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The Clean and Green Club, June 2022

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: June 2022

Test Drive This Powerful Green Business Certification—No Cost

I’ve been telling you about the Green Business Bureau and the many benefits they offer, including the GBB EcoAssessment™, a very spiffy self-guided software-driven certification process that is very easy to use and much more friendly to small businesses than other certifications I’ve looked at.

A GBB staffer will be happy to demo the assessment tool for you. You don’t have to be a member to see how it works. All you have to do is fill out this 1-minute form with your name, company or organization, email and phone. Your request will be forwarded to a member of the Green Business Bureau staff.

You do have to be a member to actually go through the assessment and obtain certification. Membership is quite affordable, starting at just $212.50 (10 employees or less) once you factor in the 15 percent off I’ve arranged for you no matter how big your business is. To claim the lower price, just visit https://greenbusinessbureau.com/membership-purchase-options/ , choose the number of employees that describes your business, and enter the code Shel15 (no space between the lower-case L and the number 1).

Yes, I will get a commission if you join—and YOU get 15 percent off.

50.17 Years in Marketing—and This Still Blew Me Away

Yes, that’s a clickbait headline—something I almost never do in this newsletter. I used it this time to very deliberately illustrate something. Can you guess what it is? Here’s another example—the actual reason I’m choosing this topic for this month’s newsletter: a presentation by direct-mail legend Denny Hatch called

A Whirlwind Tour of Direct Marketing Knowhow: From July 10, 1194 through the 21 st Century

That title got me to stop what I was doing, put aside my agenda for the day, go and watch Denny’s 41-minute talk, and then write this article—and that sequence doesn’t happen too often.

Why were these 15 brief words so persuasive to me? Can you guess?

Yes, it helped that I knew Denny Hatch’s reputation, and that it was sent in a newsletter from Brian Kurtz, for whom I have enormous respect. But the real motivator would have gotten me to click even if I knew nothing about the presenter. Have you figured it out yet? Here’s the secret:

This talk title used specificity to harness curiosity!

By putting in a specific date from more than 800 years ago, in an industry that most people assume is only about 250 years old, Denny didn’t just engage my curiosity, he grabbed it.

One-paragraph digression: And yes, he delivers on why that date is important in marketing—avoiding a mistake too many clickbait headline writers make (a mistake that I’m betting leaves the reader feeling cheated and less interested in the product). If you’ve clicked on any ads that use words like “tragedy” and then name a celebrity like Willie Nelson or Whoopi Goldberg and then discover an ad for a CBD company, you may have experienced that sort of disgust. End of digression.

The thing is, this talk title wouldn’t hook in everyone—but I happened to be the ideal audience for it. I wrote my first marketing copy around April 1972 (yep, that’s the 50.17 years in my own headline) and I’m fascinated by history. So when he offers something very specific and unknown to me about the long-ago history of marketing? Oh, yeah, baby, I am so hooked! For someone who’s more interested in football or the Kardashians, this headline weeds them out. Only the actual markets (marketers and lovers of history) will respond to that title and watch the presentation—but they won’t be able to stay away.

If you’re curious also, his presentation is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ww8a-8hyio

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.

The Carbon Almanac: It’s Not Too Late

The Carbon Almanac: It’s Not Too Late by The Carbon Almanac Network, foreword by Seth Grodin

Did you know…

Bad News

  • Climate change has secondary impacts in every aspect of our lives: flooded homes and roads, inflation, loss of precious beaches, diseases, famines… (pp. 28-29)
  • 634 million people (~2x US population) risk climate-related flooding (p. 34)
  • Flying adds 6x atmospheric carbon per person as the same trip done by train (p. 37)
  • Despite years of pretending they didn’t know, Exxon released a memo (excerpts reproduced on pages 46-47) on November 12, 1982 outlining the consequences of human-caused climate change and identifying fossil fuel industries as the major cause
  • Methane traps 80 times as much heat as CO2; nitrous oxides trap 270 times as much (p. 51)
  • We use 8x energy and produce 7x emissions to support 3x the population of 1950 (p. 72)
  • Plastic produces 6x its weight in CO2 over its lifetime (pp. 78, 79); plastics manufacturing also causes massive deforestation (preventing capture of 6.5 million metric tons per year of carbon) and emits gigatons of CO2. Only 9 percent of discarded plastic is recycled; 12 percent is incinerated, further worsening carbon impact (p. 34).

Good News

  • Only 8 percent of Norway’s 2021 new-vehicle sales were powered by fossil fuels (p. 101)
  • We improved air and water quality and slashed food waste during the pandemic (pp. 113-114)—so we can replicate that success through behavior changes
  • Switching from chemiculture to organic could cut crop losses by about half—as they were before most farmers switched to chemical pesticides (p. 120)
  • Trees, wetlands, and coral reefs embody biodiversity; a single tree can host 2.3 million organisms; coral reefs contain 25 percent of marine species; peat bogs (wetlands) capture twice the carbon of forests (pp. 136-140)
  • Tools such as “border carbon adjustments” (p. 163) and counting GNP to factor in environmental and social costs and benefits (Robert F. Kennedy quote, p. 117) could eliminate the competitive advantage of poor carbon habits and help businesses actively mitigating their environmental and carbon impact
  • Primitive solar continues to power the Vanguard I satellite, launched in 1960 (p. 178)
  • Humans first harnessed tidal power in 687 A.D.; it was widely used in 18th-century England (pp. 182-183)
  • 25 percent of all US fossil fuel hubs are ideally suited to green energy (which provided 90 percent of new capacity in 2020)—thus offering retraining opportunities for thousands of miners (p. 196)
  • We could probably eliminate world hunger by using the 1/3 of all food that’s thrown away uneaten (p. 201)
  • Drip irrigation cuts water 60 percent while increasing crop yield 90 percent over open-channel irrigation (p. 204)
  • Cross-laminated wood buildings have many superiorities over steel (p. 223)
  • Solarizing all US K-12 schools could replace 18 coal plants (p. 245)
  • Above all, humans have risen to overcome all sorts of “insurmountable” crises (p. 326); this book proves we have the know-how—let’s find the will to do it!

You’ll find or extrapolate hundreds more takeaways in The Carbon Almanac, spearheaded by Seth Godin and written by 300+ volunteers. Forthcoming in July from Penguin/Random House. It’s a readable and comprehensive single-volume guide to…

  1. Why atmospheric carbon must be addressed
  2. The many ingenious solutions—and a refreshing willingness to confront the new problems these solutions (from bioplastics to mass-scale solar) sometimes bring
  3. The impact of lifestyle choices, such as using an electric bicycle instead of a car for the short trips that represent more than half of our car travel (p. 166), changing our fashion habits (p. 162), planting trees (p. 155, in numerous suggestions to switch your primary search engine Ecosia, and in the collective’s pledge to replace 10x as many trees as are consumed to produce the book, p. 226), and eating less meat (pp. 76, 200, 203)—and the potential impacts of our activism (I love that the glossary, p. 312, defines “activist” as “You”—and the long list of activist organizations to get involved with).
  4. The way all these factors and many more intersect and interact, presenting a holistic analysis a bite at a time

Besides 40+ pages of information and action resources within the book, each article has an info/sources page on https://thecarbonalmanac.org —which keeps that single volume to a manageable size while encouraging interested readers to drill much deeper. That also allows the content to be updated easily: As a long-time opponent of nuclear power, I wrote to Godin challenging the nuclear fission article’s implication that there have been only three accidents, vs. the actual 100+. While it was too late to change the book text, he immediately posted a correction at the top of that web page, https://thecarbonalmanac.org/093

I’d scheduled my review expecting a mid-June release date. That’s been pushed back a month. I urge you to 1) preorder your copy from your favorite independent bookstore (a chance to make a lifestyle change and support your local economy), 2) get involved in the launch promotion: https://seths.blog/joining-the-almanac-launch-team/ , and 3) sign up for the Carbon Almanac Network’s Daily Difference newsletter (at the bottom of thecarbonalmanac.org home page).

Connect with Shel

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

About Shel

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

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

————–

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

 

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The Clean and Green Club, November 2021

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

Guerrilla Customer Service as Marketing

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • How to use YOUR book to create a movement

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

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

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

Seducing Strangers

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Connect with Shel

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

About Shel

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

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

————–

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

 

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The Clean and Green Club, June 2020

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

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Can You Spot the Lie?

Take a close look at the envelope we received. What do you notice about it?
Here’s what I noticed: Whoever sent this is starting the relationship off on a very bad foot: with a lie! Can you spot that lie? Scroll down to see if you’re correct.

Here it is: the word “personal.” There’s nothing personal about this envelope. It has a nonprofit stamp. A sprayed bulk-mail barcode, and a handwriting font. Oh, and there’s no clue who sent it without opening it up. No return address or even a celebrity name on either the front or the back.

I didn’t even bother opening it. Whatever charity it is, I don’t want to spoil my relationship with them just because their envelope copywriter is a liar. This is a better outcome for them, because if I did open it, I might not ever give them money in the future. But still, it means the cost of sending that mailer to us was wasted money.

As a “bonus,” it’s addressed to Dina and D Dina Friedman, who are the same person (my wife). They do get points by combining names from their database at the same address, saving resources. But as far as “personal,” this is an epic fail.

I’ve been saying publicly since at least 2002 that Honesty is one of the three pillars of “the Magic Triangle” of business success (the other two are Integrity and Quality. If you start a relationship with a lie, you will never gain that credibility back when (NOT if) your lie is discovered.

A better approach: follow the late advertising genius David Ogilvy’s admonition to “tell the truth—but make it fascinating.” And if that sounds hard, let’s talk. I specialize in writing honest copy (and giving honest advice) that fascinates. And I deliberately set up this month’s book review to hopefully provide that fascination—notice how the bullet sequence teases and (hopefully) increases reader interest.

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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.

Sweet profile that gives a lot of space to my work, including a bit that touches on the political edge: 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.

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A Recommended ebook: How We Can Be Better Together

A Recommended ebook: How We Can Be Better Together by Kare Anderson

I discovered communication and collaboration whiz Kare Anderson some time around 1995 and have been a fan ever since. In this quick-reading ebook, you’ll find 140 strategies (each with a hashtag to help you remember them) to turn enemies into friends, unblock road blocks, and achieve your highest goals. Here are a few of my favorite things you’ll learn:

 

#7 A surprising and powerful benefit of interconnectedness.
#30 How to get the best from people by assigning them the right intention.
#38 How to turn colleagues and customers into ambassadors for your organization.
#72 When someone insults you, this wins you friends.
#84 When someone attacks you, this response will move you both into solution mode.
#90 The right way to apologize.
#93 Why you must define yourself instead of letting others define you.
#129 An easy way to stay focused on what really matters.
#138 One of several great ways to help your own and another business at the same time

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, October 2019

Having trouble reading this as e-mail? Please visit www.thecleanandgreenclub.com to read it comfortably online.
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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip, October 2019
This Month’s Tip: The Spammer/ Antispammer Arms Race: Why This Marketer Says Don’t Market This Way
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Lately, my inbox is full of courses to market via Facebook Messenger.

I actually hit reply to one that began, “What if you could use FB Messenger to make up to $2,500 a week…in your spare time?”:

What if we could have ONE communication channel that doesn’t get polluted by marketers trying to hijack it? There is no refuge anymore! I remember when the only things in my inbox were things I wanted. I remember when I didn’t get blasted with texts from companies that don’t even know me. I am a marketer, and I understand the need to reach out. But damn it, we need some spaces where we’re not getting marketed to.

I do get it. Every time someone invents a great new communication tool, someone else invents a way to sneak marketing messages past the gatekeeper. And then someone else invents some protection. And usually, someone else invents a way to overcome that block.Postal mail begat bulk mail, which begat opening mail over the recycle bin (well, back then it was a trash can), which begat postcards and envelope teasers. Telephones begat outbound call centers, which begat caller ID, which begat robocalls with spoofed IDs. Email begat spam, which begat spam filters, which begat messages crafted to go around them, which begat Google’s Promotions and Social folders (which severely impacted legitimate newsletter publishers and didn’t seem to hurt the spammers much).

It’s an arms race. The Cold War in all your inboxes. Ads in toilet stalls. Digital ads on billboards changing every few seconds. Ads on the frame around the taxi rates placard on the divider between the front and back seats in a cab.

But here’s the thing: all of these intrusive methods are dinosaur-marketing. Seth Godin told us 20 years ago about permission marketing.

Seth Godin. Photo by Jill Greenberg. Courtesy of Seth Godin.

Seth has permission to be in MY mailbox. His daily blog shows up every day. I actually open and read every column for his useful information and fresh perspectives. Often, he offers a program or product—but it’s in context.

Seth walks his talk. And I buy from him occasionally. (I also sometimes share or email him comments. That, plus writing a great book, got him to endorse my 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.)

You don’t win customers by shouting louder; you win them by being relevant and helpful, and using the technology intelligently:

  • Instead of random texting, text your own customers who’ve given you their mobile numbers as they show up within a mile of you, with friendly, helpful information about today’s cool event (yes, geotexting exists)
  • Instead of using robocalls to make deceptive offers, use them to notify your customer base of important news, like a weather-related school closing or a construction delay on a major artery
  • If your Facebook page uses the automated FB Messenger feature, send links to your FAQ and three most popular or useful pages on your own website—but also make sure you have a human being reading the inbound messages and responding quickly. And figure out a way to only send that autoresponder the first time you get a PM from any specific person.

So here’s MY soft-sell pitch at the end of this useful (I hope) content: if you need help developing non-intrusive, welcomed marketing, drop me a line or give me a call. Especially if your business or product/service/idea contributes to environmental and social good.

New on the Blog
Hear & Meet Shel

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.  
Friends Who Want to Help

I wanted to let you know about a great book by David Newman titled “Do It! Speaking: 77 Instant-Action Ideas to Market, Monetize, and Maximize Your Expertise.” David walks you step-by-step through beocming a successful speaker. His book is for C-suite executives, sales leaders, professionals, and entrepreneurs who want to use public speaking as the ultimate marketing strategy, personal brand builder and one-to-many sales platform. Pre-order the book to get a bunch of business-building bonuses right now (including one from me on how you as a speaker can be seen as a powerful ally to the meeting planner as you help green the places you speak) and a great book the moment it’s released.

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.

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!

 
Another Recommended Book: A Short Course in Kindness
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A Short Course in Kindness by Margot Silk Forrest

Being nice is not the same thing as being kind, says Forrest in this small but powerful book. Kindness is authentic, builds community and feels like a shot of adrenaline, while niceness is superficial and often builds stress—because being nice often means NOT speaking your truth, but suppressing it in a misguided desire to put others’ needs in front of your own (pp. 8-27).

Being nice can actually undermine being kind (p. 29)—because kindness has to start with being kind to oneself, and you can’t do that when you’re suppressing your own needs to do what you think others want you to. Forrest identifies 19 other barriers to kindness, too (p. 37). She also identifies kindness facilitators, including empathy (p. 41).

Even a small kindness can make a huge difference if it’s received at the right time—in part because—like negative emotions—kindness is often contagious (p. 9). Also like negative emotions, we choose to be kind (pp. 39-40, 58).Sometimes, we benefit from kindnesses we don’t even know have been offered. A poet reported a very easy time going through a difficult surgery, only finding out later that the doctor, knowing her love of poetry, read Shakespeare to her while she was under anesthesia (p. 67). But let’s remember that kindness benefits the giver as well as the receiver, requires both (p. 70)—but, because kindness requires not just thoughts but action (p. 76), it often involves significant risk, as she shows in many examples throughout the book.

For Forrest, emerging from a childhood lined with multiple serial sexual abusers, kindness was a conscious choice: “Was my small, suspicious self the one I wanted to make decisions in my life? Did I want to live as if I were a victim waiting to happen? Or did I want to reach for something higher?…As we choose which deeds we will do, so we choose our identity, the ground on which we stand. We come to know ourselves in the same way others come to know us: by our deeds. This is why choosing to do kind deeds helps us develop a strong and healthy sense of self” (pp. 59, 60). Kindness is also empowering (pp. 83-84).

Still, she cautions, “Be careful about this. While an increased sense of self-worth is the result of being kind, it is a disastrous reason for being kind. Doing the right thing for a selfish reason is likely to backfire. We may find our offer of help thrown back in our faces. We can only control the intentions of our kindness, never the results.” (footnote, p. 61).

But doing the right thing for the right reasons can change your life, as it changed hers: “Acting as if I am being guided…has shown me how much of my experience depends on what I do with it…We can create a story about being thwarted or taken advantage of, or…being showered with gifts…Believing I am here for a purpose has made me discover that purpose and achieve it…I think our purpose is to be God’s designated driver. God doesn’t have hands…God depends on us” (p. 100).

That last paragraph is from Chapter 11. Chapter 12 exhorts us not only to be kind, but also to be kindness’s PR agents, spreading the idea that kindness works. She offers ten tools to spread kindness. And then she wraps up the book by describing kindness itself as a change agent: “the only way you change the world—is one heart at a time”—and, like kindness, change is contagious (p. 120). The very last page declares, “We deserve to see how our culture changes when kind people are in charge” of our news, entertainment, and especially our education (p. 122).

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About Shel 

How can you profit by putting the VALUE in your VALUES? Shel Horowitz shows how to MONETIZE your organization’s commitment to fixing problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. Shel consults individually and in groups, gives presentations, and writes books and articles including Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (endorsed by Jack Canfield, Seth Godin and others).
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Another Recommended Book: CauseWired

CauseWired: Plugging In, Getting Involved, Changing the World by Tom Watson (John Wiley & Sons, 2009)

Are there lessons from the nonprofit and social change worlds for business? Watson’s new book proves that the lessons not only are there for the taking, but that they’re numerous–particularly in the way they use new technologies to build communities poised for action.

Business is ultimately about influencing others: persuading them to take actions such as buying or endorsing a product. And business can take many lessons from the explosive growth of social change and nonprofit groups in the online world, some of which started with just a single person expressing outrage, and moved on from there to build forces that could actually change things.

Organizations that started as small local networks have broadened to create national or been international constituencies involving tens of thousands of people–and more importantly, using those constituencies to accomplish the change they want.

From this book, you can take away such important marketing lessons as:

  • Creating and leveraging “social proof”
  • Building much stronger and more powerful alliances than the organization could do on its own
  • Harnessing the “long tail” to attract profitable niche audiences that less nimble entities ignore
  • Extending not only the reach but the feeling of ownership and participation among small donors who are able to see the results of their donations, sometimes in real time–cost-effectively providing resources that used to be available only to major givers
  • Tapping into the consciousness of younger buyers–Generation Y, or Millennials–who are notoriously resistant to “traditional” marketing
  • Extracting the core understanding of the blend of organizing and marketing that characterized both the Obama campaign on the left, and the Ron Paul campaign on the right
  • Working profitably to market through new technologies, from Facebook and Twitter to cell-phone messaging, and taking advantage of the interactive, participatory aspects of these tools to build two-way participation–and thus, lasting community

In short, if you read this book through a marketing lens, you will find a whole lot of value, and you’ll be well-placed to get a jump on oghers in your industry by adapting these strategies–just as the fast-food industry borrowed the drive-up window from banks.