Many brands have hit the headlines recently for campaigning on social issues. Examples include Dove's Campaign for Real Beauty, the product Red brand raising money for AIDS in Africa and the many retailers (Tesco, Walmart et al) trying to jump on the "Green is good" bandwagon.
But seeing an advert for the Fairtrade vanilla ice cream from Ben & Jerry's reminded me just how far ahead they are in this area (you can visit the site and see photo albums like the ones of the right showing their work in India and Paraguay). They might not get as much press coverage as some of these other brands who are the new kids on the block, but they've been at it for 20 years and are much more advanced in their approach.
The key thing they Ben & Jerry's do differently is to have a 3-part mission that integrates social, profit and product dimensions. So, social and environmental campaigning is not a bolt-on attempt at "green-washing" consumers. Its not about donating a % of profit to charity (though they do this as well). No, the social mission is woven into the very fabric of their business, as captured in the sub-title of the founders' book, Double Dip: "Lead with your values and make money too".
One story I heard when I toured their factory in Vermont a few years ago illustrates the challenges of this approach. The brownies in their ice cream were made by kids working for a a charity in the Bronx. Great for the social mission: sell more ice cream and more money goes to helping keep these kids off the street. However, when the first lot of brownies arrived at the factory, they were frozen together in a huge lump. Not so great for the product and profit missions. It took real work to get the supplier to fix this issue and get the quality right.
Integrating a social dimension into your business is much harder than just sponsoring a charity. But its also harder to copy and so more differentiating. For example, it took Chiquita bananas many years to get 100% of its product certified by The Rainforest Alliance, but this has given them a real point of difference versus own-label.
A neat summary of what Ben & Jerry's do is "Fast Moving Sustainable Goods", or FMSG for short, a term coined by Innocent Smoothies (thanks to Russel for this).
5-minute workout: if our thinking about having a social mission for your brand, how could you integrate this into the way you run your business rather than just bolting it on? For example, how could you re-work your sourcing so it makes a positive contribution to society?




I started using Twitter about 7-8 mothns ago, and besides getting Tweets that someone is now Following me , I haven't been able to get excited about its value for a business. I admit I have a lot to learn, a LOT, but I started using Facebook in January and already have over 300 Fans lots of whom I'm interacting with regularly. It seems to be a much more active way to hmm, how shall I say? .exponentially expand my potential for selling my stuff, and for blog readership when my Blog is ready to meet the world.I haven't figured out if and how it's possible to have a Fan page for business, without having a Personal page that it's linked to. I'd kinda like the anonymity. Anybody?This chart was great, by the way! I actually understood most of it. Thank you!
Posted by: Eltana | July 06, 2012 at 12:23 PM
Thank for give us this type or introduction via through your blog. I have created also one site related to computer knowledge you can visit it and if you need to make any correction you can send em your advice via through blog page.
Posted by: Online Computer help | June 23, 2011 at 05:47 AM
You can keep daily track of their conversation and then checking them you may get clear intimation on what’s getting in their life and what is going to be their next step therefore you'll be able to be able to face such issues. oldsters continuously attempt to safe their children however they must get enough time to organize them self. Key-logger provides total preview of what’s progressing to happen in your kid’s life.
Posted by: computer problems | June 23, 2011 at 05:46 AM
That's way more clever than I was expecting. Thnask!
Posted by: Eloise | April 13, 2011 at 05:14 AM
Great advice! Thank you for sharing!
Posted by: myspace design | July 04, 2008 at 07:12 AM
FMSG. I'm a convert. I shall use it liberally from hereon. Thanks :)
Posted by: Charles Frith | December 28, 2006 at 12:45 PM