Title: Start A Movement! -- An Entrepreneur’s Guide To Getting Noticed In A Noisy Marketplace Word Count: 830 Summary: Want a short cut to entrepreneurial stardom? Start a movement! People love a cause. They love to jump on board. Flower Power in the 60s. (Bet someone made a killing on flowers…) Women’s lib in the 70s. Nancy Reagan’s “Just Say No” anti-drug campaign in the 80s. Hillary’s “It Takes a Village”. The low carb thing. If you start the movement, you can be at the forefront of that movement. Not a bad place for a star. It’s scary how powerful this technique is. Sadly, it’... Keywords: Article Body: Want a short cut to entrepreneurial stardom? Start a movement! People love a cause. They love to jump on board. Flower Power in the 60s. (Bet someone made a killing on flowers…) Women’s lib in the 70s. Nancy Reagan’s “Just Say No” anti-drug campaign in the 80s. Hillary’s “It Takes a Village”. The low carb thing. If you start the movement, you can be at the forefront of that movement. Not a bad place for a star. It’s scary how powerful this technique is. Sadly, it’s used as often for evil as it is for good. But if you can harness this power, you’ll be amazed at the results. If you’d come up with a natural lawn care product years ago, you could have been at the forefront of an anti-pesticide movement. Activist, Anita Roddick, used this strategy to build The Body Shop to where it is today, committing to social and environmental change. What a Dame. (No really. She is.) It doesn’t even have to be your idea. You just have to be the one to “take it public”. Over a decade ago, a Canadian provincial party swept into power by announcing the “Common Sense Revolution”. Didn’t like the guy or the party, but the marketing rocked. Totally worked. I know what you’re thinking. “Tsufit, I don’t want to be a politician. I just want to promote my business.” Starting a movement doesn’t have to be big or political. It’s not the subject of the movement that makes it work, but rather the passion and energy behind it. So How Do You Start a Movement? Don’t be standing on a street corner with a clip board or petition. That’s for bit players. Write a manifesto. Have a credo, a mantra. The more outrageous it is, the more chance it’ll work. The more you’ll stand out from the crowd. We’re not talking corporate mission statement here. Get some publicity for your movement. The more provocative you are, the more controversial, the more free ink you’ll get. And have stuff. Your “stuff” will become a symbol of the ideals behind that movement. (Reminds me of the sandal in Monty Python’s Life of Brian…) Your symbol can become a potential source of income. But don’t make the mistake of cashing in your chips too soon. Your followers will be more valuable to you down the line if you don’t try to sell to them yet. Just focus on building the following, building momentum, building the fan base. If you continue to build it, eventually people will beg you to sell to them because they’ll want some of what you’ve got. I’m not just talkin’ the “Pepsi Generation” here. A movement goes a step further. If you give people a place to belong, a place to feel like they matter, like they’re making a difference, you’ll build your platform. Eventually they’ll not only ask to buy stuff from you, they’ll actually volunteer to help you distribute it to others. So how do you apply this to your business? Here’s a perfect example. I remember, when I was a kid, getting a little red “I Am Loved” button at the Peoples Jewellers store in the local shopping center. Funny how all these years later, I still remember not only what the little red button looked like, but also the store where I got it. I thought it was a Peoples Jewellers promotion, but, on researching it, I found out that it was a movement that started about 40 years ago in Kansas City. Barnett Helzberg Jr., of Helzberg Diamonds, had just had his marriage proposal accepted. The guy was ecstatic. He was loved and wanted the world to know it. So he produced these little red buttons with the words, “I Am Loved”, printed in white. The idea spread like wildfire, buttons were given to presidents, celebrities and soldiers in Vietnam. 44 million buttons later, you can still order yourself a button in any of 9 languages. The buttons were, and still are, free, but they did put Helzberg Diamonds on the map. Doesn’t always work. Don’t think Special K broke any sales records with their “Do I Look Fat?” commercials—remember the ones with the men asking the dumb questions women always ask? But Dove’s making out OK. Check out Dove’s new Pro-Age, a clever reaction to women’s anti-aging products. How ‘bout their “Campaign for Real Beauty”? A lot of women are jumping on the bandwagon. Dove is selling self-esteem by featuring women in their underwear accepting their non Barbie doll bodies. Kinda almost makes you forget that Unilever also sells Slim Fast with young women in bikinis. Worth a try. Build a platform. Create a movement. Be a rebel with a cause. And I’ll see you in the spotlight!





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