Posts Tagged ‘Media’

Google Steps to the Plate, Now What?

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Yesterday, Google joined Cisco, Kimpton Hotels and the Gates Foundation in increasing pay to gays and lesbians to make up for the approximately $1,000 difference gay couples pay in domestic partnership taxes in comparison to their heterosexual counterparts.

So… what does this mean? Is this the case study we share with our employers to do the same or to our oppressors to validate our “marriages?” Do we just hang this up on our wall of accomplishments and hope that others follow suit? Just what does it mean that Google has returned one of the best results to its employees?

It means that talented gay and lesbian individuals power one of the most common household names, that the keywords you typed into the Google search bar has been routed to find your #1 response by someone who could be queer. Google is outing itself as a company with approximately 700 gay and lesbian employees and validating their equal rights as citizens of this country. It raises the profile of gays and lesbian in the workforce.

What can these companies do to keep the momentum?

They should continue to promote their policy by seeking opportunities so speak with gay and lesbian media (and general media as well) on the important decision to vouch for progress for the gay and lesbian community. This will create additional loyalty and showcase them as thought-leaders in diversity issues.

They can keep the momentum by encouraging partners and vendors to do the same. Yes, this sounds a bit like advocacy work – which is far off each company’s agenda in terms of gay and lesbian issues – but I am willing to bet each of these company’s LGBT employee groups would be willing to start this conversation.

What would you advise? What would you like to see? All comments are welcome!

Tony Pride

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Happy Monday, all! Apologies for being MIA on the blog of late– it's been one of those months where vacation took me away from my responsibilities on here. Rest assured, I am back!

The Tony Awards were last night. You know the Tony Awards– the annual theater award show where random presenters with no connection to Broadway (read: this year, some New York Jets player and Raquel Welch) give "Best of" awards to high-profile shows and actors and often overlook some lesser-known, but well-deserving productions. This year's festivities were hosted by Sean Hayes. You know Sean Hayes, of "Will & Grace" and Newsweek fame. He and "Promises, Promises" co-star Kristin Chenoweth had some fun at Newsweek's expense at the beginning of the show– as the photo shows here.

What I love about the Tony Awards is that for three hours, television audiences are exposed to different works of art. While this year spent too much time on Green Day and the cast of "Glee," there was still ample opportunity to soak in some fantastic performances and more importantly, truly heartfelt acceptance speeches by winners. And from what I can observe, the Broadway community is all about acceptance. Several of the winners last night acknowledged their partner, and many of the performers participate each year in the "Broadway Cares" project to help fund HIV research and education. It's certainly the gayest of our award shows, but I love that CBS commits each year to bringing the Tonys to the rest of the world, regardless of ratings. Not everyone can afford a pilgrimage to the Great White Way, but sitting down with your family and watching a performance of "La Cage aux Folles" is the next best thing.

From a marketing perspective, I would have loved to see more of corporate America recognize the majority demographic viewing the show last night and tweak the advertisements to appeal to this specific community. Think about the Super Bowl. Many companies create ad campaigns that incorporate both the game and the viewing audience (remember how Betty White reclaimed her fame this Super Bowl?). How great would it have been last night for advertisers to incorporate the show and the LGBT community in the spots that aired. Granted, there may have been some as I forwarded the first half on DVR, but I hope that we see more LGBT campaigns during the Tony broadcasts in the future.

Speaking of marketing, we're taking our "ButtOut Ohio" project to Columbus Pride this weekend to share the campaign with the LGBT community. I plan on taking some photos at the event and will share my thoughts next week about how companies are using Pride as an opportunity to engage with us.

Have a great week.

(Photo courtesy of Sara Krulwich/The New York Times)

More From Nick Vivion and Unicorn Booty on LGBT Communications in the Age of Social Media

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And we're back today with the second half of our conversation with Unicorn Booty's Nick Vivion about his business, the LGBT consumer and social media. And speaking of leveraging digital and social media for the gays, take a look at the video at the end of this post and a recent write-up on how Nick and his partner Kevin are using social media to help uncover the reason behind YouTube's selective removal of their video today.

5. Besides Unicorn Booty, what are your thoughts on how businesses should communicate with and engage with LGBT consumers? Is digital and social media the best channel?

Unicorn Booty is of course the only way to reach LGBT consumers.

Of course that's not true!  I am platform agnostic – just use what works.  What works for us is all digital and social media. Why pay $50,000 for a full-page ad in the Advocate when you can create an interactive experience that really engages your target audience for a fraction of the price? The majority of other media – print and television – are over-priced and not as effective.  People keep doing them because that's the status quo, but you really can't measure the impact of a print ad beyond circulation. The exciting (and very scary!) thing about digital/social media is that you can measure everything! You know how long someone spent on the site, where they want, if they bought anything.  You know what they think of your brand. It's all right there, and you can't hide from it.  That makes advertising much harder, because rather than just doing a "media buy" and crossing your fingers, you actually have to deliver results.

The funny thing about this tension between traditional and new media is that many businesses are still stuck in a sales mentality.  Will it drive sales? Will it boost my revenue? This is a dangerous mentality to have, because social media is about less tangible relationship marketing.  There are 1.37 billion influence impressions online every day (Forrester).  It's not just about sales, it's being a part of a whole new world where priorities have shifted from your desire to sell to your customer's desire to be engaged. You are not always going to be able to measure the sales impact of your social media efforts, but you CAN measure engagement, which lays out the path to increased brand awareness, affinity and authenticity as you meet consumers on their terms.  

6. What challenges have you experienced or seen other businesses face when communicating with the LGBT market?

As I mentioned earlier, the LGBT market is diverse.  You cannot create one campaign "for the gays" and expect it to resonate community-wide.  That's dangerous territory, and if you haven't ever marketed to the LGBT community before get some help!  If you offend the community, it has a very long-term memory.  So go slow, think twice and ask someone who knows what their doing!

For us, our biggest challenge is distilling our message down to its core so that it resonates with the widest swath of the LGBT community as possible.  We really do want to appeal to the community as a whole.  For us to succeed in our mission to strengthen our community through supporting gay-friendly businesses, we need to have as many people as possible on-board.  Once we reach the tipping point, it becomes increasingly impossible for businesses to have an anti-gay agenda.  $825 billion is a lot of money: A bailout-sized chunk of cash ready to be put behind equality-minded businesses.  
Communicating this vision is the most challenging thing facing us right now, because it applies to both our interactions with consumers and the companies that we are contacting about being featured on our site.  We need the consumers to come back every day to check out the day's partner, and we need the companies to see the value in the market.  Both sides have an interest in seeing those gay dollars at work: Consumers want to see them being used positively in the community, and businesses want to see them being spent on their products.  UB is in charge of bringing this vision to both stakeholders.

7. Tell us more about your social responsibility component. Is this a crucial element for businesses engaging with LGBT consumers? How should a business communicate that or its advocacy efforts?

We give 10% of our net proceeds to a different community-chosen non-profit every quarter.  This quarter it's Seattle's Lifelong AIDS Alliance. My experience with the Mormons during No on 8 drove this decision, because I saw first-hand what can be accomplished when an entire community gives 10% of their income. People with anti-gay agendas are already giving 10% to organizations that exist to reduce our status in the world, so if we don't also give 10% then they will win, every time.  So we call our 10% commitment our "gay tithe," and are hoping to popularize the concept as we lead by example.  10% of $825 billion is $8.25 billion.  To put that into perspective, that is enough money to put every single LGBT person in the USA through private college.  If you consider what could be done with a simple 10% commitment, it's astounding.

With a community that has experienced long-term discrimination, and who is still not enjoying full equality, a socially responsible component can be a vital component to engaging LGBT consumers.  It gives you another marketing tool, but it also demonstrates that you understand the challenges still facing the community. It sends a clear message that you empathize and are committed to doing something about it.  It also differentiates you from any competition and places you more firmly in the community.
Communicating your commitment to advocacy or a particular non-profit should be secondary to your main value proposition.  You do not want to be seen as giving to a non-profit only for the good-will and self-interest of your company.  You must come at it from the heart, and mention it in a tasteful but obvious way.  You don't want to hide it, but you don't want it to be your primary selling point either.  It should be an added benefit, something that makes the consumer choose you over your competition when faced with a decision.  This doesn't mean that you shouldn't leverage the hell out of it on the back-end: Contact stakeholders, befriend members of the organization you have partnered with, use your commitment to the organization to recruit evangelists, ask the organization if you can participate in any events they have going on.  For example, we will be MCing at a Lifelong AIDS Alliance rooftop benefit next week – a great opportunity for visibility that works even better due to our 10% commitment to that organization.
We want to demonstrate that new entrepreneurs can build a successful and sustainable business while still giving 10%.  It's not necessarily a gay thing, but a human being thing.  We all have to be part of the solution, regardless of what we do for a living.

Washington Boys & California Gurls – a Music Video by Unicorn Booty from Booty the Unicorn on Vimeo.

Unicorn Booty Gives Businesses of All Sizes a New Channel for Reaching the Gays

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Pride Month brings with it a renewed or heightened fascination with the LGBT consumer for marketers and communicators. To start off your week right, here's the thoughts from one of the newest, provocative businesses leveraging social media and a unique business model to reach and engage LGBT consumers.

Nick Vivion and Kevin Farrell recently founded Unicorn Booty, a social media marketing platform that connects consumers with gay-friendly businesses. Nick spoke at the Community Marketing Inc. LGBT Marketing and Advertising conference in New York back in April. I personally remember being intrigued simply by the name at first, but quickly became impressed with Nick and Kevin's business model and thoughts on LGBT consumers and communications. Read on for the first portion of our Q&A with Unicorn Booty's Nick.


1. So just what is Unicorn Booty? How did you develop the concept and the name?

It's simple: Meet gay-friendly businesses every day. Unicorn Booty is an interactive marketing platform that connects the community with gay-friendly companies, so that we can support those companies that support us. Every day we feature a different business, and we give away a product or service from that business in our Daily Gay Giveaway. We then promote them through a custom video, photos, social media mentions and a complete takeover of our homepage. Each business gets an integrated social media campaign which is shared with an engaged, active and loyal audience. And our community gets a chance to win free stuff while learning cool products from gay-friendly businesses. It's a really cool symbiotic system!

After volunteering at the No on 8 campaign in California, and seeing how well-funded and organized anti-gay groups are, I realized that aggregating the LGBT buying power is more important than ever. After looking around, I couldn't find a solid resource to learn about gay-friendly businesses. Sure there was the HRC Buying Guide, but what about the small-to-midsize businesses that many of us frequent everyday?

Unicorn Booty was born out of the desire to encourage equality by allowing all businesses to be gay-friendly.

Since we believe that supporting businesses that support the LGBT community is the surest way to real and lasting change, we had to come up with a concept that would facilitate that.  We had seen a couple of interactive marketing websites that used social media and giveaways to promote a different company every day, and we thought that was the perfect model for what we wanted to accomplish. So Kevin and I put our heads together and we came up with Unicorn Booty. As we were brainstorming the name, we wanted something that was appropriately gay, had some magic in it and suggested bounty or prizes. Everyone loves unicorns and booty has the delicious double-entendre.

2. What’s your definition of the LGBT consumer/market today? What defines them, their purchasing decisions, and their communications?

The LGBT market is in many ways like any other market: It is fractured and affected by the current state of the economy. There is no longer one LGBT marketplace. They are segmented into groups along various lines: racial, sex, age, income, preferences. "Marketing to the gays" is pretty much meaningless, because it is a nearly impossible to create meaning for such a diverse group. For example, we have a different product every day. Not every product appeals to every one of our fans. But we are doing our best to diversify and reflect the varied interests of our community.

From our experience at Unicorn Booty, the most unique characteristics of the LGBT consumer community is that they are fiercely loyal. Once you have them on your side, they become instant evangelists. Brands are pieces of their identity, and so it's increasingly important to create an emotional connection with your customer. We knew that we had a powerful brand with Unicorn Booty, and know that a strong part of our success has been our brand. We wouldn't have been able to reach 8,000 fans on Facebook in 8 weeks with a different name!

3. What response have you seen to Unicorn Booty – both from consumers and businesses? What role do you play in the communications between the two?

The LGBT community is more well-connected than their straight counterparts. We know the Web, and we use it to our advantage daily. Whether for dating or shopping, for staying in touch or finding what to do this weekend, we are using the Web to discover and connect with the world around us. I think it's the nature of being a minority: You use all the tools at your disposal to connect with like-minded folk. We are working hard to leverage this affinity with the Web, so that people can really start seeing Unicorn Booty as a place to discover cool products from gay-friendly businesses.

As such, both businesses and consumers are responding.  Businesses look to the LGBT market for their engagement, loyalty and brand-consciousness. The LGBT market is looking for businesses that reflect their community. They don't want to be marketed to, they want to feel like the business is a permanent part of their community. We are helping facilitate that connection for businesses, acting as another conduit to the gay community. By being featured on Unicorn Booty, businesses are announcing to the world that they support the gay community.

We also see ourselves as a bit like a translation service: We take the business, synthesize its' core attributes through our filter and then present them as they appeal to us as gay consumers. We are a mix between a CoolHunting-style blog and a marketing firm. Interactive marketing is all about presenting information in unexpected ways, and we are working to position ourselves as a resource to any company that wants to engage with the gay market.

4. Is this business model sustainable for other target audiences? What plans can you share on Unicorn Booty’s growth and future?

There are most definitely opportunities within other niche markets for similar services. We are always looking towards the future and how we can grow this beyond the Daily Gay Giveaway. The gay market is incredibly underserved, and as it's estimated to be a $825 billion market by 2011, we are eager to serve.  There really are no good resources for consumers trying to learn about, and spend money with, gay-friendly businesses. We want to develop into a localized resource that empowers and enables the gay community to aggregate their buying power in a fun and unique way. This isn't a chamber of commerce, but a way of life.

Definitely be sure to check back tomorrow for the rest of our interview with Nick and more on their new ways of engaging the LGBT community.

Cross-border discrimination

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Two months ago, I wrote about how cross-border interaction, namely the EuroPride, helps to accelerate the development of human and LGBT rights in certain countries. Today’s post deals with how reactionary thinking from the outside affects the public discourse of a society.

My last entry was about pedophilia and how we need to draw the line between it and some people’s erroneous correlations to male homosexuality. In Germany, a public discussion about this has been more or less absent despite several recently revealed cases of pedophilia.

Now this has changed and media does indeed report and discuss the issue. This is mostly due to the statements of the “secretary of state” of the Vatican, Cardinal Bertone. While visiting Chile, he claimed that there are many scientific findings supporting the thesis that homosexuality and pedophilia are indeed linked. Now I do not want to go into this issue again. My point is a different one this time.

The first German-speaking media to pick up Bertone’s statements were websites run by religious and conservative fundamentalists. From there Bertone’s statement spread to the mainstream. Now the interesting aspect is that many of these blogs are written in German but are located abroad. The blog kreuz.net is a premium example for a blog that is set up in the United States and operates from there for a German audience.

Why do they do that? It is mainly because these blogs face a problem with their legality. By all means, Germany is a liberal country with a far reaching freedom of speech, but as a reaction to our history we have established quite strict rules as to how far this right can go before it hurts democracy and the protection of minorities which is an integral part of democracy to our understanding. So in order to escape prosecution for defamation these blogs have moved to countries where they are protected by law, in particular the United States.

Lately, they have become quite successful with influencing the German discourse from time to time. They import ideas which are then discussed by mainstream media. You may argue that sooner or later the German media would have picked up the statement by Bertone anyway. You are probably right.

But the difference is that now you have a visible outlet in German language which argues against LGBT rights and people are directed to this outlet by the German mainstream media referencing it. So what should or could be done.

Obviously, we cannot restrict the Internet to an extent where we block sites we as a society do not appreciate. Apart from the inherent legal and technical problems, I have to confess that I’m not a big fan of banning ideas or the organization they are represented by from the public domain. I believe in openly engaging with these people and let arguments speak for themselves. I know that at some point certain behavior becomes unbearable for a society and the state has to act. But it is hard to draw the line and it is no easy thing to do.

Thus, we only really have one way to deal with these sites — openly engaging with these sites and using their websites as a platform for our arguments. Interestingly enough, the vast majority of comments on kreuz.net are now posted by opponents of their thoughts and stance. This is certainly a proof point that this strategy can be successful.

So a society might actually benefit from the “invasion of ideas,” even if they are reactionary. This is for the simple reason that a society which is used to liberal Human and LGBT rights sometimes forget the value of its achievements. Provocation from the outside is thus an ideal stimulus for a discussion and a reassurance that human rights and equality values are a good thing worth fighting for.

From this point of view, I would like to take the opportunity to say thank you to kreuz.net and similar websites! Thank you for reminding us all that we came a long way and that it is worth defending our achievements.

What do you think? Would you like to join me in saying thank you?