Category Archive for Recommended Books

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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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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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.

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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.

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, 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.

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, January 2021

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

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How Do You Successfully Rebrand a Century-Old Racist Image? 

A reporter recently asked, “How do you communicate new branding to a legion of fans who might not want it? Cleveland’s name change is a significant branding change. Even though it is the right thing to do, it could have consequences for fans. What this mean for other brands? And what should business owners keep in mind as they build their brands?”I thought my response was worth sharing with you, first, because it addresses a super-topical issue that many firms are struggling with, and second, because it gives insight into how to analyze a situation, find and seize opportunities, and leverage massive improvement (I think this is one of my core strengths–and if you need this sort of thinking, please reach out):

Pitch Title: Rebranding: Cleveland has some advantages (HARO) The Cleveland MLB team won’t be the first professional sports team to change–not even the first to change from less to more politically correct. The Houston Astros started out as the Colt 45s, and the Washington Wizards basketballers were once the Bullets.

And let’s face it–if Humble Oil can successfully do a complete rebranding–not just the name change but the whole image–from warm, fuzzy but lily-white Esso with its “put a tiger in your tank” mascot and pictures of smiling White men pumping gas for happy White families–to cold, corporate Exxon, whose ads were largely devoid of people and completely lacking in cute animals, the challenge of a well-established franchise with the resources to spread the news and a good political reason for making the switch should not be all that hard.

Cleveland is a city with a strong Black community and a long history of speaking out on racial justice. The team has an opportunity to bring that community into the renaming process, provide a sense of ownership in the new name. They also have not just an opportunity but a moral obligation to reach out to Native American communities, not just in NE Ohio but around the Midwest. They should commit some dollars to amplifying their voices and giving space to the case that Red lives matter as much as Black and White ones. They could easily put up a web page that didn’t just explain the reason for the change but gave room for Red folks to tell their stories. This could even be on the homepage of the current site with a button to redirect to the new site for the new name, rather than an automatic redirect.

As a green/social entrepreneurship profitability consultant, speaker, and author of Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (endorsed by Seth Godin, Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield…)–I take businesses beyond mere “sustainability” (status quo) to “regenerativity” (improving): I help develop and market profitable products/services that turn hunger/poverty into abundance, war into peace, and catastrophic climate change into planetary balance. Branding and product/company naming have been part of my work since the 1980s.

She then asked me to get specific about her four questions, and I wrote,

1. How do you communicate new branding to a legion of fans who might not want it?

The easiest way might be to identify a group of maybe 100 influencers–maybe people who have been season ticket holders for five years or more and also have 5000+ social media connections and/or newsletter subscribers (these are arbitrary numbers, just an example). Woo them a little. Reach out several weeks ahead of the public rebrand and describe some cool VIP activities that only they and their cohort (and maybe they can each invite three friends) get to do. These activities could be virtual (a live smartphone guided tour through the back, player-only parts of the stadium with a knowledgeable live guide who has an important title and can do real-time Q&A, for instance). Or do an in-person version for five or ten masked, distanced super-VIPs (that’s pretty labor-intensive and risky, so it has to be a tiny group). Give them some big hints of the new identity, but not a full reveal. Have a guessing contest with prizes for the person who comes closest, and some other prizes too.

Then actually ASK for help in spreading the reasons for the rebrand. Ask also to help you come up with new chants, ideas for cool swag, etc. Make them involved partners who want to give you their best thinking and to share their love of the club with their own base. Take lots of notes, implement the best stuff, and credit those whose ideas you used and those who didn’t–by commenting gratefully on their own and your social media feeds (on Facebook, you can do both at once by tagging. That used to be true on Twitter but seems not to be right now.)

2. Cleveland’s change is a significant branding change. Even though it’s the right thing to do, it could have consequences for fans. What does this mean for other brands?

Yes, it’s a significant branding change but plenty of teams have done it before. See for instance https://popculture.com/sports/news/7-sports-teams-changed-racist-names-mascots/#7 . Probably hundreds of high school and community teams have also switched. While it has consequences for the team, in terms of the expense of replacing all the uniforms, swag, signage, and maybe even the beer cups at the concession stands, it’s hard to see “consequences” for the fans. Some may be unhappy about the change, but hey, people are unhappy when Trader Joe’s stops carrying their favorite snack. Life goes on. In fact, there may be some positive PR buzz for finally doing the right thing, even if decades late and precipitated by a national crisis around racism this past spring and summer. That benefit can be multiplied if the team makes some sort of reparations. It could be something as simple as offering unsold VIP boxes to a rotating set of local community groups working on diversity and inclusion, at no charge and maybe with some VIP treatment.

3. And what should business owners keep in mind as they build their brands?

A brand is not just the slogan, logo, mascot, colors, etc. It’s the sum of the customer’s or prospect’s experience dealing with your organization. This means that if you’re part of an organization that says it’s an ally around diversity, you have to walk your talk. The good news is that by paying attention to what your brand REALLY stands for, aligning with a higher purpose than simply revenue or showing fans a good time, you can build amazing loyalty. And since sports teams already have enormous loyalty, they are ideally positioned to take it further and do really great things that address and begin to solve our biggest problems (not just racism but hunger, poverty, war, catastrophic climate change, pandemics, etc.)–and actually help change the culture by taking leadership. I have a lot of resources on this at http://goingbeyondsustainability.com 

4. How does a business pivot after rebranding?

Carefully but with enthusiasm. Make your mistakes in the beta phase and get them out of the way before your public launch. Get as much buy-in as possible ahead of the launch.

This Interview Breaks New Ground on Reimagining the World

I’ve begun to focus some good thinking and research on how the pandemic creates opportunities to skip “going back to normal” and instead remake the world we really want to see. I’m even looking for a publisher for an article I’d like to write, called Leveraging the Great Pivot: How COVID-19 Creates Opportunities for Racial Justice, Economic Advancement, and Environmental Healing.

As I began this research,
…Read more

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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 Comorford (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. Listen tomorrow, 1/16 at 11 a.m. ET and Sunday, 1/17 at 2 p.m. ET over WHMP, 1400 AM or WHMP.com, and listen any time, once the air dates have passed, at https://whmp.com/podcasts/shows/taking-care-of-business/

Kindness Summit, January 26-28 (online)
I’m giving the opening keynote of this three-day conference featuring a dozen speakers on various aspects of kindness at work. My talk, “Making Kindness Profitable,” includes many examples of kindness to people and planet–famous ones like Oprah and Mr. Rogers, plus plenty of very cool innovations you’ve probably never encountered. I’m on Tuesday, January 26, noon Eastern/9 a.m. Pacific. The conference is amazingly affordable, with a sliding scale starting at just USD $35. Visit this link to register

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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Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things

Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things by John C. Ryan and Alan Thein Durning

Stuff walks through a typical day in the life of a hypothetical and typical Seattle adult, looking at both obvious and hidden environmental impacts. We get an inside look at global trade, as we go piece by piece through the making and use of a car, bicycle, cheeseburger, fries, newspaper, cup of coffee, aluminum soda can, computer chip, t-shirt—and this very greenly produced book (which still has significant environmental impact). The authors include suggestions at the end of every chapter for easy lifestyle changes that reduce consumption and waste—and some policy recommendations to make a much bigger difference.

While the book is exhaustively researched, the day-in-the-life approach keeps the story moving forward, and doesn’t bog us down in the details unless you want to read the nine pages of endnotes that provide al the sources. It’s an easy and quick read.It’s really important to have an understanding of just how much is involved in making one of these objects, and what price our earth pays when we acquire and use it.

And it’s also really good to see how many improvements the business world was starting to make by the time it was published in (gulp!) 1999—and how much farther down the road to sustainability we’ve come since then, at least in the making and use of one object. To name five among many examples, when this book was published,

  • LED light bulbs were expensive and of horrible quality
  • Hybrid and all-electric vehicles were rare; the original Honda Insight was the only hybrid available in the US, although Prius had been released in Japan (and yes, I am aware of the environmental issues around hybrid cars)
  • Household solar was expensive, inefficient, and in limited supply
  • Lumber and tote bags from recycled soda bottles were almost unknown
  • The local food movement was tiny; CSA farms and even farmers markets had far less impact than they do now

The problem is that despite these huge increases in sustainable production and distribution since then, more people are getting more stuff—so the improvements in the environmental footprint of one unit for one household might be counterbalanced by the vastly increased number of units—and the number of trans-oceanic trips the components often make.

The book also points out that residential customers subsidize very eco-UNfriendly operations, such as aluminum smelting, which took 20 percent of all energy sold by the Northwest’s Bonneville Power Authority (p. 65)—and that people in the US account for just 5 percent of the world’s human population, but consumed 24 percent of the world’s energy and 13-39 percent of various other resources (pp. 67-68).

I don’t typically review a book that’s out of print—but it’s available as a Kindle. Even though the actual numbers are probably not accurate anymore, the concept of the book is, if anything, more applicable now than it was. Also, the book mentions that several portions are available at Sightline Institute, the environmental think-tank that produced the book, http://www.sightlineinstitute.com . The website is very much operational (and quite cool), though I wasn’t able to find the excerpts on a quick look.

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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.

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The Clean and Green Club, December 2020

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: December 2020

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When Is It OK to Distort the Truth?

I was deeply shocked to watch the actor playing committed pacifist Dave Dellinger, who was an actual friend of mine, punch someone out in Aaron Sorkin’s “The Trial of the Chicago 7.” Dave served some serious jail time for refusing to fight in WWII, and all of his writings emphasize nonviolence. Quite relieved to read Harvey Wasserman (who was involved in the Chicago events) say in his review of the movie that it never happened, was disgracing Dave’s legacy, and should be removed from the film:

Here Sorkin’s film hits a bad bottom. Played by John Carroll Lynch, we sense a suburbanite whose spiritual roots in a lifetime of pacifism are not quite clear.

In one truly inexcusable moment, Dave is shown punching a court officer (and then apologizing for it).

THIS ABSOLUTELY DID NOT HAPPEN!!!

Dave Dellinger spent years in prison for refusing to take up arms during World War II. He was an elder beacon for countless nonviolent protests.

He titled his autobiography From Yale to Jail. Even when sorely provoked — at least in his adulthood — it was a point of honor that Dave Dellinger would refrain from physical violence.

Years later, as we sat in at the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant, Dave made a pretty convincing case that Abbie had been murdered. When election protection attorney Bob Fitrakis held hearings on how Ohio’s 2004 election had been stolen, Dellinger came to Columbus while conducting a long water-only fast.

It was also Dave — not Tom — who read the names of those killed in Vietnam. He did it at the beginning of the trial, not the end. The litany included Vietnamese names, not just American ones.

Like Tom (and unlike the actor who portrays him) Dave’s powerful physical presence reflected his heartfelt commitments. There are artistic liberties that work in this film, but that alleged moment of personal violence does not. Mr. Sorkin, please edit it out!

Dave once wrote me a letter describing not wanting to do violence by smoking a cigar when people found it offensive. So I believe Harvey. And I don’t understand why Sorkin would undermine everything Dave believed in for a cheap visual. People will watch this movie and think, well, he wasn’t so committed to nonviolence after all. It is a total invalidation of what he stood for and the way he lived his life.

Harvey’s critique is all the more valid because Harvey himself has a tendency to write in a somewhat apocalyptic style, with a lot of capitalizations and exclamation points and predictions of dire consequences or major victories (see an example in the single-line third paragraph I quoted). Yet this false characterization of Dellinger was unacceptable because it completely changed the meaning of Dave’s philosophy and behavior.

Bending or distorting or outright ignoring the facts is something that happens way too often in Hollywood movies. I still remember a movie portrayal of nuclear safety whistleblower Karen Silkwood, whose death on a highway has been widely linked to a deliberate attack. While official investigators said she’d fallen asleep, a union investigator found that her car was indeed rammed from the back. That the documents she was bringing to meet with a New York Times reporter were never found makes the story of deliberate murder far more likely.

But in the movie (it may have been “Silkwood” or it may have been “The China Syndrome”), her little Honda is repeatedly hit from behind by a large pickup truck—but she survives.

I honestly don’t see how changing the outcome was at all useful in telling the story. It essentially lets the company she worked for get away, literally, with murder.

Yet, when I interviewed one of my favorite authors, Madeleine L’Engle (author of A Wrinkle in Time and dozens of other books), she made a distinction between truth and fact. The emotional impact of powerful fiction doesn’t have to be based in fact, she says—and we have many powerful novels to prove her right.

Facts are limited. It is a fact that we’re sitting here, but whether any truth comes out of this meeting is something else again. We don’t always know [truth]. I write stories because that’s how I look for truth. I was looking for truth when I was writing Wrinkle. We live in a world where it’s very difficult for people to understand that a story can be truthful and not factual.

For me, the line in the sand is whether shifting the facts to make a better narrative interferes with perceiving the truth. In both the movie examples I’ve cited, I think changing those particular facts is unacceptable because it changed everything about what we believe about Dave Dellinger and about the people who probably killed Karen Silkwood.

Where is the line YOU draw, and why?

This Interview Breaks New Ground on Reimagining the World

I’ve begun to focus some good thinking and research on how the pandemic creates opportunities to skip “going back to normal” and instead remake the world we really want to see. I’m even looking for a publisher for an article I’d like to write, called Leveraging the Great Pivot: How COVID-19 Creates Opportunities for Racial Justice, Economic Advancement, and Environmental Healing.

As I began this research, podcast host Tony D’Urso invited me to return to his show–so I got my first chance to see how some of this sounds out loud. Keeping in mind that this is in the very early stages, and that we spent the first ten minutes sharing some background, I’d love to know your thoughts. You might even get a credit in my next book!

You can listen (and read the transcript) at https://tonydurso.com/crisis-opportunities-now-with-shel-horowitz/ –and Tony would be grateful if you gave a quick kudo at ratethispodcast.com/tony And here’s my list of takeaways from the call

Shel’s personal backstory as a writer, marketer, and activist (Timings: 00 through 8:20):

  • How activism got me into marketing and journalism in my teens
  • My start in journalism: a right-wing high school alternative newspaper gave 15-year-old left-wing me a platform–and ran my articles with disclaimers!
  • My first paid writing assignments, at $3 per hour–and my unusual motivation to write those articles quickly
  • The humble beginnings of the business I’ve run for more than 39 years
  • Why forming a successful group to block a large mountainside housing development proposal opened the door to the work I’ve done for the last 20 years, integrating profitability with environmental and social good

Shel’s motivation for activism on multiple issues, especially clean energy (8:20 through 10:33, 15:06-17:35):

  • Why clean energy has a much brighter future than even 20 years ago
  • How the energy-hogging Empire State Building was converted into one of the greenest buildings around–and how those improvements generated 33% return on investment
  • The cow-poop-powered green heating system in my antique farmhouse (built in 1743)

How we pivoted in 2020, and how we can make those pivots bigger and more long lasting to create a better world (17:40-24:38):

  • The opportunity COVID created to remake the world differently–including the newly global reach of formerly local events
  • How I got connected to a 16-year-old green entrepreneur on the other side of the country, which would never have happened pre-pandemic
  • Chances to explore entirely new careers, because your old career may not exist anymore
  • How we’ve often faced huge social shifts (the 1918 pandemic, when no one had Zoom and few people had a phone in their house; transition from horse to engine power; the vast disruption of the Internet) and risen to the challenge

What it means to be environmentally and socially responsible AND profitable (29:23-39:54):

  • Successful examples from clothing company Patagonia to a company that builds a ladder out of poverty using inexpensive solar LED lanterns
  • Cost savings in going green, including a different approach to manufacturing (and the technology we already have that will eventually make that possible at scale)–and how that could revolutionize medicine and other areas
  • How even a pizza shop could make a meaningful difference–with a youth training program that offers four distinct types of benefits around job and entrepreneurial skills, healthy eating, life skills, and more profit to the shop owner
  • How a house in the Colorado snowbelt went net-zero-energy–in 1984–and paid for all the improvements out of energy savings
  • How mindset changes possibility, including a magnificent quote from Muhammad Ali (I built my TEDx talk around this quote)–and how to frame the narrative to find out what actually is possible
  • What I’ve learned by posting a daily public gratitude journal

“Opportunities, ideas, are under every rock and tree” (44:34-48:00):

  • If you generate ten ideas a day), find two each month to explore
  • Our power is in our resilience and our inventiveness
  • The benefits of the conscious choice I made to have a happy life

Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World–and what my legacy might be (48:00-54:00):

  • How marketers benefit by finding an elastic market (like books)
  • Why Guerrillas should be quick and nimble
  • Marketing that leads to action–and action that makes the world better
  • The secret of turning customers into ambassadors
  • Why customer evangelism is one of the most profitable things a marketer can invest in–and how surprisingly easy it is to develop and harness that loyalty (easier for businesses with a higher purpose, by the way)

Tony’s summary of the call takeaways (54:00-57:12):

  • The necessity of getting good and getting fast
  • The power of a higher purpose: “sew good seeds and do good deeds”
  • When you see problems–brainstorming how things can work better–grab hold of your vision
  • Find ways you can pivot
  • Find 10 new ideas each day

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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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Dare to Matter

Dare to Matter by Jordan Kassalow and Jennifer Krause

Social entrepreneur and optometrist Jordan Kassalow gives us a book that’s part memoir, part guidance for social entrepreneurs, and part inspirational self-help pep-talk about living a meaningful life. Co-authored with his rabbi (who gets a full co-byline, not just a “with” or “as told to” credit), the book is exclusively in his voice.

Kassalow stumbled around for a while before he found his joy, but eventually chose to help people in deeply disadvantaged economies live and work better through providing eyeglasses. In many cases, a simple non-prescription pair of drugstore readers could take someone from hopelessness to active citizenship and add years to their productive work life; for others, a common prescription could do the same. After working with various medical charities that took him to distant lands, he founded VisionSpring to make glasses more widely available.

While short on the specifics of how to start and operate a social entrepreneurship venture, the book is strong on the personal challenges one particular social entrepreneur faced, and how he overcame them. And even stronger on how to figure out where your skills, interests, and resources intersect, what your purpose is—and how to align your life and career with that purpose, and make your life matter by harnessing that purpose. Among the tools to guide that discovery are the instruction to find the need that specifically needs you, as opposed to some random other person—your skills, knowledge, joy, and feeling of aliveness when you do the work (pp. 113-114). Related to that, ask yourself these two questions (p. 228): “What needs me? What feeds me?” He also gives some good guidance on whether, in your unique situation, you should set up as a for-profit, nonprofit, social entrepreneur, or other model (p. 76), and how to balance your need to do good with your own financial health (p. 83).

And I love his injunction to “see compassion as a renewable resource,” nurtured by your own self-care (p. 108). He further admonishes,

Be hyper aware of any injustice you encounter that ignites a fire in your belly so intense that the only way you can extinguish it is to act. Challenge yourself to examine the issue from all angles—don’t stop at one giant problem. Tease the issue apart until you find the need within the need that you are uniquely suited to serve…the point of need where you can exert your energy that helps take down much bigger and more overwhelming problems. (p. 131)

Providing glasses to those in need enabled him to check off boxes for addressing poverty, inequality, and educational opportunity.

He notes that social entrepreneurship pioneer Bill Drayton calls finding that personal sweet spot “your jujitsu move.” This is particularly relevant to my own mission of using profitable business to address the world’s biggest social and environmental problems.

I also love the schooling he got in making sure every aspect of a social good enterprise respects the dignity of those you serve. One lesson was understanding why it was no help to provide someone with the perfect prescription if the frames were so hideous as to make the patient a laughingstock. Similar lessons are sprinkled throughout the book.

Peppered with quotes from people like Helen Keller, Rumi, Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (one of my favorite spiritual teachers), and even my old friend Rev. Victoria Safford, who I’d lost touch with decades ago (and got inspired to track down and reconnect with), the book is an easy read. It’s fun to watch Kassalow try to integrate the very different parts of his life: practicing his craft as a partner in his father’s optometry practice where he serves mover-and-shaker clients in the 1%, his work on the ground in primitive conditions in remote parts of Latin America, Asia, or Africa, his love of backcountry camping, his journey as a Jew, his hobnobbing with other social entrepreneurs at conferences such as the World Economic Forum in Davos. There were a few times when I found him annoyingly out of touch with the realities that many of us face, a certain sense of privilege and arrogance. But on the whole, I enjoyed it.

One of the things I really like is that Kassalow sees joy and gratitude as integral in his work. I especially like the suggestion (borrowed from Heschel) to live your life in “radical amazement” (p. 256). I didn’t have that wonderful wording until reading this book, but I’ve been attempting to do that for many years, and fairly successful at it. My daily public Gratitude Journal on Facebook often celebrates the mundane with that sense of radical amazement—the joy I take in living a life so full of blessings. Later this month, I will post about whatever little miracles happen to me for the thousandth consecutive day.

Strongly recommended for people of any age who are figuring out how to align their career with their values. Order from your favorite independent bookstore at https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780806539034

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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.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, November 2020

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: November 2020

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17 Steps to a Powerful Marketing Plan

Sooner or later, you might need a marketing plan. Actually, you might need a few marketing plans—because, like any good marketing document, your plan should be targeted to a specific audience. So you might need a plan for investors and lenders, a different one for media where you plan to buy advertising, and a third for people you want as stakeholders to the concept of your higher mission: the ways your product makes the world better. All of these would tell the truth and nothing but the truth, but slant the material differently for the different sets of readers.While every marketing plan is different, there are some things you should probably include:

  1. What the product (or service, idea, etc.—we’ll just call it all product in this article) is called
  2. What the product does: what problem/pain point it solves or goal it helps achieve
  3. Who it does it for
  4. Who else it could serve
  5. Competition analysis:
    • Who else is in this market—why, how long they’ve been there, and how they’ve fared
    • What you have that they don’t (your advantages)—and what they have that you don’t (theirs)
    • How robust their customer base is
    • How you have advantages in manufacturing, distribution, quality, speed, etc.
    • How you might partner with them to grow both businesses
  6. How this product has a competitive advantage (hint: what’s unique either as stand-alone benefits or by harnessing a particular combination of features to create a new benefit)—and how can you express this as a Unique Selling Proposition
  7. How you will reach the primary and secondary markets. If advertising is a part of your plan, how much you’ll spend in which media
  8. How you’ll measure the results
  9. If it’s a manufactured product, how you’ve taken steps to lower the environmental footprint and boost the social responsibility
  10. For any kind of product, how you will identify and market the social and environmental benefits
  11. How you might repurpose the product to accomplish different things and/or reach different markets
  12. How you will reach the same people with line extensions that meet additional needs
  13. What angles and talking points you’ll use to get no-cost media exposure in print, online, radio and TV (including podcasts, blogs, webinars, and other newer media)
  14. What no-cost and paid outreach techniques you’ll use to find and build your following
  15. What energy and resources you will put into each of these avenues
  16. How you will identify, reach out to, and partner with those people who can benefit by your success
  17. What impact your success will have on the wider world: how it will be a better place because you birthed and nurtured it

Would you like to be quoted or featured in media like the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Christian Science Monitor, ABC TV News, Redbook, and Reader’s Digest? I do at least 30 interviews in a typical year, 50 or more if I’ve got a new book out.

My favorite way to get coverage is to respond to reporters who have posted that they’re actively looking for sources for a story they’re working on. It’s so much easier to get press by giving a journalist the exact information they need to write a story than to “spray and pray” by sending press releases or cold-calling.

Several services match journalists with story sources—and most of them don’t charge anything. There’s one called HARO, also known as Help A Reporter, that I’m particularly fond of. I put time aside three times every weekday to look over the queries and respond to the ones that could benefit me.

But here’s the thing: I’ve forwarded reporters’ source queries to friends many times. And when I see their responses, I often cringe. I got tired of cringing, so I wrote a 40-page quick-read ebook on how to answer those queries the right way. It includes seven actual queries (by me and four other people) that resulted in coverage in Reader’s Digest, the Toronto Globe and Mail, and elsewhere—with analysis of why they worked and how some of them could have been even better–as well as four failed queries and a look at why they didn’t work.

It also includes three bonus reports: How to Write Press Releases that Actually Get Media Coverage—and Your Prospects’ Attention (includes 10 full or partial actual “story-behind-the-story” press release examples); Ten Other Services That Get You in Front of Journalists and Show Producers; and How to Get Superstars to Endorse Your Book—discussing some of the ways I’ve gotten endorsements or guest essays from Chicken Soup for the Soul co-creator Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, Cynthia Kersey (author of Unstoppable and Unstoppable Women), Frances Moore Lappe, author of Diet for a Small Planet, and the founder of the Guerrilla Marketing concept, Jay Conrad Levinson (who later co-authored two books with me).

This very useful addition to YOUR marketing toolkit is just $7.95, delivered instantly as a PDF. Get your copy at https://shelhorowitz.com/product/generate-thousands-of-dollars-in-publicity-without-spending-a-cent/

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Recent Media Coverage:

  • My article on how to stop a coup got picked up and reprinted by a local paper, the Amherst Indy. The original is on my blog: https://greenandprofitable.com/how-we-stop-the-coming-trump-coup/  Part 1 of the article is about the Barrett nomination and is obsolete, but Part II is about what happens if the sitting president attempts to maintain power now that he’s lost, and it may be alarmingly relevant. At press time, he had just dismissed his Secretary of Defense, who supports the Constitutional requirement for a fair election process.

  • Quoted along with AOC (I think that’s very cool) and others about the Biden climate plan: https://themilsource.com/2020/10/14/joe-bidens-green-policy-explained/

  • I got quoted with several other writers on how COVID is affecting our careers. Mine is the fifth one, and I used it to talk about doing a book on the opportunities COVID has created for deep change: https://www.eatlikeawriter.com/post/how-writers-have-been-affected-by-the-coronavirus-pandemic

  • Got to tell two pieces of the Save the Mountain success story on a new B2B social media platform and small business resource called Enterprise League https://enterpriseleague.com/blog/creative-guerrilla-marketing-ideas/ . I cited my daughter getting her entire sixth-grade class to write letters to the local paper, and why we referred to the real estate developer we were battling as our honorary fundraising chair. Mine is the second submission, with the subhead, “6th graders can do a better job than adults”. I liked the site enough to set up a free account.

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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No-Harm Marketing Ethics

No-Harm Marketing Ethics by Marcia Yudkin

I’ve been following Marcia Yudkin for a long time. We met in the 1980s when I hired her to do some freelance editing. I watched her marketing career evolve, and we were two-thirds of a three-person mastermind group that met regularly for a couple of years. I was one of the presenters for her first No-Hype Copywriting summit.

I’ve always admired her for:

  • Authenticity
  • Willingness to buck the trends and stand up for integrity
  • Highlighting the introvert’s perspective that too many marketers ignore
  • Positive focus in her marketing copy
  • Intense study of the marketing world—so her many diversions from “the way marketers do things” are deliberate opposition to the wrongs she sees.

This brief ebook took me well under an hour to read—time well-spent.

She starts by noting that she had wrestled with the question of whether marketing is innately evil—but concluded that it’s not marketing itself that’s evil, but marketing that’s out of integrity with the marketer or the client—that represents the product, the marketer, or the prospect in inauthentic, condescending, or untruthful ways.

Then she moves into 12 no-harm marketing principles, which make up the bulk of the book. Her advice includes discouraging buyers whose needs won’t be met by the product (including those who want to buy something similar to what they’ve already bought but haven’t implemented yet), rejecting manipulative practices and sneaky return-discouraging tricks, marketing through positive benefit rather than fear or other negative emotions—and building personal customer/client relationships based on mutual trust. And of course, being scrupulously honest in your copy and all your client interactions.

I also appreciate the attention Yudkin puts into environmentally- and user-friendly packaging, promoting social justice values and common humanity, and encouraging diversity—areas that far too many marketers ignore.

From her introvert perspective, she has a fascinating insight into the much-ballyhooed concept of social proof—the idea that so many others have taken the step, so of course, you should too. She describes the unintended consequences when marketers’ social proof attempts caused her to back away from the purchase because she didn’t want her purchase displayed for others to see. Social proof has its place, but it’s certainly not a panacea. And it can be used in ways that don’t compromise privacy—such as my own use of testimonials or guest essays—with full permission—by credible experts like Seth Godin, Frances Moore Lappe, and Jack Canfield in my own 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

After admonishing marketers to know and follow the laws and best practices in their industry, she ends with a simple but brilliant 8-point checklist: if you can answer yes to the first four questions and no to the last four, chances are you’re good to go.

You can get your choice of PDF or Kindle format at https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1044614

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, October 2020

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: October 2020

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Are You Making THIS Mistake in Your Social Media Outreach?

As I went through a couple of weeks’ worth of LinkedIn connection requests, I saw several with messages:

We haven’t met…This will come out of nowhere, but we just finished a PPC project for a well known consultant. Thought you might want to connect//start a conversation, etc…who knows…

And

Hi Shel, I hope you are well! I’d be honored to connect and network on LinkedIn Looking forward to sharing value and seeing your content,

And

Hi Shel, It’s good to “e-meet” you. Thought it would be good to connect here on LinkedIn given our mutual connections. Hope all is well! Thanks, [First Name]

And

I’m [First Name], I own and run an amazing AR/VR Animation Studio, a Digital Marketing Agency, and two Software Development Companies! I also happen to think I’m a pretty cool connection to have 😉 haha. Lets connect!

And (from a self-proclaimed LinkedIn lead generation expert)

I hope you are well! I’d be honored to connect and network on LinkedIn Looking forward to sharing value and seeing your content, [First Name]

And

I am involved in utilizing AI in managing building management systems to maximize economic value for building infrastructure. I saw your LinkedIn profile and thought it would be great to connect.

When you see messages like this, what does it bring up for you?

For me, it seems like someone told them it would be a good idea to personalize their LI connection requests, and they think a standard generic message, in most cases all about them, will do the trick. I did like the phrase, “I’d be honored to connect,” but the rest of her message gives me no idea where the shared value would show up.

I wrote back to the one starting “We haven’t met”, who seemed more clued in than most of them:

No need for PPC campaign but happy to connect. At the risk of giving advice you haven’t asked for, may I suggest that you might improve your results if you give some idea of the industry or your general capabilities? As a copywriter, I see your message as better than some, but still very lacking in the specificity that provides credibility.

If he responds, I now have an opening to sell him on my copywriting services. But not on the first date. Relationship building requires an actual individual point to build on. None of these people have a pre-existing relationship with me.

None took two minutes to visit my page, see what I’m about, and customize their message accordingly. The AI person would have seen that I’m a one-person consulting company and I don’t work in the building trades. The AR/VR person might have pitched me on extending those services to my marketing clients and told me what kinds of software he’s developed, instead of bragging about how amazing he is.

Compare those approaches with this one in the same batch:

Hey Shel, I’m building GoodHuman, a place to discover all things ethical and sustainable in one immersive mobile app. We’ve vetted 650 brands in apparel and beauty and users can connect with others on the same mission. Would you be interested in early access as a beta tester for the app? 😀

This is much better. In the first line, he talks about two of my touchpoints, ethics and sustainability—plus his branding resonates with me. He finishes by asking if I’d like to beta-test his cool-sounding software, but he doesn’t tell me it’s cool, letting me judge for myself. In short, he is laying that foundation for an actual business relationship and maybe even a friendship. I wrote back,

Sounds like you’re doing great work. Please tell me more about how you see the role (and time commitment) of your beta testers. There might be a fit, but I do very little purchasing in the two areas you mentioned. Also, please have a look at what I’m doing: https://goingbeyondsustainability.com 

And he responded quickly that he’d be happy to send me an access code if I wanted one. I said yes. Taking the time first to write to me based on my own interests and second to build a relationship set him apart from all those others. That relationship got off to a much better start.

Would you like to be quoted or featured in media like the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Christian Science Monitor, ABC TV News, Redbook, and Reader’s Digest? I do at least 30 interviews in a typical year, 50 or more if I’ve got a new book out.

My favorite way to get coverage is to respond to reporters who have posted that they’re actively looking for sources for a story they’re working on. It’s so much easier to get press by giving a journalist the exact information they need to write a story than to “spray and pray” by sending press releases or cold-calling.

Several services match journalists with story sources—and most of them don’t charge anything. There’s one called HARO, also known as Help A Reporter, that I’m particularly fond of. I put time aside three times every weekday to look over the queries and respond to the ones that could benefit me.

But here’s the thing: I’ve forwarded reporters’ source queries to friends many times. And when I see their responses, I often cringe. I got tired of cringing, so I wrote a 40-page quick-read ebook on how to answer those queries the right way. It includes seven actual queries (by me and four other people) that resulted in coverage in Reader’s Digest, the Toronto Globe and Mail, and elsewhere—with analysis of why they worked and how some of them could have been even better–as well as four failed queries and a look at why they didn’t work.

It also includes three bonus reports: How to Write Press Releases that Actually Get Media Coverage—and Your Prospects’ Attention (includes 10 full or partial actual “story-behind-the-story” press release examples); Ten Other Services That Get You in Front of Journalists and Show Producers; and How to Get Superstars to Endorse Your Book—discussing some of the ways I’ve gotten endorsements or guest essays from Chicken Soup for the Soul co-creator Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, Cynthia Kersey (author of Unstoppable and Unstoppable Women), Frances Moore Lappe, author of Diet for a Small Planet, and the founder of the Guerrilla Marketing concept, Jay Conrad Levinson (who later co-authored two books with me).

This very useful addition to YOUR marketing toolkit is just $7.95, delivered instantly as a PDF. Get your copy at https://shelhorowitz.com/product/generate-thousands-of-dollars-in-publicity-without-spending-a-cent/

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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.

You are “The Expert” – Let the world know.

3 Ways you get found by news media and Google search:

** Press Room Search Engine select from 39 topics
** Send News Releases (including Google News) sent out 10 ways
** Print Listing in the 2021 Yearbook of Experts, Authorities & Spokespersons

Save 15% when you register at this link: http://www.expertclick.com/discount/Shel_Horowitz

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A Very Stable Genius

A Very Stable Genius, by Philip Rucker and Carol Leonnig

Important Note: Most of this review was written in mid-September. As I write this update, it’s October 4. A lot has happened in those seven weeks: Ruth Bader Ginsberg died and Trump nominated the ultrarightist Amy Coney Barrett, who has less than three years experience as a judge (seven months of that when the courts were closed) and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is attempting to push her nomination through in violation of his own 2016 precedent. The first debate was held, where Trump proved once again that he has no manners, no grasp of policy, and no desire to tell the truth. And Mr. and Mrs. Trump, along with at least three Republican senators, came down with Coronavirus after saying for months that it was not a big problem, even as more than 210,000 Americans have died of it —and while revelations surfaced that he knew back in February that the virus was a severe problem. Trump also openly stated that he wouldn’t abide by an election result that he lost, raising fears of a coup following the election. All of these make it clearer than ever that we need a complete repudiation of Trumpism to make this election outcome too big to steal.

There are any number of books you can read about the unsuitability of the present occupant of the White House for his job. It really doesn’t matter if you read Mary Trump, Bob Woodward, this one written by a pair of investigative journalists at the Washington Post, or some of the others. And I know I may lose some readers over this—but I feel that for people who care about the issues I write about regularly—the environment, the business case for sustainability, ethics as a success driver, the value of competence and of science, and more—it would be immoral for me not to discuss the greatest threat to the climate and to American democracy. It would be a crime against my values not to urge a vote for Biden.

What matters is that we all recognize every American eligible to vote has a clear picture of the incompetent and corrupt liar who inhabits 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. This man is a would-be dictator who cozies up to dictators and thugs around the world, who in turn see him correctly as easily manipulated: stroke his ego, tell him what he wants to hear, and he’ll sell the country down the tube for you. Tell him a painful truth, and you get thrown under the bus. He has no sense of how to govern, no sense of constitutional limits on his power, no regard for what might actually be good for the country or this world, and only cares about how it benefits him and his cronies, and how it looks on TV. The most recent example: he put the lives of two Secret Service men and a driver at risk to take a joyride near the grounds of Walter Reed Hospital so he could wave at his adoring fans while he was still contagious.

Rucker and Leonnig paint a dismal picture of the campaign and the first few years in office, pretty much ending with the Mueller report but with an epilogue about the incident that finally got him impeached: attempting to blackmail the president of Ukraine to investigate Biden if he wanted the foreign aid that had already been authorized.

I’m not going to get very specific in this review, because all the significant outcomes have been widely reported in the news.

But I will make an exception on page 170. So much is crammed onto that page: his ignorance, his penchant for corruption, and his lack of understanding of how he was being manipulated. Here’s the corruption piece:

Trump perked up at the mention of bribes and got rather agitated. He told Tillerson he wanted to help him get rid of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

“It’s just so unfair that American companies aren’t allowed to pay bribes to get business overseas,” Trump told the group. “We’re going to change that.”

Looking at Tillerson, Trump said, “I need you to get rid of that law…”

What I found most interesting was the clear lens on what happened behind the scenes. Rucker and Leonnig show us the back story in vivid detail: who was trying to do what, why, and how the palace politics was playing out. You find out who was fighting with whom, who was covering up for whom (hint: the beneficiary was usually the guy at the Resolute Desk). All the intrigues and negotiations. The differences between those in the administration who thought he is saving the world, and those who thought their job was to save the world FROM him (the now-departed adults in the room like Tillerson, Kelly, and Mattis).

I know that many of you have probably voted already. If you haven’t, get out there and vote. Whether you voted early or not, get your friends to vote. Volunteer with and/or financially help an election protection organization. This is a moment to step up.

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.

 

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, September 2020

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: September 2020

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Are You a Franklin or a Mozart?

One of Chris Brogan’s newsletters offered this nugget:

We have to throw out multitasking. It’s basically an excuse we use to be bad at multiple things. Be better at one. Or a few.

If we “stay busy,” we think that’s progress. But progress is progress. Seeing one needle (one number) move is the real target.

Sell one thing really well. (Man, I really need to embrace this.)

I think of Chris as someone who does many things well, and who doesn’t fit easily into a box. So I wrote him this reply:

What you are suggesting works great for some people. But I am one of the ones who has enough ADD that it wouldn’t work well for me. I always say I became a writer because I’m interested in almost everything. And writing is at the core of what I do as a marketer.

But that ADD has driven me to keep expanding the scope of what I do, while narrowing the focus toward businesses that want to make the world better in some way.

In the earliest days of my business, most of my work was typing term papers. You may be too young to remember when that was a thing. By the time I got my first computer, in 1984, I had been in business almost 3 years.

Over time, my focus shifted first into editing and resume writing, then PR materials for small businesses and authors, then book publishing consulting, and now a mix of all of the above (except typing, which I let go of in 1990) – plus strategic marketing consulting, all with a much narrower focus on who I would like to serve. And the other strand has always been activism. The evolution of my business over the past 20 years has a LOT to do with a conscious decision to braid those two together, following a successful campaign I started to stop a hideous housing development on the side of a local mountain. That campaign brought a lot of my marketing and negotiating skills into my activist work, and I started thinking about how I could bring the values of my activism into the business world.

[I didn’t go into detail about the work I’m doing helping business find the sweet spot where profitable products and services make an actual difference on things like hunger, poverty, war, catastrophic climate change, and pandemics, because Chris and I have corresponded many times, and I think he already knows this about me. He even endorsed my latest book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World. If we’d had less contact, I would have inserted that right here.]

From the 30-thousand-foot level, this shifting path actually makes sense and feels somewhat linear. But looking at piece by piece, it would come across as chaos.

There is a wonderful book called The Renaissance Soul by my late friend Margaret Lobenstine that posits two paradigms for a successful career path. The first is Mozart, who knew what he wanted to do at age 4 and kept doing it, getting better and better at it, until he died.

But the second is Benjamin Franklin, a person with half a dozen career paths and a gazillion interests. Was he a postmaster? An inventor? A diplomat? A revolutionary? He was all this and more.

Many of our greatest successes as a society have come out of the work of people like Franklin, Hedy Lamar (famous as an actress, she was also an inventor whose work made cell phones possible), DaVinci, Eleanor Roosevelt, Buckminster Fuller, Helen Keller, Franklin’s contemporary Thomas Jefferson… People who see the world and their own contributions through a holistic lens.

So that’s multitasking on the macro level. On the micro level, I find I’m not as good at doing several things at once in the same moment as I used to be, and have tried to focus more deeply. But I can only keep that intensity for so long, so I take a lot of breaks. If I’m doing client work, I am not multitasking, but I might only work for 20 or 30 minutes before clearing my brain for at least a few minutes. If I’m on a learning call, I typically am [multitasking]. I listen to a lot of learning calls, and in many cases prefer the replay recordings, because if I hear something that sounds important, I can rewind a minute or two and give it my undivided attention for a moment. And if I’m hiking, I often find that part of my brain is chewing on a problem, and sometimes I have the solution at the end of my walk.

PS: I think of you as someone whose natural strengths lead much more toward the Franklin than the Mozart.

PPS: Along with multitasking is multipurposing. This letter will become the main article in one of my newsletters.

Warmly,
Shel

He wrote back a one-sentence reply wondering how successful the approach would be—and acknowledging that he’s much more in the Franklin camp.

I answered,

I really think it depends on how we are wired. Some of us work very well in the do one-thing-at-a-time mode. Margaret’s whole point is that it is a mistake to assume that because it works for some people, it should work for everyone. Not that people can’t change their style but I think on the whole it is much easier to adapt your work can the style that works for you, rather than trying to adapt your style to someone else’s idea of how you should work.

This one didn’t get a reply. Perhaps you have a thought on this? If so, write back (and please tell me if I have permission to quote you).

—————————————————————————————————————————-

Would you like to be quoted or featured in media like the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Christian Science Monitor, ABC TV News, Redbook, and Reader’s Digest? I do at least 30 interviews in a typical year, 50 or more if I’ve got a new book out.

My favorite way to get coverage is to respond to reporters who have posted that they’re actively looking for sources for a story they’re working on. It’s so much easier to get press by giving a journalist the exact information they need to write a story than to “spray and pray” by sending press releases or cold-calling. I see many people doing this all wrong–so

Several services match journalists with story sources—and most of them don’t charge anything. There’s one called HARO, also known as Help A Reporter, that I’m particularly fond of. I put time aside three times every weekday to look over the queries and respond to the ones that could benefit me. But here’s the thing: I’ve forwarded reporters’ source queries to friends many times. And when I see their responses, I often cringe. I got tired of cringing, so I wrote a 40-page quick-read ebook on how to answer those queries the right way. It includes six actual queries (by me and four other people) that resulted in coverage in Reader’s Digest, the Toronto Globe and Mail, and elsewhere—with analysis of why they worked and how some of them could have been even better.

It also includes three bonus reports: How to Write Press Releases that Actually Get Media Coverage—and Your Prospects’ Attention (includes 10 full or partial actual “story-behind-the-story” press release examples); Ten Other Services That Get You in Front of Journalists and Show Producers; and How to Get Superstars to Endorse Your Book—discussing some of the ways I’ve gotten endorsements or guest essays from Chicken Soup for the Soul co-creator Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, Cynthia Kersey (author of Unstoppable and Unstoppable Women), Frances Moore Lappe, author of Diet for a Small Planet, and the founder of the Guerrilla Marketing concept, Jay Conrad Levinson (who later co-authored two books with me).

This very useful addition to YOUR marketing toolkit is just $7.95, delivered instantly as a PDF. Get your copy at https://shelhorowitz.com/product/generate-thousands-of-dollars-in-publicity-without-spending-a-cent/

 

 

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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.

Wide-ranging written interview on Fem Founder (I was very pleased that they would interview a man) about being a tiny startup, morphing my business multiple times, marketing challenges, the current work on strategic integration of profitability and social change–and even some insight into my lifestyle and my volunteer social justice/immigration justice/environmental activism outside of work. https://www.femfounder.co/femfounderstories/shel-horowitz-interview . If you prefer to read it on Medium, it’s also at https://medium.com/fem-founder/do-the-homework-to-make-sure-you-can-find-a-market-if-you-follow-your-heart-with-shel-horowitz-f27efb35ac82 . Note that at this time, I am not pursuing the activist clearing house idea that the interview refers to. I have something more exciting that I’ll reveal to you down the road.

The 22-minute Climate Change with Scott Amyx interview I taped several weeks ago is now live: https://scottamyx.com/2020/08/31/interview-with-shel-horowitz-green-transformative-expert/ We discussed some very different ideas about marketing, the importance of environmental and social commitment to profitability, and more.

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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Not a friend, but I came across this interview with a naming expert and had to share it with you. As a Canadian living in Australia, she has a very different perspective. https://www.sourcebottle.com/blog/WHATS-IN-A-NAME

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What Does Injustice Have to Do With Me?

What Does Injustice Have to Do With Me? Engaging Privileged White Students with Social Justice, by David Nurenberg (Roman & Littlefield, 2020)

Like so many other fields, from customer service to architecture, education has a marketing component. Educators are in the business of marketing the importance of knowing certain information, or embracing certain values or thinking processes. As Nurenberg points out throughout the book and most clearly in his final chapter, educators also have to market their own worth as change agents in a system that values conservative conformity (pp. 163-173)—and do this to multiple audiences with different agendas: students, parents, administrators, and colleagues. And he recognizes that every classroom has a different dynamic, that each teacher knows that dynamic intimately and will need to adapt any exercise to the specific conditions.

While many of the books I review here are much more overt in their marketing focus, books about social change (another subset of marketing, often) are also within my purview. This is a book by an educator, for educators. It uses the language of educators, which is not always familiar to me.It looks at how a teacher can incorporate anti-racist lessons and materials even into science and math classes (pp. 66-75). And it dips heavily into both marketing and social change.

Again and again, Nurenberg demonstrates the advantages privileged kids gain by having their privilege challenged (especially pp. 108-118): they become more critical thinkers, they face adversity and build skills of resilience, they’re more college-ready (and more desirable to good colleges), and of course, they become much more aware of different perspectives in the wider world, and perhaps more willing to take action to redress inequity. Nurenberg offers a number of specific in-class and research activities that can break down resistance to confronting racial justice—and particularly to confronting one’s own (conscious or unconscious) complicity in a system that’s ultimately based in institutionalized racism. He also offers strategies to promote genuine allyship and avoid coming in as the know-it-all, patronizing, smug benefactor. He has fewer ways to actually have students of different races work together productively, though he does offer some.

All of this is somewhat fraught. Nurenberg is highly sensitive to the effects of this kind of curriculum not only on suburban white kids of privilege but also on urban kids, kids of color, or kids of lower economic status, who are often already marginalized in majority-white schools serving the affluent. It’s very easy for white teachers and students to commit microaggressions such as tokenizing or insisting that the voice of the student of color or a particular religion or ethnicity or disability or gender category represents all people of that cohort, or demanding that those students share experiences they might rather keep to themselves. But Nurenberg offers lots of strategies to do this in a meaningful and inclusive way that feels safe for students of any background.

There’s no index, but there is extensive footnoting and a terrific bibliography.

Full disclosure: the author and I are acquainted. We both participated in a Jewish social justice delegation to a prison holding 3000 teens in Homestead, Florida last year. That prison was closed a couple of months later due to public pressure.

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, July 2020

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: July 2020

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Reading an article on the Singapore-based Eco-Business site (often a wealth of fresh thinking to my American eyes) called “Build Back Better,” about ways we can mitigate the climate crisis as we reopen, I got the idea to start a community on the theme of building back better—but not just for climate change. I envision a portal with resources and ideas to create better futures in criminal justice/policing, nonviolent defense, equitable housing, transportation, community food self-sufficiency, education, the work world, democracy… There’s a ton of great stuff out there, but I’m not aware of a one-stop resource that crosses silos and disciplines, reaches people with a wide range of passions, interests, skills, and demographics, and has the power to create change. I put up a blog post about what this might look like, including a call for several different types of volunteers. Interested? take a look at https://greenandprofitable.com/build-back-better-lets-start-a-movement/

Don’t Poke Your Eyes Out Before You Take Your Road Test

On a discussion group, I saw a note from a small publisher grousing that nobody told her how hard the marketing would be, that she’d spent $20,000 on her websites and getting the book designed and the first 100 copies printed, but had sold exactly two books. She’d just put another $3,000 into advertising. She didn’t discuss what it cost to translate the book into three other languages and publish again.

I went to her website. I am betting that the $3K will also be wasted.

But I can’t feel too sorry for her. I don’t understand why anyone would sink that kind of money into a project without doing the most basic research into why and how people buy books. It’s like taking your driving test after you’ve deliberately poked your eyes out. It’s hard to imagine any outcome other than failure.

Look at the two screen shots—and know that these are the whole thing. There’s no other content on the pages.

Can you spot the mistakes?

Here are a few I came up with in a very short visit to the site:

  • The cover looks like it was designed for a textbook around 1952.
  • For a consumer audience, the title needs to state a point of view and/or a problem/solution. Something like How Your Lymph System Could be Sabotaging Your Health—and How to Turn it From Enemy to Ally (note: I have not read the book and have no idea what the book advocates, other than this statement in the original note I saw:
    “For me the decision to write a book was prompted by two factors – first, that I had upended a conventional medical belief, and second, that part of the data I used to do that was not available to anyone, anywhere. Part of the source material which was unavailable came from an ancient text from the late 1700’s. If you could find the book to purchase, it would have cost 5,000 pounds. My obsession with the lymphatic system was coming from a completely different place than medical professionals – and I developed methods to manipulate the deeper lymphatic system externally, unlike others who do lymphatic drainage massage.” Lymphatic Anatomy: Ancient Art, New Directions tells the reader nothing.
  • There is no selling copy whatsoever. Nothing about who it’s for, why it’s important, how it will help the reader, what kind of research went into it, the authors’ credentials (other than the secondary author is an M.D.)…nada!
  • If the book is designed for ordinary consumers, the $125 pricetag is a nonstarter. If it’s aimed at medical professionals, the price is not a big issue but the nonstarter is the main author’s lack of credentialed expertise. And we don’t have any idea of what kind of role the secondary author, who is a doctor, brought to the project, or what that doctor’s relevant credentials are. We don’t even know anything about why Chinese medicine is germane.
  • No third-party credibility. No reviews, no testimonials, no case studies accompany the visual presentation of the book. It’s supposed to stand on its own and convince people to buy, on the “strengths” of the terrible cover, the high price point, and the lack of any reason to buy.

Whatever product or service you’re offering, don’t make these kinds of mistakes! Your marketing has to make sense, and so do your product and your pricing. You have to know who your audience is, how to reach them, and what messaging will resonate.

If you’re unsure, call in a professional. I have a few slots left for new clients. If your product is a book, I’m an experienced book shepherd and book marketer who can help you produce a quality product, keep you from making expensive mistakes, and help you find skilled, affordable vendors. If you run a green or social entrepreneurship business, you’ve found your expert in that realm as well. If you’re in a different industry, I may or may not have industry expertise but can certainly help you with the marketing. Eight of my ten books are on marketing, and only Grassroots Marketing for Authors and Publishers is industry-specific. Four of those books are specifically for green and social change companies/organizations.

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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.

Tomorrow (July 16) is the final day of Mari-Lyn Harris’s Kindness Matters virtual summit. I’m debuting a brand new talk, “Making Kindness Profitable,” at 5:35 p.m. EDT/2:35 p.m. PDT, with Q&A to follow. The whole conference looks terrific; if you open this today, you may want to check out the earlier sessions: https://heartatworkonline.org/speaker-schedule-kindness-matters/

Insight-packed five-minute interview by Mitchell Levy https://www.thoughtleaderlife.com/thoughtleaderlife/thought-leader-life-455-guest-shel-horowitz/

Back in March, I responded to a reporter query on corporate social responsibility (one of my fortes). I just received a note from the reporter that the story was published late last month, and I was very pleased with the way it came out. I talk about one of my favorite examples, a company that addresses poverty, the environment, and quality of life all at once, through solar LED lights. And I enjoyed reading the examples other experts provided, too: https://blog.submittable.com/csr-examples/

Also quoted in some depth on whether socially conscious advertising is a good thing. Not surprisingly I argue that it is, and back up my claim with facts: https://www.verywellmind.com/does-socially-conscious-advertising-work-4847116

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.

Join 4x #1 International Bestselling author Teresa de Grosbois & Co-host Pam Bayne for a 2-hour live fully interactive clinic you’ll do exercises aligned with where you’re at in creating and writing your book. We’ll be live-polling the attendees to see where you’re at right now and what you need to get your #book #completed. https://www.retreathostingcostarica.com/writers-clinic

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The 100% Solution: A Plan for Solving Climate Change

The 100% Solution: A Plan for Solving Climate Change, by Solomon Goldstein-Rose (Melville House, 2020)

At age 22, Solomon Goldstein-Rose served a term as the State Representative for a district that borders mine. He left the legislature to work full time on climate change, and he and I have had many climate discussions over the years. When I found out he’d released a book, I asked for a review copy.

The title would be more accurate if it said “Solutions”, not “Solution”; Goldstein-Rose’s whole point is that if we break up the causes of climate chaos into separate industries and sectors, multiple solutions can be woven together to create a carbon-neutral or even carbon-negative world: a meta-solution with many components woven together into a coherent approach, where no single approach could come anywhere near eliminating 100% of atmospheric carbon. He even gives percentage ranges that each can theoretically accomplish.

The well-researched book offers four questions to evaluate carbon remediation strategies (pp. 21-22):

  • Is it cost-competitive?
  • Can it scale up fast enough?
  • Does it rely on mandates to industry or on individual choices? Mandated behavior change will be a lot faster—but in MY opinion, encounter more hostility.
  • How much lifestyle change will it require? The more change, the lower the rate of adoption.

Also five pillars for addressing carbon globally (p. 4, explored in detail with a chapter for each, pp. 83-195):

  1. (Clean) electricity generation
  2. Electrification of processes now powered by carbon-intensive fossil fuels
  3. Synthesized fuels
  4. Non-energy shifts
  5. Carbon sequestration

Pillars 1 and 2 are all about getting our electricity generation as clean as possible, and then switching many energy-hogging activities to that clean electricity. Pillar 3 is about switching to carbon-free artificial substitutes for systems that really need concentrated, consistent energy (jet airplanes, for instance, p. 125). Pillar 4 covers the impact of industries like agriculture, logging, and cement. And Pillar 5 extracts carbon from the air and puts it, quite literally, “where the sun don’t shine”—usually deep underground.

In general, while I have concerns about the environmental and social impacts of several of his recommendations, I basically approve of his approach and am grateful for his meticulous number-crunching and numerous references (which would have been even better if the book had an index).

But there’s one “solution” he gives a lot of weight to that I am convinced is a serious mistake: He’s strongly in favor of nuclear power (pp. 96-105).

I’ve already made the arguments against nuclear power, many times. You can find a condensed version in the brief update I wrote for a new Japanese edition of my first book, Nuclear Lessons, following the Fukushima meltdown in 2011: https://goingbeyondsustainability.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Nuclear-Lessons-Intro-2011-2017-tweak.pdf 

There’s also one potential 6th pillar he dismisses that could make up for not using horrific, unsafe, toxic nuclear technology: He almost completely ignores conservation/efficiency, other than calling them a distraction (pp. 41-46) and only hinting at the significant positive contribution they make on pp. 200-201. There’s also a passing reference (p. 147) to eating less meat as a way of reducing carbon impact (which, as a vegetarian since 1973, I certainly endorse—but as just one conservation step among many).

The research on conservation and efficiency is clear. We’ve already cut our energy use drastically by switching from incandescent to LED lighting, insulating our buildings, etc. But that’s only the beginning. The US still uses well more than twice as much energy per capita as, say, Denmark or Britain—places that offer comparable or better quality of life by most metrics.

And by designing systemically and holistically, there are far more opportunities to conserve. For example, when the Empire State Building underwent a “deep-energy retrofit” several years ago, it achieved energy savings of over $4 million per year, with just a three-year payback. Multiply by billions of buildings, and we begin to see what’s possible. As Amory Lovins, founder of Rocky Mountain Institute (a major player in the Empire State Building project), notes (in this admittedly dense article), when we have different energy efficiency systems working together, we can gain exponential energy savings. And that translates to vastly lower carbon footprint. I discuss Lovins’ amazing work in much more accessible language in my latest book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World, along with several other equally amazing “practical visionaries.”

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.

 

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

 

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