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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
CSR Is The New 'Branded Content'
by Diana Verde Nieto, Wednesday, May 20, 2009, 10:00 AM

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Today's reality consists of multiple media channels, new technologies and consumers who have a short attention span. Traditional communications are no longer sufficient for creating loyal fans or bringing the brand to the forefront. This new reality demands a new approach to engaging consumers; this is where corporate social responsibility (CSR) as branded content comes in.

CSR offers solutions that are required by modern branding in order to deal with the new digitally enabled interconnected business environment of the 21st century. This involves taking the message of a brand and using it to produce entertainment that consumers are interested in and want to engage with. By producing these new entertainment experiences brands gain significant publicity. When brand entertainment is based on the things that really matter, consumers volunteer their attention. It is a move from interruption to attraction.

Using CSR in branded content allows companies to demonstrate their approach to CSR and address sustainability issues that are important to both the organization and its consumers. This allows consumers to engage with brands. Take the Dove Evolution of Beauty video as an example. The portrayal of women in the media and self-esteem are ultimately sustainability issues.

Many women feel strongly about these issues, and because of this, women will listen to what Dove has to say. By responding to women's concerns, Dove is building the social value of its brand and in so doing, enhancing emotional value and brand identity. This strategy has only worked for Dove because it is part of their long term therefore credible commitment to CSR.

Events that encompass CSR are another example. Innocent Smoothies, a brand underpinned by its overall approach to sustainability, hosts an annual festival in London, the Innocent Village Fete. The event is a physical and authentic representation of what the brand believes in: community, sustainability, healthy living and, of course, fun.

The annual event has helped to turn customers into supporters by hosting memorable brand experiences that aim to make people's lives better, while raising money for a good cause. The event allows Innocent to promote its new Smoothie flavors to festival-goers, while giving them the opportunity to wander around the farmers market, visit charity stalls and enjoy the music.

The benefits of using CSR as part of branded content are endless; foremost it helps to build a brands reputation and is a point of differentiation. It also encourages consumer interest and helps to build consumer trust and loyalty. If consumers see that brands are addressing the issues that are important to them, it follows that they are likely to continue to buy their products.

CSR provides a goldmine of stories that can form the basis of branded content. However, companies are often doing good work behind the scenes through CSR initiatives that brand marketers don't even know about. At the same time, these brand teams are desperately looking for meaningful stories to create engaging messages and capture their consumers' attention.

Businesses must make the relationships among the CSR team, marketing team and advertising agency seamless, to bring their sustainability stories to the forefront of branded content. The brands of the future will be the ones that integrate sustainability into their vision and communicate this effectively to consumers.

Editor's note: If you'd like to contribute to this newsletter, see our editorial guidelines first and then contact Nina Lentini.

27 people recommend this article. 

3 comments on "CSR Is The New 'Branded Content' "

  1. Peter Schankowitz from Joe Digital, Inc.
    commented on: May 22, 2009 at 12:29 PM
    This is EXCLLENT. As we try to get brands to understand the new equation and its sub-sets (Great Content + Strategic Distribution = Loyal Participants), its nice to see someone so eloquently offer up one key solution on the "great content" side. We all know its about delivering personal value via authenticity. Appealing to the consumer's deeply rooted, intrinsic passions via CSR---done correctly---is one amazing way to deliver the goods. Like the post above notes, if a brand can live a core principle inside and out, people will notice. If the effort is not GENUINE, i.e., just another hunk of branding "fashion", they will smell it in a second. The BS meter is on high folks. Diane---well done, well said, and I am sure, well received.

  2. Diane Court from Quickfire Productions
    commented on: May 21, 2009 at 10:24 AM
    Thank you, Diana, for highlighting the potential of using CSR in branded content. As David writes, the value depends on evidence that the CSR mission is integrated across processes. Just as consumers will eagerly embrace an "authentic representation of what the brand believes in," they will energetically reject efforts that simply attempt to ride the tail of a trend: the KFC "Healthy" grilled-chicken bucket giveaway being a disastrous case in point and a consumer relations nightmare.

    Integrity in every sense is the key. The future belongs to those in which the broad engagement of internal stakeholders in the CSR mission ensures the foundation of the branded vision communicated to consumers.

  3. David David from Coethica Limited
    commented on: May 20, 2009 at 10:24 AM
    Great article Diana.

    As CSR infiltrates further across businesses and deeper into processes it becomes much more value based than many of the more superficial approaches out there. As consumers become more aware through access to information, especially social networks their expectations rise accordingly. The difficulty for most is to define CSR priorities for their own business and then to communicatie these with integrity to an at times sceptical audience.

    The point about CSR relationships across the business is key. If your own employees aren't on the same song sheet then your stakeholders will notice, especially customers. Your external message is of course important, but many forget the internal message which ultimately provides the foundation for integrity.

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DIANA VERDE NIETO
  • Diana Verde Nieto is CEO of Clownfish in London, which she founded in 2002, with the vision of creating a consultancy that put people, planet and profit at the heart of its business philosophy. Recognizing that businesses, whether small or big, could be a force for good, Clownfish was born to help clients benefit from delivering practical solutions to the environmental and social challenges we face today. Clownfish has offices in Shanghai and New York and was acquired by Aegis Group plc in October 2008.



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