Cause-related marketing, or cause marketing is a mutually beneficial marketing relationship between a nonprofit and a business or corporation. In modern times, more and more companies are now “doing well by doing good.”
One of the early examples of cause marketing happened in 1983. At the time, American Express partnered with a nonprofit group called the Restoration Fund to raise money for the repair of the Statue of Liberty. American Express donated a portion of every credit card purchase to the nonprofit and gave an additional amount to the Fund for every new credit card application they received.
The results were astounding. In only three months, the Restoration Fund raised over $1.7 million for the statue while American Express enjoyed a 27% rise in credit card use and a 45% increase in new card applications. It was then that American Express coined the term cause-related marketing, which has been shortened over the years to cause marketing.
Cause marketing campaigns are highly visible to the public. With cause marketing, corporations differentiate their product by leveraging the goodwill that is associated with a social or environmental cause. The hope is that consumers will switch brands, increase loyalty, or drive sales as a result. The featured nonprofits can also benefit from the heightened visibility to potential donors—as well as an influx of funding for their cause. The goal of cause marketing is that the consumer, seeing the connection between the corporation and the nonprofit, will become loyal to the corporate brand supporting the nonprofit.
Transparency is key in the billion-dollar-a-year cause marketing industry. Consumers want to know how their dollars are spent; they want to know that their money is benefiting a charity in the way the corporation promises. After all, most cause marketing campaigns rely on the consumer’s spending power to be effective. On the CharitiesNYS website, a resource for charities in New York State, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman released five best practices for cause marketing. His guidelines aim to help corporations remain transparent and accountable to nonprofits and the public:
Cause marketing is a mutually beneficial relationship for both the corporate and nonprofit partners. Influx of new funds, increased brand visibility, and strengthened public image are just a few of the benefits of “doing well by doing good.” If you are considering a cause marketing relationship with either a nonprofit or a corporation, keep these transparency measures in mind for a successful partnership.