts of a company) are responsible for making the brand promise (the agency or marketing department) and for keeping or exceeding that promise (design, manufacturing, distribution, etc.). Both are required to build a brand (p. 33).

For Weltman, successful marketing answers one of four questions, each used at a different stage in the customer lifecycle—and each requiring different ads (or other marketing messages):

  1. What is it? (aimed at prospects who don’t know the product or company)
  2. Why do I need it now? (creating scarcity or urgency or bargain-frenzy among those who are wavering or not yet committed—with these, be careful not to cannibalize the 20 percent who would buy anyway without a discount or other incentive)
  3. What makes it different? (why they should choose you over a competitor)
  4. Who else thinks it’s good? (social proof and community building—these ads are aimed at your existing customers, to turn them into raving fans)

By far the biggest portion of the book explores these four types, the situations to use them in, and what you can expect to happen. The important thing is that each marketing piece should only address one of the four, because the different messages aim at different market segments with very different needs.

I’m a long-time believer in segmenting the market; if you’ve heard me speak, you’ve probably heard me discuss marketing differently to Deep Greens, Lazy Greens, Non-Greens, and Green-Hostiles. But for me, the big insight of this book is to also segment by stage in the buying process and the lifetime customer cycle. And I like the idea of using tag lines that unify these different stages (p. 61).

The market also shifts by demographics and psychographics, of course. In one of many case studies, Weltman goes through the process of advertising an SUV specifically to communitarian Generation Y, with a brilliant spot where sequential users do something cool with the car, then toss the keys to the next user (pp. 75-77). That’s useless to individualistic, antiauthoritarian GenXers but sings to digital natives Millennials who create their own participatory Internet daily (pp. 147-148).

Another counter-intuitive case study involves setting expectations low enough that a shaky brand can keep its promise (pp. 91-93)—an advertising heresy! And a refreshing admission that not all marketers believe in the products they’re hired to pitch. (Personally, I turn down assignments that go against my values or my quality standards.)

And I love his focus on the power of the right words, noting again that persuasion requires both fact and emotion. That means ruthlessly going over copy drafts to change weak words like “hungry” into powerful ones like “voracious” (p. 120). And remembering that once your prospect agrees to your key principle, persuasion is happening.

Unlike most marketing authors I’ve read, Weltman sees online as fundamentally different than offline marketing. The final nine chapters focus on online: how to demonstrate values and vision through empathy, what stories to tell to whom (pp. 161-162), four key strategic questions (p. 165), and why to change people’s sense of what’s possible (167-168).

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, October 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: October 2021

What Chris Did—And What I Thought of It

Last month, I shared a conversation with Chris Brogan about his salesletter rewrite project, including the changes I suggested to him and his response. I also shared the revised salesletter done by the copywriter he hired to “shiny it up.” And I told you I’d come to you this month with my reaction to the rewrite.

Unfortunately, I hated it. And here’s why:

The previous version of the letter clearly identified an audience: People who want to earn more customers, create fast, effective media, find better productivity tools, receive guidance, be more known, be the authority, get more attention. They may or may not already consider themselves a part of Chris’s tribe, but they respect him enough to visit his website. And some portion of them could consider going deeper with him and might enjoy the option of a continuity program.

But what happens in the rewrite? The headline is just “Owner Media.” Some people may know that’s the name of one of Chris’s businesses. Others might just be confused. What does that even mean? Not only is there no call to action or audience clarification in the headline, it loses any promise of something to help the prospect—even the fairly week “Small Business Owner Tools and Support” of the original.

And the subhead that follows those two words is “WAIT, WHAT? THERE’S A MEMBER COMMUNITY AT OWNER MEDIA?” (emphasis in original)

Let’s keep in mind that for most people, a continuity program in the form of a membership site is not a goal. It’s a tool: a way of getting fresh thinking, new insights, and access to other tools that someone they trust has already vetted. Yet this copy assumes that:

  1. The reader will already want Chris’s membership community and just has to be informed that it exists
  2. The community is a desire, not a means; the reader knows the benefits without being told
  3. “We” language about Chris and his partner Rob will work better than “you” language about the prospect’s wants and needs

I disagree with all three assumptions. Let’s look at the third one: I think language like “we’re not telly-tell lecture-y people who create a curriculum and never want to hear sass from the audience. No, that’s not how we do our best, and we know it’s not how our Insiders do their best” is all about them, not about the benefits, and counterproductive.

Then the letter starts addressing the objection of not enough time. But it hasn’t really addressed why the person reading even needs this. Then there’s a long digression about pricing before getting to the actual pricing. Instead of building confidence in Chris and Rob’s considerable skills—they’re two of the smartest people I know—it makes Chris and Rob sound flaky, disorganized, and narcissistic.

I could go on, but I’ll stop here. I already laid out the strategy I would have used in my first response to Chris’s newsletter.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

Northampton, MA, Friday, November 12, 6-8 p.m., Anchor House of Artists, lower Pleasant Street across from the bowling alley. A rare chance to meet me in a non-marketing, non-activist setting. My late stepfather, Michihiro “Yoshi” Yoshida, was an incredible painter. Known as The Mythic Modernist, he combined natural landscapes, real and fictional/famous and ordinary people, and mythic images from around the world in vividly colorful canvases, some quite large. He was killed three years ago at age 88 by a distracted driver as he was on his way to his daily 3-mile jog. His work is stunning and original.

You can get a taste at http://ArtByYoshi.com –but really, you want to see the actual paintings, which are a much deeper experience. Yoshi and another deceased artist friend have a joint exhibit November 10-27 in the main gallery, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday from 3:00 p.m to 6:00 p.m.,with a reception as part of Northampton Arts Night Out, Friday, November 12, 6-8 p.m. The Real and the Imagined: The Legacy of Two Passionate Painters, Michihiro “Yoshi” Yoshida and Harriet Graicerstein. There will be a live violin/piano klezmer duet at the reception featuring Rafael Natan (my younger child, who has two degrees from New England Conservatory) and Nick Beary. Light refreshments will be served, several other interesting exhibits will be open in other parts of the gallery (which consistently features some of the most exciting art in the area), and there’s even on-site parking. Yoshi’s paintings for the show were selected by my wife and me. The gallery website is https://www.anchorhouseartists.org/

We also expect to do a virtual event, but I don’t have the details at press time. We’ll do it in the second half of November, so I can announce it in the next newsletter.

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

The Folk Singers and the Bureau

The Folk Singers and the Bureau by Aaron J. Leonard

Most of us are familiar with the general outlines of US anticommunist hysteria from the 1930s into the 1960s, and particularly Senator Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). We know that entertainers were blacklisted, workers lost their jobs, quite a few people were imprisoned, and at least two (Julius and Ethel Rosenberg) were executed.

But Congress was only one slice of a much deeper attack on freedom of belief. The FBI was another big prong. I, for one, didn’t know that the FBI actually drew up lists of people who would be rounded up and detained on command—and those lists included some of our best-loved entertainers, among them Pete Seeger, Paul Robeson, and Bess Lomax Hawes (co-author of the MTA song, a/k/a “Charlie and the MTA”). Interestingly, Leonard argues that longtime FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, though a virulent anticommunist, disliked McCarthy and opposed his methods.

In a year that started with an armed coup attempt inside the US Capitol against the elected US government, it is worth remembering three key points:

  1. All but one of the mass domestic terrorist incidents I can think of were conducted by right-wingers: the January 6th insurrection, of course–but also Oklahoma City, 9/11, Pulse Nightclub, El Paso, Las Vegas, Sandy Hook Elementary School, Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life Synagogue, Charleston, South Carolina’s Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church… (The exception is the 1954 Puerto Rican Nationalist attack on the Capitol.) Yet the government has historically focused its energies on the little sliver of far-left agitators.
  2. Neither Democrats nor Republicans have clean hands in suppressing dissent or in harnessing state terror just to show power. Though they continued into the Eisenhower administration, the FBI abuses against suspected Communist Party members and sympathizers mostly took place under Democrats FDR and Truman. FDR’s other shames include authorizing the Japanese internment and turning away Jewish refugees, while Truman’s including deploying two atomic bombs against a Japan that was already about to surrender—with the apparent purpose of telling the USSR not to mess with us. And of course, LBJ and Nixon were both in charge during the suppression of leftists in the 1960s. This makes it even more urgent to organize and make sure Biden keeps his progressive campaign promises (as I write this in September, he’s failing badly on several, including immigration justice, climate change, and voting rights).
  3. It is absolutely important to curtain domestic terror. However, there are plenty of ways to do it that don’t involve “othering” and repressing a portion of the population. We are all entitled to our beliefs, no matter how far outside the mainstream. But none of us are entitled to wage violence in the service of our beliefs, and the government needs to keep those elements in check.

Personally, I’d love to see the government embrace alternative strategies to war and violence both in containing terrorism and in furthering democracy around the world. A good first step would be establishing a Cabinet-level Department of Peace, as proposed by former Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio.

The book is impeccably researched, with a seven-page bibliography and discography, 50 pages of end notes(!), and a 15-page index. However, the writing is less than stellar, and the editor or proofreader should have been fired. Still, I will put up with bad writing to get important information (or a good story). I didn’t plan to review this as I read it, and only realized as I finished the main text and began going through the notes that there was relevant wisdom to my newsletter readers. Thus, no page citations this month.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

Powered by:

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The Clean and Green Club, September 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: September 2021

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Are You Confusing Your Market and Audience? BIG Mistake

In a recent newsletter, Chris Brogan wrote, “The other day, I tweeted out something like, ‘Hey, who here can help shiny up a sales page for me?’” and then went on to list the responses and his process of choosing who to work with. I realized even as I was writing back to him that I wanted to share my thoughts with you, too. Here’s the relevant part what I sent him. You can see the archived sales page we’re discussing (since he has indeed replaced the copy) at https://web.archive.org/web/20210507210632/https://ownermedia.leadpages.co/insider/

I L O V E “shiny it up”–nice addition to the language. I missed the post where you made that request, or I probably would have responded.

I say “probably” because your existing sales page is quite strong–at least for a word nerd like me. I love replacing the “new normal” with “New Better”–especially since I’ve been thinking hard about the opportunities to make a better world as we emerge from the pandemic. I’m sure you’ve heard that it’s too long, but that’s an audience thing. If I and people like me are your target audience, it’s not too long because it got me to read all the way through. And it felt much less lengthy when I switched from reading it on my phone to re-reading it on a computer, BTW.

I will be very curious to see what magic Sandy works. Three changes I would make would be:

  1. A MUCH stronger headline than “Small Business Owner Tools and Support”–something focused on the benefit (goal made easier and/or problem solved or at least helped) and an action step
  2. Change the five “I” bullets to “You”
  3. Spread the testimonials out instead of grouping them together (and possibly add more)
  4. Since you used Cyndi’s testimonial as a teaser early on, I’d use her entire blurb there and not repeat it later

It got me thinking more about the difference between audience and market, though–because I AM your audience, but I’m NOT your market.

I’m your audience because I love good copy, I run a microbusiness (a solopreneurship, in fact), and I encounter some of these issues in my business. But I’m not your market, because 1) I historically haven’t reacted well to online courses and tend to abandon them; 2) I can’t keep up with the firehose of information already coming my way; 3) I tend to multitask while listening to webinars and teleseminars, and if I’m paying for the content, that means I have to not multitask to get my money’s worth, and therefore there are fewer computer hours in the day to get everything else done; and most importantly, 4) I’ve already developed a bunch of support systems and networks of people I can bounce stuff off–ranging from online communities to 1:1 peer masterminds where we mentor and help each other.

Until now, writing to you, I really hadn’t thought very much about the truth that [audience and market] don’t always align even when it looks like a fit. Since I’m thinking about it now, this note is likely to evolve into my monthly newsletter main article.

Other places where a market and an audience might not match–these, I *have* thought about before–would include:

  • K-12 and college-following-right-after-high school educational settings, where the market is parents or teachers but the audience is kids
  • Services for elders, purchased by younger caregivers
  • Services provided by nonprofits working in poverty situations; their market is donors in wealthy countries, but their clients (the audience) are individuals with zero disposable income and little infrastructure
  • Corporate B2B sales where the decision-makers are not the users

What’s new and different about *this* conversation is the situation where the audience is almost the market, but non-obvious factors get in the way. So thanks for the insight ;-).

And here’s the relevant part of his reply to me:

There’s quite a lot of food for thought in here so thank you for that. We both agree that a new better might be much better than a new normal.

If you’re curious about what his copywriter did, visit https://ownermedia.leadpages.co/insider/ . The version I’m looking at begins,

Owner Insider

“WAIT, WHAT? THERE’S A MEMBER COMMUNITY AT OWNER MEDIA?”

If you’re seeing something different, you can see if Archive.org has that one (paste the above URL into the search field on that site). As of the day I’m writing this in August, the most recent Archive copy is the May 7 version that begins “Small Business Owner Tools and Support.”

Next month, I’ll give you my response to Chris’s “Shiny up” new sales page.

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Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

Are you ever stuck on the hamster wheel, just barely getting by? What if I told you there are always ways to create more impact, more income, and more freedom?

>Maybe you’ve seen others thrive and asked yourself, “Why can’t I create those kinds of results? How do I figure out what the cutting-edge experts are doing?”

Well, if you’re like my friend Christine Schlonski, you get a bunch of these super successful, heart-centered experts and authorities together and ask! She won’t even charge you to hear our answers, if you listen live to her Profitable Coach Summit. But it’s not just for coaches. Any entrepreneur will benefit.

You might recognize some of the speakers’ names–Milana Leshinski, Jeannie Spiro, Dan Janal, and many others–and, of course, Christine herself. She is not only brilliant, she’s also a lot of fun to be around. Plus, all of these strategies are heart-centered; they’ll feel right from the get-go.

Get your complimentary ticket to The Profitable Coach Summit here: https://ci340.isrefer.com/go/PCS/shelhoro/

The best part is, these sessions will give you guidance and insights on how you can become a profitable coach with the impact and freedom you desire.

Here’s just a taste :

  • How to Create a Business That Feeds Your Soul and Your Wallet
  • The World’s #1 Media Coach Will Show You How To Generate Top-Tier Media Coverage (without paying anything for it)
  • Turning Webinars on Their Heads: How to increase interaction and conversion with shorter, story-based presentations.
  • Converting LinkedIn Content and Connections to Conversations
  • The Four Sales Languages
  • Small Events, Big Back End: How To Build a 7–Figure Business With Retreats & Mastermind Groups
  • How To Triple Revenue In One Year With 3 Simple Steps
  • MY TALK: Finding the Profit in Purpose and the Purpose in Profit: The Sweet Spot Where Profitability, Social Change, and Healing the Planet All Intersect
  • And many more…

==> https://ci340.isrefer.com/go/PCS/shelhoro/ for your no-charge ticket, then tune in September 21-26.

PS–if you can’t make all the sessions, there is an upgrade package to get all the recordings.

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

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Sell with Authority: Own and Monetize Your Agency’s Authority Position

Sell with Authority: Own and Monetize Your Agency’s Authority Position by Drew McLellan and Stephen Woessner (BookPress, 2020)

Don’t be put off by the subtitle if you don’t happen to run an advertising or marketing agency. While the book markets itself to ad agency owners, the authority strategy is far broader. I actually tried to think of an industry vertical where an authority strategy couldn’t work, and I failed. When I think of toilet paper, I think first of Marcal and its authority strategy around forest preservation…when I think of transportation, I think about the way Toyota and Tesla made electric cars a status symbol in vastly different markets—by positioning their customers as authorities in combining functionality (Prius) or performance/luxury (Tesla) with environmental responsibility: customers who were smart enough to be pioneers in our brave new path to a clean future. In agriculture, I think of the hundreds of organic foods businesses that use their packaging to educate consumers and position themselves as authorities on healthy eating and healthy land use.

So…what’s an authority position? According to McLellan and Woessner, you pick a niche, which could be driven by your industry slice, your audience, or the problem you solve (p. 31). In a Venn diagram, your niche is the intersection of several circles, as on the cover and on page 36, where the intersection is agencies—we’ll substitute “businesses”—with your expertise, those who “give a rip,” and those with your unique point of view. That intersection is tiny slice of a huge pie, and if you define it properly, it may only have one dot in the intersection: YOU! People who need your exact expertise, benefit from your point of view, and see that you actually care will discover that hiring your company is the only choice.

But I’d a add a caution: make another Venn diagram to establish market viability: One circle for who needs your expertise (and your solutions), another for who is aware of you or can become aware after minimal exploration, and a third for who is willing and able to pay for that expertise. THAT intersection is your actual potential market, and it should be a lot bigger than a single pinpoint.

I made the mistake of not doing this research 25 years ago when I released my book on how to have fun cheaply. It turned out the frugalists who wanted information on how to legally and ethically see entertainment for no-cost, travel for a fraction of the usual place, and find dating options that cost little or nothing didn’t want to pay for that information—and despite consistent national publicity (including ABC News, the MSN home page, and Redbook, among many others), it took me 8 years to sell through a 2000-copy print run of a $17 book.

You develop a detailed and unique point of view on the issues in that niche (pp. 37-43), perhaps asking how your clients are missing the mark (p. 41). Next, you develop a single content “cornerstone”: a central marketing strategy including the six building blocks on page 51. Something like a book, a regular podcast or blog—that consistently gets you in front of prospects who welcome those messages, that plays the long game—that both helps your audience (of actual prospects) get better at their task and deepens your connection with them. Once one cornerstone is firmly established, you can add a second.

From the cornerstone, develop “cobblestones”: little drips of enticing content that engages, informs, and brings people into your orbit.

In other words, everything should be strategic. As you develop your cornerstone content, you get to play journalist. Call your prospects, invite them to be interviewed, and then turn snippets of the conversation into cobblestones that promote them—and you.

Strategically maximize your efforts with everything from adding captions to all your videos (p. 70) and loading them natively into not just YouTube but other platforms including LinkedIn and Facebook (p. 137) to turning clients and prospects into marketing partners (p. 112), to detailed rinse-and-repeat recipes for getting the most exposure from every effort (pp. 156-165), and even a list of software tools they use.

Each chapter has one author, by the way: a very easy way to collaborate on a book.

Connect with Shel

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Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, August 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: August 2021

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Live Events Are Back…But Zoom Isn’t Going Away

I am quite sure there will be online options at many formerly offline events. As I write this, I’m currently attending my first hybrid conference. It took place in Paris a month earlier with some in-person speakers, and I am watching from Massachusetts, slowly, over a few weeks. And no travel costs, no travel fatigue.

As an attender, advantages include being able to spread out the sessions, watch multiple programs that took place at the same time, and catch them at my convenience. Remote events also provide many advantages to event planners. Direct mail guru Brian Kurtz listed a few:

“Many of the events I’m referring to (pre-pandemic) ranged from 500 to 2,000 attendees live…and when they had to go 100% virtual, attendance increased as much as 50% to 200%. Along with increased stick rates (i.e. how long the audience stayed online).”

Of course, attending a replay has disadvantages too. Since I’m attending after-the-fact and have no access to any chat rooms that may have been going on, the networking value is close to zero. I could, if I wanted to, network with speakers by tracking them down (so far, no one has blown me far enough out of the water at this event, but I’ve reached out to other speakers at other virtual conferences)—but reaching non-presenting attenders isn’t an option. When I’ve attended live over Zoom, I actually have done some good networking and made new friends, got speaking opportunities and even some paying clients. For instance, last year, I dropped in on an inventor pitch meeting in virtual San Diego. There was a 16-year-old inventor/entrepreneur presenting (I guess he’s probably 17 by now) who I reached out to, have nurtured a friendship, done a bit of mentoring, and brought him in as one of the other guests when a radio producer told me to bring two guests to my segment. In a different meeting, someone expressed frustration in the chat about a business situation. I gave her some immediate advice, asked if I could follow up with her, and she gave me her contact information. She’s turned into a repeat client with several small jobs.

There’s also a whole new category of events: ongoing Zoom salons where some of the same people show up every week, and we get to know each other over time—kind of like a Chamber mixer but MUCH more substantive. These have become a favorite activity for me and vastly expand my circle.

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Risk Forward: Embrace the Unknown and Unlock Your Hidden Genius

Risk Forward: Embrace the Unknown and Unlock Your Hidden Genius, by Victoria Labalme (Hay House, 2021)

This isn’t the sort of book I typically review. It’s motivational, very brief, with sometimes only a word or two on a page, followed by a page or two with a single phrase up to a couple of hundred words expanding on the opening word or phrase. But I liked this one enough to share.In part, this is because like me, she combines many worlds: in her case, she has a background in multiple performing arts—including studying with Marcel Marceau—as well as business and teaching/coaching.

She’s also obviously very persuasive; she got her publisher, Hay House, to spring for color printing throughout the book (an expensive undertaking, and one that isn’t obvious to the casual reader, because many of the pages have just a dab of color in one of the little critters that say wise things at the edges of the text). And she got me to review it (and subscribe to her newsletter) after hearing her present on a Zoom call some months ago.

Starting by reinventing the contents listing as a “circle of contents,” she makes an adamant case to be yourself, to risk embarrassment or failure, to let your light shine even if it shines on a path no one else is taking—and to allow ideas to sprout even in the places you aren’t comfortable and can’t guess the outcome. That’s where the extraordinary might be hiding: “It is in this very gap between what is and what could be that we find our way; it is here that some of our best ideas are born” (p. 5).

She gives a lot of guidance on nurturing your intuition, including a page each of feelings that demonstrate you are or are not on the right path (pp. 25-26)—and nurturing others, even asking what single piece of advice you would give a mentee if you were dying on a desert island (p. 31).

That kind of twist on the familiar is something she does a lot; she’s a delightful contrarian. So many business and self-help books go on about goals, while Labalme proclaims, “you don’t need a goal to justify a pursuit”—and you don’t need to know where it’s going, how you’ll use it, or even why you’re following this passion (p. 48). Similarly, you don’t need to select a single focus; be like the spreading canopy of an oak or maple, not the narrow needle of a cypress (p. 115). And I love “Don’t just do something! Stand there!” (p. 102). If others are pressuring you to act prematurely, demand more time (pp. 104-106). Risking forward is about courage, not speed (p. 117); it’s an adventure (p. 129).

It also doesn’t have to be a choice. Often, you may discover an “and” instead of an “or” (pp. 72-74)—but you may have to take it apart before you can put it together (p. 75). And you may draw from a completely different vertical.

And even while recognizing the huge benefits of collaboration, ultimately, you may have to build your own road. As her husband Frank Oz put it in a series of visual diagrams (pp. 88-93), if you let creativity be shaped by consensus, your idea may get so skewed that it no longer works.

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About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

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The Clean and Green Club, July 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: July 2021

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“Does It Scale?” Is the WRONG Question

Instead of worrying about whether something scales, ask about whether something is worth it. This advice comes from Seth Godin, https://seths.blog/2021/06/non-machinable-surcharge/ , whose daily column is almost always one of the first things I do each morning, before I start a work shift or have breakfast or jump on my exercise bike. The same column introduced me to the wonderful Italian word sprezzatura (the column has a link to explain it).

I found this particular post extremely validating. I’ve always prided my business on its lack of scalability. I don’t do cookie-cutter “solutions.” I have general principles that guide what the British call “bespoke”—custom work that acknowledges one size almost never REALLY fits all. The consulting clients I work with get answers that are about them, their business, their goals—and how they can develop and implement profitable social change that harnesses their firm’s capabilities and interests—their firm’s unique “secret sauce.” The same with my resume clients. I’ve literally done resumes for people who referred a colleague doing the exact same job, and the resumes were very different—because each client had a unique history and a different set of career goals. I see my out-of-the-box thinking and ability to borrow solutions from a different industry entirely as strengths. In fact, when I’ve tried to scale, I’ve mostly floundered.

Years ago, I decided to ignore the common marketing world advice to “stop trading hours for dollars,” even though I have some physical limitations on how much I can be at the computer. I have a pricing structure that balances affordability with feeling sufficiently compensated, I manage to get significant leisure/outdoor time every day, travel a lot (in normal times), and perhaps I have fewer material desires than many of my marketing colleagues who brag about their fancy houses and cars. I don’t need a Ferrari; I’m perfectly content to share a 2005 Toyota Corolla purchased in 2011 and an inherited 2012 Honda Fit with my wife. I don’t need a 6000-square-foot mansion and realize that now that the kids are grown, the relatively modest antique home we share is bigger than we really need—but I also feel I live in Paradise, nestled between a mountain and a river on a working farm, a 15-minute drive from town. As long as both of us can manage stairs and driving, and there’s no dire political emergency that would make our home unsafe because our country had become unsafe, I see no reason to move. If aging-in-place requires a live-in caregiver at some point, we have the space—and meanwhile, we have plenty of room for overnight guests.

So I consider myself mostly a success. I’ve had impact in the larger world and opened some minds wider (less impact and fewer minds than I’d hope, but enough to feel I’ve made a difference), have a blessing-filled life, and find joy and gratitude every day. And it’s thrilling that Seth Godin, who anyone would consider a success, gives his blessing to this mindset.

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Good Business: The Talk, Fight, Win Way to Change the World

Good Business: The Talk, Fight, Win Way to Change the World, by Bill Novelli (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021)

Who knew that centrist activism is a thing? Meet Bill Novelli, a Renaissance Soul who did marketing for one of the largest CPG (Consumer Packaged Goods) companies in the world, ran a PR agency, led several nonprofits including Tobacco-Free Kids and AARP, served in the Peace Corps, teaches social responsibility at Georgetown University’s business school, and…(too much more to list here). Republicans call him a Democrat while Democrats call him a Republican.

I often joke that my left-wing friends call me a capitalist tool while my right-wing friends call me a communist dupe, so I can relate. But I identify as an unabashed progressive who happens to support ethical capitalism; Novelli identifies as a proud centrist—but one who’s willing to “talk, fight, win” and willing to “stress the system” by engaging in multiple points and strategies at once (p. 39).

Novelli is a great cross-pollinator and coalition builder. He amplifies voices from corporate, nonprofit, religion, government, grassroots, and academia. He finds value in each of these career paths, and in those who synthesize these different silos or jump among them.

He’s also a long-term, big-picture thinker. Early on, he became a convert to ethical business that does social/environmental good—after succumbing to pressure to do the wrong thing and realizing he’d made a huge mistake (pp. 34-35). Since then, he’s worked to transform business culture so no one is forced into those kinds of choices—continuing to use the story skills he learned as a marketer in his later work as lobbyist, nonprofit executive, and educator. He promotes the broad messages that:

  • Social change is profitable (including measures aimed at the bottom of the economic pyramid)
  • Competitors need to work together to solve big problems
  • Nontraditional employees (such as elders or people with disabilities) can thrive and help their organizations thrive
  • Early interventions can ripple out to make enormous changes (e.g., brain exercises for preschoolers can reduce prison populations decades later—p. 304).

Where I found the most value was the detailed case studies: the specifics of how, what worked, what didn’t, the immediate and long-term outcomes, and their impact: taking on big tobacco, pp. 61-128; fighting to get a Medicare prescription drug benefit, pp. 129-166; protecting Social Security, pp. 167-198. For instance, we discover Tobacco-Free Kids’ single-sentence mission statement, “We work to save lives by advocating for public policies that prevent kids from smoking, help smokers quit, and protect everyone from secondhand smoke”, its four public policy pillars, and even punchier vision statement: “A future free of the death and disease cause by tobacco” (pp. 108-109).

The book is peppered with great quotes like these:

“Society is increasingly looking for companies…to address pressing social and economic issues…Profits are in no way inconsistent with purpose…[they’re] inextricably linked.”—Larry Fink, CEO, Blackrock (p. 9)

“Why can’t we sell brotherhood like soap?” (quoted without attribution by Novelli, p. 39. I tracked it down to G.B. Wiebe, quoted in a footnote to Philanthropy in America by Dwight Burlingame)

“It is never easy for…warriors to transform themselves into peacemakers, to shift from the comfort of combatting a…demonized enemy to…acknowledging an enemy as simultaneously a bargaining partner.” (Mike Pertschuk, former head of the Federal Trade Commission, p. 119)

“Problems worthy of attack prove their worth by attacking back.” (Piet Hein, mathematician, paraphrased by Novelli, p. 269).

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About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

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The Clean and Green Club, June 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: June 2021

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Can You Adapt Your Presentation on the Fly?

Here’s a blog post by Darren Lacroix, an actual Toastmasters World Champion of Public Speaking, discussing a time that he misread the audience and didn’t get what he was looking for from them: https://darrenlacroix.com/sponge-oops-i-made-a-big-mistake-on-the-big-stage/ . I suggest reading the comments, too—the audience felt rather differently about it.

I’ve had at least two times when I completely misread the audience ahead of time and prepared essentially the wrong presentation. One was before probably the most influential audience I’ve ever spoken to (editors of major magazines). Even though I was a second-day speaker and revised my speech quite a bit after attending Day 1, I hadn’t revised enough and the speech fell flat. That got me to move to a more interactive style and way better slides for future presentations–so it was a missed opportunity but also a growing edge. The other was giving a poetry reading in my 20s to what turned out to be a chatty and hard-of-hearing café audience that was mostly 50 years older than me and didn’t relate to my material.

But I also had an experience sussing out an audience on the fly, throwing away my usual opening for a small-business marketing speech, and replacing it in the moment with something that was perfectly tailored to this group of home repair contractors. They met in a seedy bar that really needed renovation. So I threw away my prepared opening and led with “How many of you have been to bathroom tonight?” (pause for show of hands) “And how many of you who raised your hands saw the marketing opportunity for contractors in there?” (laughter and attention). After that, I could say anything I wanted and they would listen.

I didn’t know I would open that way when I got there. It was only when I went to empty my own bladder and saw the bathroom in its decrepit glory that the marketer in me said, “If I were a contractor, I’d be pitching the business owner—and I’m talking to a bunch of contractors about marketing.”

The point is that I grabbed the opportunity to reach contractors interested in marketing, just as I was suggesting that they grab the opportunity to offer services to someone who had a clear need.

If you remember, in the February edition, I talked about using this strategy to upsell existing clients:

“I couldn’t help noticing _______________ [problem statement]. Would you like me to fix that for you?”

As you can see, this strategy also can work to land first-time clients. But since you’re not yet the trusted advisor, you have to be very careful to explore the client’s level of desire to address the problem, and to get permission before trying to market your service or product. Otherwise, you’re just another pushy salesperson, and you’ll be—appropriately—dismissed.

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Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents

Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, by Isabel Wilkerson

Unlike most of what I review in this newsletter, Caste is not a business book. But it is a book with deep implications for social change, and especially racial justice. Wilkerson makes the strong case that race dynamics in the US must be seen through the lens of caste: of a social order where everyone knows their place, birth (not competence) determines status, those of higher status actively defend their position, and deviations are harshly punished.While it’s positioned as an examination of caste in three societies: the US, Nazi Germany, and India…the US dominates. The occasional glimpses into the other two seem useful add-ons. She sees the US drawing from the thousands of years India has embraced caste, and Nazi Germany in turn looking to the American South to determine the outer limits of how much oppression they could get away with (pp. 78-88). But American examples take by far the largest share.

And Wilkerson makes the first logical argument I’ve seen for why white working-class voters in the US so often vote against their class interest and for politicians aligned with the economic interests of the 1 percent—the super-rich who actively extract wealth from those who have the least. They support these politicians who keep them at the bottom of the white portion of the class ladder because caste is more important than class in maintaining the social order. Wilkerson argues persuasively that lower-status whites need caste (p. 181). The lowest white is treated better in many situations than even the upper elites of black society: the system reinforces racism in thousands of ways, both overt and subtle. And this may explain why President Obama was so hated and so many white supremacist hate groups sprung up (p. 319), and why Donald Trump’s open racism found willing ears (p. 325). Many of those near the bottom want to make sure there is a lower stratum to make them feel superior—and this is so deeply inculcated into white identity that many are not even consciously aware of their bias (p. 186).

Worse, the success of anyone from the lowest caste threatens the system (pp. 180, 224). Through this analysis, we see the numerous instances of brutal repression against blacks seen as “infecting” an upper stratum. Wilkerson even casts the sordid history of slavery and Jim Crow as leading directly to the US’s far poorer safety net, higher health care costs, higher rates of gun deaths, incarceration, death during pregnancy and labor, infant mortality, and other social ills (pp. 354-355).

She sees caste as afflicting all of us, no matter where on the caste ladder we are. Whites as much as blacks have been deprived of the benefits when black innovators are suppressed (p. 377).

The largely pessimistic book turns optimistic near the end, beginning with a white dinner companion creating a very public scene over the racist treatment they were receiving from a waiter (pp. 365-369), continuing with a great story of how Wilkerson changed a plumber’s racist attitude by forging a connection of two human beings dealing with their grief (pp. 372-375), moving into Albert Einstein’s anti-racism activism (pp. 378-379), and noting that caste was successfully dismantled in Germany after it lost World War II (p. 383).

Then she moves into a call to action: “The price of privilege is the moral duty to act when one sees another person treated unfairly…If each of us could truly see and connect with the humanity of the person in front of us, search for that key…to whatever we may have in common…it could begin to affect how we see the world…Each time a person reaches across caste and makes a connection, it helps to break the back of caste. Multiplied by millions in a given day, it becomes the flap of a butterfly wing that …builds to a hurricane across the ocean (p. 386).” And while we’re not responsible for our ancestors’ behavior or our position on the caste ladder, we are responsible for choosing between ignorance and enlightenment. The book’s final sentence is big-picture hopeful: “A world without caste would set everybody free (p. 388).”

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

The Clean and Green Club, May 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: May 2021

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A 15-Second Lesson in Super-Effective Communication

Spend 15 seconds watching this video. Yes, I said seconds. It took me longer to write this paragraph than it will take you to watch.

This is an attempt to cross the lines of political division—to talk in the language of your target market, rather than your own demographic. For the purposes of analysis, it doesn’t matter which direction that flows; the lesson is about how to talk to the other side, whatever side that happens to be.

Do you think it worked? Why or why not? Please leave a comment to let me know.

I’ve advocated talking respectfully with the other side for decades, and frequently have conversations, in-person and online, with people whose views are very different from mine. I joke that my right-wing friends think I’m a communist dupe while my left-wing friends think I’m a capitalist tool. I’m also a believer in long-form messaging. I don’t typically see 15 seconds as enough time to convey any real content, especially a substantive discussion of fraught issues.

Nonetheless, I think this spot is amazingly powerful and effective. It uses both visuals (the cowboy, the American flag) and narrative to build support for this piece of legislation as a patriotic act that “puts the American people back in charge” after leading with a frame of government corruption. Yet the bill it supports is heavily supported by progressives and liberal Democrats and as of this writing (April 13) hasn’t received endorsements by any Republicans in Congress as far as I know—though plenty of ordinary-citizen Republicans do support it.

I am not aware of any outreach of this quality from the right to the left. If you have an example of a video (two minutes or less) that successfully makes the case to progressives on a favored right-wing issue, please share it with me—and tell me if I have your permission to thank you by name.

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Inspiration to Perspiration

Inspiration to Perspiration: The 4 Essential Steps to Achieving Your Goals by David A. Jacobson (Goal Success, 2003)

The title is a metaphor, of course—but in this case, it’s also literal. The author and his wife Shari were inspired by Team In Training (TNT), a fundraising arm of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, to train for and run a marathon.

TNT raises vast amounts of money for medical research, by getting even couch potatoes to participate in some kind of extreme athletic event like a marathon, 100-mile bike ride, or even an Iron Man triathlon.

The book interweaves David and Shari’s personal journey, David’s four-step GAIN goal achievement formula that he uses with his coaching clients (first introduced on p. 6 and throughout the book), and the personal stories of athlete participants and blood cancer patients—including the organization’s founder and his teenage daughter Kim Costa’s Ten Life Lessons (written shortly before her death, pp. 98-100).

What I found most interesting, and the reason I chose to review this book even though it seems to be out of print (though widely available on the second-hand market) is TNT’s marketing and fundraising strategy. It’s so different from that of many other causes, focused as it is on individual and team-based athletic achievement. Yes, I know, squillions of charities use athletic events to raise money. But typically, these have much more modest standards and don’t require extensive training.

Participating in one of these extreme events, especially for those starting from a very sedentary lifestyle, requires several months of arduous training. And to fundraise at scale, most of us need to develop parts of our personality that might be in hiding. It’s a great example of my long-time claim that successful social change businesses need to appeal both to self-interest and to the greater public interest.

On the self-interest side, TNT athletes get in shape, bond with others, build community, and feel like they’re making a difference. And in the public interest, they are raising money for research that is helping actual people, including their “honored patient.”

TNT motivates its athletes by letting them build a personal connection with an actual cancer patient. The athlete wears a facsimile of the patient’s hospital ID bracelet and might pin a picture of that cancer hero on the back of their jersey. TNT trains them with a huge organization of more than 800 coaches around the country and the world, in small groups where they can build community around their common purpose. And there’s lots of emphasis on finding and nurturing the support that will nurture you. For instance, Jacobson identifies eight different types of support networks (pp. 60-62). And he recognizes that asking for the support you need might itself be a new challenge (pp. 64, 72).

Jacobson moves back into the coaching role near the end of the book, with a great list of 50 questions to ask yourself as you look at your goals (aimed at teens but useful for any age, pp. 169-171), and seven implementation questions (p. 173). And I love his exhortation to think big in order to act big (pp. 178-179).

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, April 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: April 2021

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Why Settle for Return to Normal?

Golden Earth picture by Stephanie Hofschlaeger

As this arrives in your inbox, I’m about to take a plane for the first time in 14 months. My wife and I will be visiting my 90-year-old father, for the first time since August 2019. Yes, all three of us are fully vaccinated. And we bought our tickets the very day we got our second dose. On our way, we’ll visit our daughter and her husband in New Jersey and my in-laws in Queens, then fly nonstop from LGA to minimize airport exposure. We’ve seen the NY/NJ family a few times, picnicking on my daughter’s roof or meeting in a state park halfway between our houses and having tea with Dina’s parents in their yard. We’ve also seen my younger child and their partner, but our kids haven’t seen each other in person since they came to our house for Chanukah in December, 2019. Zoom is great, but it isn’t the same.

So yes, it’s great to see the light at the end of the tunnel and to resume some “normal” activities—but that’s not enough! The pandemic presents an incredible chance NOT to return to “normal,” but to create the society we really want. That window will only be open for a short time. If we seize the moment while change is floating within our reach, we can join together to create a society grounded in social and racial justice, healing the environment, meeting basic needs, combining the best of pandemic and pre-pandemic (such has having events that include both in-person and online attenders), and more. But if we let the moment pass, it may be years before that opportunity arises again.

Why am I so optimistic in this dark and strange time? Because all those people who told change agents that they couldn’t change, that “this is the way we’ve always done it,” that we had to settle for so much less than we want have all been proven wrong. We know now that everything can pivot. We’ve seen dramatic change in so many sectors, and we’ve also seen a much broader and deeper awareness of the need to address systemic problems. From the murders of people like George Floyd almost a year ago to the attacks on Asian sexworkers in Atlanta just last month, we’ve seen how much work still must be done—and many of us have emerged from these shocks with a much stronger commitment to racial equity, fairness to the lowest economic strata, and willing to make deep systemic changes in how we govern, how we work, how we learn, and how we socialize—not to mention how we eat, how we get our entertainment, and how we travel. I think we may have passed the tipping point in recognizing that we have to go beyond “sustainability” (keeping things from getting worse) to a regenerative economy and society that actually makes things better.

As a green/social entrepreneurship profitability consultant, speaker, and author who helps businesses develop and market profitable products/services that turn hunger/poverty into abundance, war into peace, and catastrophic climate change into planetary balance, I find this very exciting. I believe business, especially small business, has a huge role to play in initiating and nurturing these changes, and that business is more likely to get involved when we show them the opportunities to profit in this work.

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Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

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The ROI of Kindness

Brian Biro (pronounced BY-row) and I were two of the speakers at the recent Kindness Matters Summit, and when I opened the swag box the organizer sent all the speakers, I found a copy of this book. It’s a quick read, laid out for fast assimilation. Biro wrote most of the book, with Anderson contributing a few sections.Early on, Biro shares some amazing statistics on how terrific a kindness culture is for the bottom line (no surprise to long-time readers of my stuff). For example, a quick service restaurant chain with a kindness culture lowered employee turnover from the typical 170% all the way down to 14%, saving millions in hiring and training costs—and generates average revenue per store of $4.1 million, compared to $2.7 million for McDonalds (p. 35). And kindness-focused companies overall increased their stock price by 901% over 11 years, versus just 74% for companies lacking a kindness culture (p. 22). Biro names several companies that have succeeded while implementing a culture of deep kindness (among them Southwest Airlines and Zappos). The Zappos open return policy has paid huge dividends; the people who return the most come right back and buy a lot more (p. 36).

The bulk of the book, pages 46-98, examines 7 business success principles grounded in kindness (with narrative and examples for each), which Biro and Anderson position as the job description for your new role as Chief Kindness Officer (CKO):

  1. Being fully present
  2. Blame-busting
  3. Humility
  4. Living with gratitude
  5. Listening
  6. Asking more than telling
  7. Staying focused

CKOs can take inspiration from many places, including this lovely quote from Audrey Hepburn: “For beautiful eyes, look for the good in others; for beautiful lips, speak only words of kindness; and for poise, walk with the knowledge that you are never alone.” (p. 77)

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription for, too.

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The Clean and Green Club, March 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: March 2021

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What Can Rock’s Greatest Songs Teach Us about Marketing?

The direct-mail rockstar Brian Kurtz recently riffed in his newsletter about how, decades ago, he got his own favorite song, “Running Hard” by the British group Renaissance to take top honors in the annual best rock song vote on his college radio station. Every other year, the top two were always Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven” and “Layla” by Derek and the Dominoes.

My own choice for greatest rock song of all time is The Who’s “Won’t Get Fooled Again” (WGFA). Here’s a version from 1978, which has quite a bit of variation from the original but still has Pete Townshend doing incredible acrobatics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDfAdHBtK_Q . By the time I saw them in 2013, that was all in the past. He was about 67 at the time, if I remember right, and Daltrey was 69.

One more example of the patterns I’m seeing: Santana’s “Black Magic Woman,” if you include the prologue, “Singing Winds, Crying Beasts” (technically a separate track). Five songs in the running for greatest rock song.

Let me put on my “Brian Kurtz Analytical Hat” for a moment: See any patterns? Here are some I notice:

  • They all completely break the classic hit-song formula: three minutes, catchy but simple tune, lyrics you can sing along with the second time you hear the song.
  • Strong, complex, almost orchestral instrumental work–especially guitar parts (though the keyboard openings for WGFA and Running Hard are probably their most memorable features)
  • MUCH longer than three minutes–much more suited to album-oriented FM radio play than Top-40 AM
  • Catchy riffs; it’s actually easier to sing the guitar and keyboard parts to WGFA or “Stairway” than it is to sing the lyrics.
  • Not always so easy to decipher the lyrics. For “Layla,” I understood what Clapton was singing only when the way-slowed-down acoustic version came out years later.

In short, what makes these songs great was their originality. Have they endured because they made the listener work hard—but not as hard as, say, some obscure work by Frank Zappa that has no pattern within the song?

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Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

Nice new print interview with me on Billion Success: https://billionsuccess.com/shel-horowitz/

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

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Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire

Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire by Rebecca Henderson (Public Affairs, 2020)

An academic who does a lot of corporate consulting, Henderson has had a ringside seat as global corporations address climate change and social justice. She’s quick to spot the innovators, understands how they can build support either from a leadership platform or from much farther down the hierarchy.

Her focus is on creating “social value,” which goes beyond the financial bottom line to address things like hunger or racism—and, of course, climate change. Many of her examples are from large multinationals. And she has access to the research to back up her claims. Even though I’m familiar with many of her case studies, I still took 6-1/2 pages of notes. This book is an excellent complement to my own Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World. I recommend reading them in close succession. Her book lays out how big corporations have implemented, while mine is more of a roadmap for smaller businesses.

I’ve talked a lot about how changing mindset is so crucial to social change—but Henderson shares the insight that the power structure puts those “there’s nothing we can do” messages out when it feels threatened, or even challenged (p. 5). And yet, when firms seek change at global scale, they do so for their own survival (p. 11).

She’s also very big on ensuring that companies don’t externalize the costs onto taxpayers or customers while privatizing profits (another long-time concern of mine)—and one way to do that is to focus on the true costs, regardless of who’s paying. When we point out that externalized costs raise the true costs of coal from the 5 cents per kilowatt hour that we’ve been led to think it is, to 13 cents (2-1/2 times as much), we’ve just done a whole lot to make clean renewables cost-competitive (p. 21).

Oof—at the rate I’m going, this book review would be 4000 words. Let me just share 10 among many highlights:

  1. Most capitalists fail at dividing the pie, while socialists fail to grow it; we have to re-engineer to do both (p. 28)
  2. Fair labor practices help companies as well as workers (p. 41)
  3. How one brand manager at Lipton, Michiel Leijnse, made the business case for sustainable tea and changed the whole industry (pp. 50-59)
  4. How Walmart’s post-Katrina embrace of sustainability generated 13% ROI (pp. 63-65)
  5. Toyota’s successful penetration of the US market in the 1970s targeted team productivity, rather than individual workers; they cut both design time and assembly time in half (p. 109)
  6. Three keys to reinventing finance: accounting that measures environmental and social good (ESG); impact investors motivated by ESG; rule changes to free companies from investor short-termism (p. 157)
  7. Major firms can sway their suppliers (p. 158); the top 100 buyers can shift their entire industry’s practices AND create reporting mechanisms that identify who is in compliance (pp. 175-177). Similarly, getting the world’s largest investors on board will change investment practices much faster (pp. 195-197)
  8. Business also has a vested interest in protecting democracy (p. 226)
  9. The $12 trillion opportunity in meeting the UN Sustainable Development Goals (p. 255)
  10. Six ways your company can make a difference (pp. 258-268; also see Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World)

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

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The Clean and Green Club, February 2021

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: February 2021

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Two Magic Upsell Phrases that Open Clients’ Wallets 

It happened again this week: I completed an assignment for a new client, and pretty much immediately, I had three more assignments and another three potentially in the pipeline down the road.

This isn’t an accident. It’s a strategy that combines wanting to be of genuine service, having my strategic thinking powers recognized, and knowing that it’s far easier to get more work from a happy client (especially while they’re still glowing over the work you just did for them) than from a new prospect.

Here’s the cover letter I sent when I turned in the first job. Can you spot the phrase that led directly to more work?

Hi, [client’s first name] — see what you think.
I’ve upped the marketing quotient, demonstrated the benefits more clearly, smoothed out the language, reorganized some sections, made it a LOT more personal, and avoided making any absolute claims yet without using “weasel words.” (For instance, rather than say that after completing a particular module, they won’t make the mistake anymore, as your original states, I say that they will understand how to do it right–you don’t want to be liable for their forgetfulness or bad habits). I’ve also fixed some minor grammatical issues and gotten rid of inappropriate capitalization (particularly for words like preposition and module). Note that I don’t speak French and have not made any attempt to examine the French portions. Since I was rewriting and reorganizing so much, I didn’t turn on Track Changes.

The letter uses “I”, “my”, and “me” more than I typically do, but I decided that in this case, talking in your own voice as the friendly expert and not some faceless corporation was a good thing in your draft, something I wanted to maintain as it creates personal rapport. I did add lots more “you” language as well.

Please be sure to read the embedded comments. I will probably need to make some minor adjustments once you’ve addressed them.

You might also give some thought to naming the product. (I can help with that, too.)

We are coming in under budget ($600 before any reworking). I would strongly recommend that you also have me prepare a response once someone has used your freebies, that you could send either by email or LinkedIn Messaging. Hire a temp to get the names into the spreadsheet (and once that’s done, spend a few minutes a day keeping it updated), but you want to be responding *quickly*. Leads age and lose interest very quickly. This first batch, you’ll send off all at once–but after that, you probably want to be following up within 48 hours.

Did you spot it? In the last paragraph, I say, “I would strongly recommend that you also have me prepare…” That paragraph identified two problems and then pointed him to solutions: hiring me for one and a data entry temp for the other. If you guessed, “(I can help with that, too.)” in the previous paragraph, you’re also on the right track. These are magic phrases—but only once I’ve established my expertise, as I do in the first two paragraphs where I explain what I did to fix his draft, and why. Notice that I didn’t go on about my credentials. I simply fixed the irritants.

My favorite upsell phrase is some variant on “I couldn’t help noticing _______________ [problem statement]. Would you like me to fix that for you?”

It’s useful not just for copywriters and marketers but for website coders, graphic artists, health professionals, even hair salons—pretty much any service business and many product businesses as well.

This kind of framing makes it amazingly easy for the client to say yes. I’ve found that nearly all responses fall into:

  • Yes, please!
  • Yeah, I know. I’ve already hired someone to fix it
  • Not right now, but could you help me with this other thing?

Two of those three likely responses lead immediately to more work. And even if you get the second response, you’re establishing yourself as someone who looks out for your clients’ interests and are likely to get other assignments. Using this strategy, I’ve turned several clients who came in for a small job in the few hundreds into mid-five-figure lifetime value. One eventually hired me to ghostwrite two books!

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Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

For his Western Mass Business Show, radio host Ira Bryck asked Shel to put together a panel. Shel reached into the activism world to pull in State Senator Jo Comerford (who was elected after a decades-long career at MoveOn and elsewhere) and to the green business world for Raj Pabari, a 16-year-old entrepreneur who has started multiple companies and has 16 employees.

Watch video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kdego4U3jSM&feature=youtu.be

  • Guests: Shel Horowitz, Going Beyond Sustainability, expert on/consultant to social entrepreneurship businesses and author of Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World

  • Jo Comerford, Massachusetts State Senator and 30-year professional activist

  • Raj Pabari, 16-year-old CEO of Off Grid Technologies (a social enterprise and green business making device charges that can take many power sources)

Takeaways:

…Read More

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Ecotopia

Ecotopia by Ernest Callenbach

This imagined eco-country was very much ahead of its time. I thought it would be interesting to look back, almost 50 years later, and see what the book got right, where it was off the mark, and what influence it may have had. (I’m not going to discuss the plot.)

The environmental movement was just edging into wider public consciousness, starting with the first Earth Day in April, 1970. The homesteading/back-to-the-land movement was firmly established and was already supporting magazines like The Mother Earth News—but it was the fringe province of young hippies. The US was still enmeshed in Vietnam. The book would have been mostly or fully written before the Arab oil embargo that skyrocketed oil prices and began to make conservation mainstream. And the successful German resistance to nuclear power plant construction at Wyhl, which birthed the safe energy movement worldwide, wouldn’t begin in earnest until February, 1975 (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-nuclear_movement_in_Germany#Early_years ).

  • The largely post-industrial Ecotopian society has made huge progress in cleaning its air and water, reimagining energy systems, and making itself a much more livable place. Callenbach barely mentions conservation, however—and that’s where much of the progress in the real world took place. The actual US (along with many other parts of the world) has also made huge strides on pollution and green energy, but it still has far to go. We no longer have urban rivers catching fire (see https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/06/the-cuyahoga-river-caught-fire-it-inspired-a-movement/ ), but we still have major industrial disasters, many of them related to fossil and nuclear power (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingston_Fossil_Plant_coal_fly_ash_slurry_spill , as one of many examples).
  • Along with the de-industrialization came a reduction of the work week to 20 hours, thus doubling the number of available jobs while freeing time for leisure pursuits such as arts, sports, and science (which in turn can stimulate any economy). Callenbach is far ahead of us here. We would do well to implement something similar so we can achieve full employment and stimulate an economy that’s in tough shape. This would need a pretty big infusion of government money; the private sector can’t just double its labor cost.
  • At a time when the US love affair with good natural food hadn’t really started yet, Ecotopia eats well. Farm-to-table is the norm, and people appreciate fresh food. The ecotopian ideal has certainly filtered into the general population. Farmers markets, CSA farms, massive natural foods supermarkets (and decent natural foods sections of mainstream supermarkets) are normal now. But while the natural foods movement has grown enormously, most food consumed in the US is still grown using chemiculture, at industrial scale, far away from where it will be eaten, with sacrifices in soil quality, taste, water pollution, putting other animals and plants at risk, and nutrition. Yet the Ecotopian food sensibility is very meat-oriented, with wild game supplanting feedlots. Callenbach doesn’t build a very accommodating society for vegetarians, vegans, gluten-free, or other special diets.
  • Private cars and petroleum-based plastics have been essentially eliminated, though plant-based plastics are common. People have no problem getting around via trains and minivans (and for short distances, walking and biking), even in isolated rural areas—or using tools like videoconferencing to avoid the need to travel. This is another area where the US could emulate Ecotopia, or at least Europe.
  • Feminism is a given. The book has several strong female characters and a carefree attitude about sexuality; nonmonogamy is widely practiced and accepted. Ecotopia’s president is female, when only Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), India, and Israel had ever elected a female leader in the modern era. The US is a lot less sexist than it was in the early 1970s and just elected a female Vice-President of color. Ecotopia would be a good model for us—but in today’s US, same-sex relationships are widely seen as normal, and gender identity is open to question. The near-total invisibility of gays and lesbians in Ecotopia is surprising.
  • Cultural diversity, however, is not dealt with well. Ethnic communities have separated from the mainstream and form little “mini-city” Bantustans in the suburban rings around major cities. The population centers are uncomfortably homogeneous. Having lived both in some of the most and least diverse communities in the US, I think diversity is a strength.

I could keep making comparisons for a long time, but let me stop there. It’s an interesting read, a lens on what some of us thought that better world could look like.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

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