Skip to main content

Let's Do the First QR Coded Paper Icon Cause Marketing Campaign Together

This paper icon… which I purchased for $1 at Bashas’, an Arizona grocery chain… made it very clear to me that charities doing paper icon cause marketing campaigns are going to need to differentiate or risk being commoditized out of existence by the retailers themselves.

The full-color icon benefits a new orangutan enclosure at the Phoenix Zoo. The icon is 5½” x 8½” and was sitting on the checkout counter. I couldn’t see any hanging in the store in Mesa, Arizona where I bought it or any other kind of collateral material explaining the campaign. Nor did the clerk try to “sell” me the icon or amplify any aspect of the campaign. The back of the paper icon was blank.

But I was impressed that the icon featured the beneficiary, a cute little orangutan. Too many charities are still selling sneakers and balloons and shamrocks even though their beneficiaries are adorable little human children.

Bashas’, which has done paper icon campaigns for other charities, seems to have learned some lessons in so doing. One of those lessons almost certainly is that the retailer sits in a position of power in paper icon campaigns.

And they’re right. Bashas’ has 160 stores in Arizona. If an average of 416 people shop each of their stores a day, that’s a potential audience of 2 million people a month.

Bashas’ may have looked at paper icons for charities and said, “all these campaigns are is some printing, a charity, and our cash registers.” Since larger grocery chains have their own print shops… and their own 501(c)(3) charities… the barriers to entry for bigger retailers are pretty low.

How could a charity bring something to new to differentiate its campaign and head off competition from the grocers/retailers themselves?

I’ve already suggested that no paper icon campaign is using QR codes. So has Joe Waters on his blog Selfish Giving. But imagine all you could do with QR codes in a paper icon campaign:
  • Augmented reality images on smart phones.
  • Links to websites or microsites.
  • Promotions and co-promotions.
  • Contests and sweepstakes.
  • Links to video presentations.
  • Giveaways to donors who buy $5 icons.
  • Facebook/Twitter interfaces.
  • Plus, a lot more that I haven’t thought of yet
Could grocers/retailer pull this off themselves?

Eventually, sure. But the first charity that takes a cool QR code paper icon promotion to even the biggest grocers… Kroger and Walmart… won’t have to worry about competition from the retailers themselves for a while to come.

When you’re ready to kick this idea into high gear call my company, Alden Keene and Associates. I really want to help launch the first QR code paper icon cause marketing campaign!

Comments

Gear blanks said…
Really a great post. Thanks for sharing this useful post with us.........

Popular posts from this blog

Batting Your Eyelashes at Prescription Drug Cause Marketing

I’m a little chary about making sweeping pronouncements, but I believe I've just seen the first cause marketing promotion in the U.S. involving a prescription drug. The drug is from Allergan and it’s called Latisse , “the first and only FDA-approved prescription treatment for inadequate or not enough eyelashes.” The medical name for this condition is hypotrichosis. Latisse is lifestyle drug the way Viagra or Propecia are. That is, no one’s going to die (except, perhaps, of embarrassment) if their erectile dysfunction or male pattern baldness or thin eyelashes go untreated. Which means the positioning for a product like Latisse is a little tricky. Allergan could have gone with the sexy route as with Viagra or Cialis and showed lovely women batting their new longer, thicker, darker eyelashes. But I’ll bet that approach didn’t test well with women. (I’m reminded of a joke about the Cialis ads from a comedian whose name I can’t recall. He said, “Hey if my erection lasts longer than ...

Cause Marketing: The All Packaging Edition

One way to activate a cause marketing campaign when the sponsor sells a physical product is on the packaging. I started my career in cause marketing on the charity side and I can tell you that back in the day we were thrilled to get a logo on pack of a consumer packaged good (CPG) or even just a mention. Since then, there’s been a welcome evolution of what sponsors are willing and able to do with their packaging in order to activate their cause sponsorships. That said, even today some sponsors don’t seem to have gotten the memo that when it comes to explaining your cause campaign, more really is more, even on something as small as a can or bottle. The savviest sponsors realize that their only guaranteed means of reaching actual customers with a cause marketing message is by putting it on packaging. And the reach and frequency of the media on packaging for certain high-volume CPG items is almost certainly greater than radio, print or outdoor advertising, and, in many cases, TV. More to ...

Chili’s and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital

I was in Chili’s today and I ordered their “Triple-Dipper,” a three appetizer combo. While I waited for the food, I noticed another kind of combo. Chili’s is doing a full-featured cause-related marketing campaign for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. There was a four-sided laminated table tent outlining the campaign on the table. When the waitress brought the drinks she slapped down Chili’s trademark square paper beverage coasters and on them was a call to action for an element of the campaign called ‘Create-A-Pepper,’ a kind of paper icon campaign. The wait staff was all attired in black shirts co-branded with Chili’s and St. Jude. The Create-A-Pepper paper icon could be found in a stack behind the hostess area. The Peppers are outlines of Chili’s iconic logo meant to be colored. I paid $1 for mine, but they would have taken $5, $10, or more. The crayons, too, were co-branded with the ‘Create-A-Pepper’ and St. Jude’s logos. There’s also creatapepper.com, a microsite, but again wi...