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Social Marketing

Social Marketing

Social marketing is the systematic application of marketing along with other concepts and techniques to achieve specific behavioural goals for a social good. For example, this may include asking people not to smoke in public areas, asking them to use seat belts or prompting to make them follow speed limits.

Social marketing is marketing designed to create social change, not to directly benefit a brand. Using traditional marketing techniques, it raises awareness of a given problem or cause, and aims to convince an audience to change their behaviors.

So, instead of selling a product, social marketing “sells” a behavior or lifestyle that benefits society, in order to create the desired change. This benefit to the public good is always the primary focus. And instead of showing how a product is better than competing products, social marketing “competes” against undesirable thoughts, behaviors, or actions.

Social marketing is commonly used for causes like

Health and safety, including:

  • Anti-smoking
  • Anti-drug
  • Promoting exercise and healthy eating
  • Safe driving
  • Railroad station safety

Environmental causes, including:

  • Anti-deforestation
  • Anti-littering
  • Endangered species awareness

Social activism, including:

  • Illuminating struggles that people of color, people with disabilities, etc. face, then inspiring people to fight against mechanisms that create inequality
  • Anti-bullying
  • Fighting gender stereotypes

Who initiates these social marketing campaigns? Nonprofit organizations and charities run the majority of social marketing campaigns. Government organizations, highway safety coalitions, and emergency services (police, fire, ambulance) run them as well. But social marketing is not out of the question if you’re a commercial business. Commercial brands will sometimes run social marketing campaigns for causes they are passionate about.

The primary aim of social marketing is ‘social good’, whereas in commercial marketing the aim is primarily ‘financial’. This does not mean that commercial marketers cannot contribute to achievement of social good.

Applications of Social Marketing

  1. Health promotion campaigns in India, especially in Kerala and AIDS awareness programmes are largely using social marketing, and social workers are largely working for it. Most of the social workers are professionally trained for this particular task.
  2. Anti-tobacco campaigns
  3. Anti-drug campaigns
  4. Anti-pollution campaigns
  5. Road safety campaigns
  6. Anti-dowry campaigns
  7. Protection of girl child campaign
  8. Campaign against the use of plastic bags
  9. Green marketing campaign

Social marketing applies a customer-oriented approach, and uses the concepts and tools used by com­mercial marketers in pursuit of social goals such as anti-smoking campaigns or fund raising for NGOs.

Advantages of Social Marketing

Social marketing a new marketing tool can be a great asset if used properly. The beneficial effects of social marketing for a business can be tremendous, but one must remember that it must be used in the most efficient possible way.

Social marketing allows businesses and web sites to gain popularity over the Internet by using different types of social media available, such as blogs, video and photo sharing sites, social networking sites and social bookmarking web sites.

There are six distinct advantages of social marketing that make it a vital tool to any marketing campaign:

  1. Promotes consumption of socially desirable products.
  2. Promotes health consciousness in people and helps them adopt a healthier lifestyle.
  3. It helps in green marketing initiatives.
  4. It helps to eradicate social evils that affect the society and quality of life.
  5. Social marketing is one of the cheapest ways of marketing.
  6. One of the best advantages of social marketing is that anyone can take advantage of it, even from their own home.

What is NOT social marketing?

Often, people get confused about what social marketing is and isn’t. So, before we keep going, let’s break down 3 types of marketing that do NOT count as social marketing.

  1. Social Media Marketing

Many people think social marketing is the same thing as social media marketing: marketing on social networks like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. Well, that’s not true. Sometimes, social media will be used to spread, and generate buzz around, social marketing campaigns. However, most marketing on social media is oriented towards promoting a product or service. Those viral tweets by Wendy’s, and that influencer’s promotion of Fashion Nova on Instagram, are definitely not social marketing!

  1. Self-Serving Donations

If a company publicizes a donation they make to a charity or cause, that isn’t social marketing, because their aim is partially to boost their own reputation.

  1. Marketing “green” or “charity tie-in” products

If a company is marketing its own line of eco-friendly water bottles, hybrid cars, reusable lunch containers, or other “green” products, this doesn’t count as social marketing. The marketing of products with a charitable donation tie-in (such as TOMS) doesn’t count either. In both of these examples, the primary focus is on selling a product. Meanwhile, with social marketing, the focus is solely on changing behaviors for the public good.

Here’s an example:

  • An ad with alarming stats on the number of disposable water bottles thrown out per year, which promotes Hydro Flask reusable bottles as environmentally friendly, and that is made by Hydro Flask to sell its own bottles, is not social marketing.
  • Meanwhile, a general campaign to promote reusable water bottles, made by an environmental organization, that does not promote a specific brand of reusable bottle, is social marketing.

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