Costly Red Campaign Reaps Meager
$18 Million
Bono & Co. Spend up to $100 Million on Marketing,
Incur Watchdogs'
Wrath
Published: March 05, 2007
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AdAge.com) -- It's been
a year since the first Red T-shirts hit Gap shelves in London,
and a parade of celebrity-splashed events has
The collective marketing outlay by Gap, Apple and Motorola
for the Red campaign has been enormous, with some estimates
as high as $100 million.
followed: Steven Spielberg smiling down from billboards in
San Francisco; Christy Turlington striking a yoga pose in
a New Yorker ad; Bono cruising Chicago's Michigan Avenue with
Oprah Winfrey, eagerly snapping up Red products; Chris Rock
appearing in Motorola TV spots ("Use Red, nobody's dead");
and the Red room at the Grammy Awards. So you'd expect the
money raised to be, well, big, right? Maybe $50 million, or
even $100 million.
Try again: The tally raised worldwide is $18 million.
The disproportionate ratio between the marketing outlay and
the money raised is drawing concern among nonprofit watchdogs,
cause-marketing experts and even executives in the ad business.
It threatens to spur a backlash, not just against the Red
campaign -- which ambitiously set out to change the cause-marketing
model by allowing partners to profit from
charity -- but also for the brands involved.
Enormous outlay
By any measure, the buzz has been extraordinary and the collective
marketing outlay by Gap, Apple and Motorola has been enormous,
with some estimates as high as $100 million. Gap alone spent
$7.8 million of its $58 million outlay on Red during last
year's fourth quarter, according to Nielsen Media Research's
Nielsen Adviews.
But contributions don't seem to be living up to the hype.
Richard Feachem, executive director of the Global Fund to
Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the recipient of money
raised by Red, told The Boston Globe in December, "We
may be over the $100 million mark by the end of Christmas."
Rajesh Anandan, the Global Fund's head of private-sector
partnerships, said Mr. Feachem was misquoted, and defended
the efforts by Red to increase the Global Fund's private-sector
donations, which totaled just $5 million from 2002 to 2005.
(The U.S. Congress just approved a $724 million pledge to
the Global Fund, on top of $1.9 billion already given and
$650 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.)
'Hugely frontloaded'
"Red has done as much as we could have hoped for in the
short time it has been up and running," he said, adding:
"The launch cost of this kind of campaign is going to
be hugely frontloaded. It's a very costly exercise."
Julie Cordua, VP-marketing at Red and a former Motorola marketing
exec and director-buzz marketing at Helio, said the outlay
by the program's partners must be understood within the context
of the campaign's goal: sustainability. "It's not a charity
program of them writing a one-time check. It has to make good
business sense for the company so the money will continue
to flow to the Global Fund over time." She added that
since many of Red's partners haven't closed their books yet
on 2006, more funds likely will be added to the $18 million.
But is the rise of philanthropic fashionistas decked out
in Red T-shirts and iPods really the best way to save a child
dying of AIDS in Africa?
Parody mocks Bono
The campaign's inherent appeal to conspicuous consumption
has spurred a parody by a group of San Francisco designers
and artists, who take issue with Bono's rallying cry. "Shopping
is not a solution. Buy less. Give more," is the message
at buylesscrap.org, which encourages people to give directly
to the Global Fund.
"The Red campaign proposes consumption as the cure to
the world's evils," said Ben Davis, creative director
at Word Pictures Ideas, co-creator of the site. "Can't
we just focus on the real solution -- giving money?"
Trent Stamp, president of Charity Navigator, which rates
the spending practices of 5,000 nonprofits, said he's concerned
about the campaign's impact on the next generation. "The
Red campaign can be a good start or it can be a colossal waste
of money, and it all depends on whether this edgy, innovative
campaign inspires young people to be better citizens or just
gives them an excuse to feel good about themselves while they
buy an overpriced item they don't really need."
Fears of nonprofits
Mark Rosenman, a longtime activist in the nonprofit sector
and a public-service professor at the Union Institute &
University in Cincinnati, said the disparity between the marketing
outlay and the money raised by Red is illustrative of some
of the biggest fears of nonprofits in the U.S.
"There is a broadening concern that business is taking
on the patina of philanthropy and crowding out philanthropic
activity and even substituting for it," he said. "It
benefits the for-profit partners much more than the charitable
causes." |