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Holiday Philanthropy
Entrepreneurs are Improving their Business Profiles Through Kindness
By Natasha Gray
Associate Producer Office.com
Nov. 22, 2000 - For many business owners, the festivities
surrounding the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays provide the
perfect opportunity to make a quick profit. But what efforts are
small businesses making to give something back to their communities
during the season of good cheer? How can these companies benefit?
Rewards for small businesses that return the favor
to their communities are considerable. Elizabeth Goodgold, CEO of
the Nuancing Group, a San Diego-based firm that helps companies
create brand identities, says the benefits of philanthropy cannot
be understated: "It increases employee morale, derives positive
word-of-mouth advertising, raises customer loyalty and solidifies
community efforts."
Dave Wolkowitz, manager of brand-contact development
at the Watercolor Group, an Internet and marketing-strategy firm
based in Chicago, agrees that these efforts can really help distinguish
a small business. "Despite what many business leaders think, the
community and prospective customers might not see much difference
from one business to the next," he says. "Therefore, anything a
company can do to differentiate itself is positive."
"The beauty of small-business charitable giving
is that it's not expected, which only adds to the reason to do it."
Dave Wolkowitz
Watercolor Group
Because people tend to expect more charitable efforts
from larger corporations, Wolkowitz believes that small companies
are in a better position. "The beauty of small-business charitable
giving is that it's not expected, which only adds to the reason
to do it," he says.
This strategy appears to have worked for Trinity
Communications. A marketing-communications firm based in Boston,
Trinity has made charitable giving a year-round effort since the
1993 inception of the company.
According to Paul Sorensen, media-relations director
at Trinity, the company steps up its philanthropic endeavors during
the holiday season with the launch of the Trinity Holiday Card,
a corporate Christmas card that features a local nonprofit organization
chosen by the company's employees. The employees nominate and raise
money for a nonprofit organization in the greater Boston area, and
Trinity matches, dollar for dollar, their contribution, Sorensen
explains.
Last year, Trinity nominated the Boston chapter
of the National Conference on Community and Justice, a 73-year old
organization with a mission to fight bias, bigotry and racism in
America. Trinity's card featured the themes of diversity, justice
and peace. The NCCJ couldn't have been happier with the result.
Says Susan Musinsky, the executive director of the
NCCJ: "It was a stunning piece because it highlighted both peace
and justice as what the company wishes for people during the holidays
and showed how committed it is to working with an organization like
ours," she says.
Sorensen says that this type of work is part of
the company's corporate culture. "We are a values-driven business,
and we like to empower our staff to bring forward ideas on giving
in our community," he explains. Sorensen says that the company is
doing well by doing good and has enhanced brand awareness as well
as created new business. "We have set ourselves apart from our competitors,
generated a buzz about what we do and enhanced awareness of our
business and the services we provide," he explains.
- Similarly, Rick Goodwin, president and CEO of
General Creation International Ltd., a small interactive-toy company
based in Bristol, Tenn., says that this kind of commitment and obligation
within the community is important to the company: "By being willing
to give and help in the community, you become a visible model for
the rest of it," he says.
For the holidays, General Creation has created Elfland
Express, a local children's-gift drive which last year provided
Christmas gifts for more than 200 underprivileged children in the
community. This year the company is partnering with six other local
businesses to help bring holiday cheer to 1,200 children in need.
According to John Sperazzo, VP and partner of Eye
To Eye Communications, a PR firm based in San Diego, it's important
for small businesses to integrate a philosophy of charitable giving
in the community. He says the philanthropic work his company has
contributed has grown along with the business. "When we were starting
out, we focused on nonmonetary efforts such as visiting the elderly
at local hospitals," he says. "Now we are able to donate $1,000
each to three local charities for our 'Holiday 2000' efforts."
Deciding to get involved with giving was an easy
decision, says Scott Eggleston, president and CEO of Momentum Software,
an e-business-solutions company based in Austin, Texas. It's the
company's first year to get involved in charitable work, and, for
Thanksgiving, Momentum is working with Meals on Wheels to deliver
Thanksgiving dinner to Austin residents. In December, the company
will sponsor a coat drive to help underprivileged children in the
city.
Eggleston believes the benefits go beyond just business.
"Making it a duty to give back to a community that's been very supporting
of us brings everyone in the company together. It's important to
create a strong common bond that extends outside of work," he says.
Walt Sutton, author of "Leap of Strength" and founder
of W. G. Sutton International Ltd., an entrepreneurial consulting
company in Seattle, echoes this thinking. He explains that the small-business
participation in smaller communities is "a big builder of good will,
which brings businesses closer to their customers." Sutton advises
business owners to look at what their customers would care about
in the community - and then to devise a logical philanthropy and
make sure the public knows about it. "Aligning the cares of their
customers with their own social concerns is an innovative way to
give back," he says. "The next step is to publicize this well."
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