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03/8 2006

Wal-Mart Seeks Global Ethics Chief – Not Actual Ethics

In the Global Ethics report I saw a piece on Wal-Mart seeking a Global Ethics Chief.
Facing numerous class-action lawsuits and ire from its employees, and
patrons Wal-Mart if finally looking to put a good face forward.  From a
community standpoint it may be too late.  I’m in the middle of Doug
Rushkoff’s ‘Get Back In the Box‘ and so many of his points apply to this situation.  Wal-Mart is looking for an Ethics Chief … not actual ethics.

As a  corporation they are run and governed by the bottom line, and
in that case they have little room for consideration of what is right
… only what is profitable.  From hiring illegal immigrants to clean
stores, underpay employees, and cut health benefits they are looking to
boost margins at all costs.This flies in the face of ethics and their
attempt is little more than a farce.

Rushkoff has a wonderful
example of how a retail in this segment can be ethical, socially
responsible and be rewarded with extreme customer loyalty and
consistent profits.  Costco
covers 92% of health insurance costs, has 1/2 the staff turnover of
Wal-Mart, and has $.9 billion in net cash compared with Wal-Marts $25.6
billion in net debt.  They pay their employees fairly, treat them well,
and in turn have a loyal customer base. Communities, and business would
most certainly benefit from following the Costco’s model and embracing
their ethics model. As posted in Community Mobilization.

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01/20 2006

Load up your pods

The podcasts for last week’s Net Tuesday are online at Odeo.  There are interviews and presentations of Myles Weissleder of Meet up and Jason Schultz of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Both speakers talked about what their organizations mean to nonprofit organizations.

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12/8 2005

Constituent Evangelists

US News and World Reports has an article on its Web site about "customer evangelists."

 With corporate evangelism, the goal is to
find and identify those customers who are already crazy about your
product or service–who are actively talking it up in blogs or Web
forums, for instance–and turning them with loads of personal attention
into "customer evangelists" who then spread the word to others, who
then–well, you get the idea.

For the past six months or so, I’ve been reading a blog about customer evangelism called Church of The Customer.  This is something we should incorporate into our CRM philosophy. As the CRM manager for the HP division, I’m going to be encouraging people to take a look at this and see how we can do it. We already know we have evangelists out there, our next step is to determine how we cultivate those relationships.

Customer Evangelism does set some "mainstream" paradigms on their heads. For example, further down in the article it says:

Forget about the critics. Look how many companies seem befuddled about
how to deal with pro-company bloggers like McChronicles, a blog devoted
to one McDonald’s fanatic’s take on the Golden Arches. It’s written by
a guy in the Northeast–he didn’t want his name used in this story–who
visits McDonald’s here and abroad, reviewing the restaurants for
service, food quality, and cleanliness. Sometimes the reviews are
critical, but often they’re positive. And even the negative ones are
written with a constructive attitude. It’s clear that McDonald’s holds
a special place in his heart and stomach. "I was poor as a kid and
never went to McDonald’s until my teens, but I always thought of it as
a happy place where you have wonderful experiences," he says. This is a
guy who admits there was a point in his life when he ate pretty much
nothing but fast food from Mickey D’s, yet he claims never to have
gained a pound. What a powerful, personal counterpoint he would make to
Super Size Me filmmaker and McDonald’s
critic Morgan Spurlock. And although McDonald’s employees have visited
the site, the company has never directly contacted the McChronicles
man. This sort of nonreaction doesn’t surprise Phipps. "Many companies
are still stuck in the ‘pre-participation’ world," he says. "It is a
world where a company did careful construction of your messaging and
then got out their marketing death ray to beam that message into the
community. The thought of a space where they don’t control the message
is terrifying." McDonald’s spokesperson Anna Rozenich wouldn’t comment
on McChronicles, but she called blogs a "valuable communications tool,"
adding that "we appreciate that customers who relate to our brand are
sharing their thoughts about McDonald’s with others."

On the other hand, there are companies like Vespa Scooters:

Motor-scooter company Vespa recently brought in two fans as unpaid
bloggers on its website. "Vespa has incredible fans, and we thought the
best approach was to let the customers tell their stories online," says
"micropersuasion" strategist Steve Rubel,

Some of us were in a meeting in late summer where we discussed several bloggers who were Relay evangelists. I now believe we ought to have a coherent strategy to build relationships with them.

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11/29 2005

Free Candy for You and Yours

Daily Candy, a daily email service of nifty new products and
services, mainly entrepreneurial in nature, offers this gem. Good Search, a new
search engine partnered with Yahoo, allows searchers to donate to the cause of their choice every time
they go hunting for information. Per the bio, Good Search is founded by a
brother and sister team who lost their mother to cancer. The American Cancer
Society
is already listed as a recipient choice, both National and local
offices. With the recent Pew report that Americans now are searching via engines more
than any other activity, Good Search capitalizes on a new revenue stream.

 
Ongoing political discussion exists on the growth of major
corporations in

America

and the support of that process by the government. Even in this big business friendly environment, new ideas continue to come to life.  Daily Candy, because of its
focus on fashion and events, can be taken as empty fluff. Digging a little deeper,
support of small business can be presented as fluffy for its intended market, but is is not empty. I am going to give Good Search a try and follow up on the benefits received.

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