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Marketing and Comms
Digging Deeper Into Marketing’s Purpose Pivot

Once your purpose is in everything you do, it becomes an indelible part of the customer experience. By attracting customers who believe society is better off if they do business with your company, you can create a social movement around your brand.

In a purpose-driven business, the role of marketing changes. It shifts from advertising products or services to building a social purpose brand ecosystem. From one-way communication to engaging customers in purpose-inspired actions. From paid media to earned media. From speaking to passive customers to developing active customers who co-create new purpose products and amplify your message – and help you fulfill your purpose aspirations.

As this social purpose continuum reveals, once companies adopt an authentic social purpose as the reason they exist, they are positioned to create meaning for their customers: Customers believe that if they do business with that company, society is better off. Once social purpose-driven companies implement their purpose across their operations, values chains and relationships, everything they do (not just their advertising) tells their story.

This shift to purpose and purpose marketing is propelled by changing customer expectations that business play a stronger role in society. More and more consumers identify as belief-driven buyers — nearly two-thirds, according to Edelman’s 2020 Trust Barometer — which means they choose/switch/avoid/boycott a brand based on its stand on societal issues. Buying on belief is the new normal. Yet, attracting and retaining these consumers has been a mystery — until now.

Defying Online Algorithms with Authentic, Impactful Storytelling

Join us as representatives from BarkleyOKRP lead a thought-provoking discussion with two brands that care deeply about their workers' rights and wellbeing, Tony's Chocolonely and Driscoll's, about how to successfully involve consumers in social-justice issues with authentic storytelling that defies online algorithms — Friday, May 10, at Brand-Led Culture Change.

Last fall, I moderated a dialogue on the topic for the Social Purpose Institute, a program of the United Way, with three social purpose marketing visionaries: Anne Donohoe, Marketing Advisor and global marketing executive; Chris Peacock, Chief Marketing Officer at Traction on Demand; and Peter ter Weeme, Chief Social Purpose Officer and VP of Player Experience at BCLC.

According to Anne, Chris and Peter:

  • In purpose-led brands, marketers become storytellers; and focus on mobilizing customers, employees and stakeholders on the purpose — and on telling their stories

  • They build their purpose into everything they do; and thus, their purpose is communicated to their customers by the very act of conducting business

  • Customers want to know the people and values behind the brand; this becomes part of the value proposition

  • Stakeholders help purpose-driven companies achieve their purpose and build their brand — and hold them accountable for it

  • Leaning into purpose attracts customers — and customers that hold back can be cultivated as purpose ambassadors in the future

With retail consumers seeking stronger connections to brands, business customers looking at the people behind the brand, and shorter attention spans, companies that have and market a purpose can differentiate themselves from the clutter.

The biggest part of the pivot: Once your purpose is in everything you do, it becomes an indelible part of your customer experience. By attracting customers who believe society is better off if they do business with your company, you can create a social movement around your brand. By growing your business this way, your business becomes a bigger engine for social good. Your purpose provides the “why” and purpose marketing provides the “heart.”

Purpose-driven companies are unstoppable. Just watch them — or become one!

Interested in a deeper dive? Here is a link to the webinar discussion and the Purpose Marketing Insight Paper that summarizes the discussion.

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