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Ellie Pennybacker with Jackson County Habitat for Humanity

June 23, 2024 by Tom Sheldon

Northeast Georgia Business Radio
Northeast Georgia Business Radio
Ellie Pennybacker with Jackson County Habitat for Humanity
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Ellie Pennybacker

Ellie Pennybacker/Jackson County Habitat for Humanity

Habitat for Humanity is a global nonprofit housing organization working in local communities across all 50 states in the U.S. and in approximately 70 countries. Habitat’s vision is of a world where everyone has a decent place to live.

Habitat works toward our vision by building strength, stability and self-reliance in partnership with families in need of decent and affordable housing. Habitat homeowners help build their own homes alongside volunteers and pay an affordable mortgage.

Visit Jackson County Habitat for Humanity here.

 

 

Our Community Partner for this episode of Northeast Georgia Business Radio is Leather & Lace Coffee and Company. A giant thank you to Heather and Lori for their continued support. Leather & Lace Coffee and Company specializes in barrel aged coffee beans; artisan roasting all their coffees. They also offer event and special occasion catering: visit them today.

 

Northeast Georgia Business Radio is presented in part by Regions Bank.
Start Building your financial confidence at Regions Bank. Member FDIC and an Equal Housing Member.

Tagged With: ellie pennybacker, Habitat for Humanity, jackson county, nega, northeast georgia, tom sheldon

Joshua Rodgers with Habitat for Humanity, Cat McAfee with LaAmistad and Charaun Cash with VOX ATL

April 4, 2023 by angishields

Atlanta Business Radio
Atlanta Business Radio
Joshua Rodgers with Habitat for Humanity, Cat McAfee with LaAmistad and Charaun Cash with VOX ATL
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In this episode of Atlanta Business Radio, Lee Kanter chats with some amazing guests who went through the American Express Leadership Academy. They talk about how important it is to develop leadership skills and build communities in the nonprofit sector.

Cat McAfee, Executive Director of LaAmistad, a program that provides educational services to the Latino community in Atlanta, shares about the challenges they face and the impact of their programs. Charaun Cash from VOX ATL, a media and youth development organization, and a Josh Rodgers from Habitat for Humanity also join in on the conversation. They encourage young people to consider a career in nonprofits.

Founded in 2008, the American Express Leadership Academy builds the personal, business and leadership skills of emerging nonprofit and social purpose leaders through multi-day, in-person trainings. The initiative has grown to a global program, training world-class leaders in the areas of education, the arts, social services, health, the environment, and more. Since 2008, we hosted more than 160 Leadership Academy programs around the world and training more than 6,000 nonprofit and social purpose leaders.

Josh-RodgersJosh Rodgers is a writer and DEI practitioner originally from Memphis, TN. He works with Habitat for Humanity International, creating strategies and resources that support the organization’s global DEI strategy.

Josh also serves as a content writer for Blavity, AfroTech and Buzzfeed – highlighting the nuanced experiences of Black culture and entertainment. He can also be found on the mic as the co-host and founder of The Jigsaw Podcast.

Josh holds a B.A. from Morehouse College, an MPA from Arkansas State University, and an MPP from Georgia State University.

Connect with Josh on LinkedIn and Instagram.

Cat-McAfeeCat DaCosta McAfee, Executive Director at LaAmistad, was born and raised in Attleboro, MA. Mrs. McAfee earned a B.S. from Georgia State University and is a graduate of the Spanish School at Instituto Chac-Mool in Cuernavaca, Mexico.

She is deeply involved in the community serving on Atlanta Public School’s Advisory Committee, Georgia Coalition for English Language Learners and the Georgia Department of Public Health Brain Trust 4 Babies Committee.

McAfee is also a founding board member for Atlanta Classical Academy, a tuition-free, open enrollment, K-12 public charter school opened in 2014. When Ms. McAfee is not at LaAmistad, she loves playing guitar, salsa dancing, wakeboarding, snowboarding and hockey.

Connect with Cat on LinkedIn and Instagram.

Charaun-CashCharaun Cash, Executive Director of VOX ATL,  is originally from Dayton, Ohio, but has called the Atlanta area home since 2015. She is a graduate of The Ohio State University where she earned her bachelor’s degree in communications and holds a Master of Public Administration from Georgia State University.

She is passionate about equitable education access, entrepreneurship, and civic engagement. She was a member of the Atlanta Women’s Foundation’s Inspire Atlanta class of 2020. She was recognized by the Young Nonprofit Professionals Network of Atlanta’s 30 Under 30 Nonprofit Leader Program for her outstanding leadership, innovation, and commitment to community work in Atlanta.

Charaun enjoys spending her free time helping entrepreneurs, nonprofits, and social enterprises tell their brand stories through design and photography.

Connect with Charaun on LinkedIn and Instagram.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • About the American Express Leadership Academy
  • About the nonprofit sector in Atlanta and how it’s changed over the past few years
  • Challenges facing nonprofits and your particular organization
  • How important it is that nonprofit leaders undergo learning and development programs like the Leadership Academy

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio. Brought to you by Onpay. Built in Atlanta, ONPAY is the top rated payroll and HR software anywhere. Get one month free at on paycom. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:32] Lee Kantor here another episode of Atlanta Business Radio, and this is going to be a good one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor, Onpay. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories. And today is a very special episode. This is an episode where we’re focusing in on the American Express Leadership Academy and some of the folks who went through that program here in Atlanta. First up, we have Cat McAfee, the executive director of LaAmistad. Welcome.

Cat McAfee: [00:01:03] Thank you. Good morning.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:04] Before we get too far into things, tell us about your program, how you serving folks.

Cat McAfee: [00:01:09] So we work with the Latino community here in Atlanta providing educational services. We have our largest program which provides after school supports and takes a holistic approach, educating the parents at the same time doing classes and workshops in Spanish for anywhere from how to navigate your school to financial literacy, digital literacy and anything in between. Whatever the families may need. We provide those services for the parents. We take the academics for after school program very seriously, making sure that the students have access to reading specialists and teachers so that they can get their homework done. But we have such a learning curve that we have with lots of learning loss, especially since the pandemic. So of course, making sure that we’re providing those services to really make sure the kids are on reading level by third grade and can go ahead and graduate high school. And so we see them through that trajectory starting today from birth to five all the way through adult education.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:09] So what’s your backstory? How’d you get involved in this line of work?

Cat McAfee: [00:02:12] Well, I was skating through Atlanta on a pair of roller blades, and I tell people God had a plan in a sense of humor. And I was asked to teach some skating classes to a group of students that were getting off the bus. And that’s where it all started. Met those kids, skated them around the gym.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:27] Serendipity.

Cat McAfee: [00:02:27] It really was. Absolutely. And fell in love with the students and their families and slowly but surely began to do more.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:35] So what are some things, maybe some myths you can kind of unlock here for folks who have maybe don’t understand that community as well as you do?

Cat McAfee: [00:02:46] I think the biggest piece that I understand today that I didn’t when I started was the fact that there’s so many Latinos that are here in Atlanta, in Georgia, and really throughout the country because they want an opportunity for their children to be academically successful. They want access to school. It’s extremely important. Education is important. It’s what sets people free. And I think that is something that I see through all of the families we serve is that desire to give their children an opportunity that maybe they never had.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:18] Now, what are some of the challenges when you’re working with children, especially whose parents may not speak English as well as you’re trying to teach them, and they don’t have that kind of support inside the home?

Cat McAfee: [00:03:32] I think one of the big pieces is understanding that they come with a different understanding of education in general. And so in many Central and South America, many of the many locations in Central and South America, a school is something you pay for. And so those nuances are extremely different in the United States, so much that parents are frightened when invited to a conference and they don’t understand that collaborative environment that the schools here in the United States really desire. So in breaking down a lot of those barriers with the families, our families are much more comfortable going into the school setting, advocating for their children, understanding that they have a voice at the table. So that’s a lot of the work that we do. Initially when students and families join our program, is helping them to understand those those small nuances that are the educational system here in the United States.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:24] Now, when you started working with these folks, was there a moment where you were like, Hey, I’m good at this, This is something I can really make a difference? Can you share that when that kind of light bulb went off?

Cat McAfee: [00:04:37] I think it’s something where we can all make a difference. There’s a lot of need out out there, right? And it’s just where you feel that you can line up your talents in a way that can really support a student family and change the trajectory. I think early on, the small successes of seeing a child that with a little bit of support not only were able to read well, but even do better than some of their peers so much that they were able to take places and and some of the more prestigious, even private schools here in Atlanta. We had students in those early years taking seats at Pace Academy or the Westminster schools because they were extremely smart. Right. And with the additional support, they were able to do so much more. And and those students today have come back and they now work for the organization or we’ve got kids even in law school at this point in time. So that little bit of education and support you give the children in the beginning, it has such a ripple effect and it’ll do so much more for the entire city and state when we have folks that are able to take seats at the table, especially tables like these.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:42] Now, can you share an example of that ripple effect, how impacting one person can impact maybe their family and even their community?

Cat McAfee: [00:05:50] Sure, absolutely. So there’s a family that actually sticks out. In particular, the mom had very little English skills and she had three children in the public school sector. And her oldest son was the first to take a seat at a private school here in Atlanta in eighth grade. And he went on to graduate from Oglethorpe University, and he’s now pre-med at Tulane. He is also joining the military, wants to become a doctor and wants to give back to his family. His sister is at Loyola University after graduating from Pace Academy and the youngest child is in his probably junior, junior or senior year at Pace Academy. So all three children were able to acclimate through private school once given the opportunity. But more importantly, Mom learned English, has a command of the language and can advocate for herself, can be a spokesperson for the program, and has been able to do a lot more than so many others in her family just by giving the by being given the resources that we’ve been able to provide them.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:56] So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Cat McAfee: [00:06:59] We need folks like you to volunteer. We need we have centers all over the city. An hour a week or an hour a day makes such a big impact. And we see that those kids that can connect to a volunteer, they take it with them for a lifetime. These kids will come back in and I’ll see them when they’ve graduated, and they want to share those successes, which are fantastic. But I always ask them, What do you remember about La Amistad and what made the difference? And each one can name a volunteer that impacted them. So minimally. Sharing an hour of your time can make a big difference that you might even might not even realize what it can do to change the trajectory of a child’s future. And then, of course, like all nonprofits and businesses, we need to keep the lights on and continue to pay all of these wonderful teachers and specialists that are working with the students around the clock. So continued funding is always important.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:50] Now to be a volunteer, do you have to speak Spanish?

Cat McAfee: [00:07:52] You don’t. I think that’s another one of those myths, right? The students are in our public school system and they all speak English very well. And we just want to wrap have folks that can wrap around them. So I tell people, if you want to know, if you qualify for a volunteer, if you can read any books in English and if you know a two plus two is you are over qualified, come join us.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:15] And then if somebody wants to connect with you and learn more about the program, what’s the website?

Cat McAfee: [00:08:19] LaAmistad Inc. Org That’s LaAmistad Inc.org.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:26] Good stuff. Well, thank you so much for sharing your story and hang around because at the end of each of these interviews we’ll come back and do a roundtable about the American Express Leadership Academy. Thank you. All right. Next up on Atlanta Business Radio, we have Charaun Cash with VOX ATL. Welcome.

Charaun Cash: [00:08:44] Good morning.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:45] How are you doing today?

Charaun Cash: [00:08:46] I’m doing great.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:48] So, again, share a little bit about Vox. What mission purpose? How you serving folks?

Charaun Cash: [00:08:54] Absolutely. So Vox is a media and youth development organization based here in Atlanta, Georgia. We provide free after school programing and summer programing for teens ages 13 to 19. And all of our programing is centered around amplifying youth voice. And we do that through employing journalism principles, spoken word poetry and also leadership development. And we have an online publication where our teens are able to come together, write stories that are really impactful to them. And then we produce those stories online and also in our print publication.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:34] So how did you get involved with Vox?

Charaun Cash: [00:09:36] It’s funny. So I actually started my role as executive director in January, so I’m fairly new to the organization, but I’ve seen their work ever since I’ve been in Atlanta, which was since 2016, and it’s just been a really nice trajectory to how I ended up here. I actually stumbled across their work while I was interning at Cox Curry and Associates. It’s a fundraising consulting agency that used to work with Vox, and I said, That’s cool. My background is actually in communications and I have a master’s in public administration. And so I’ve always been looking for ways to collaborate and combine those two things.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:16] Now, do you find the the students that you work with are hungry for this type of education? Is it something that maybe they have a little bit of an interest, but once you kind of give them a platform for this and they can dive deeper, then they’re just kind of all in and they just really run with it.

Charaun Cash: [00:10:31] Absolutely. So the teens that come to Vox, they’re all they’re very passionate. They feel deeply. They have a perspective. They have something to say. And so when you give them the opportunity to be able to share their perspective and share their stories, they’re not going to shy away from that opportunity. We have teens who are eager to cover press conferences. For example, we had some teens go to the premiere of Wakanda Forever, and they wrote their stories and their reviews, and they were very honest. And we have teens who go to to the Fox Theater and watch the plays and then share their their reviews because they have perspective. And so just giving them the opportunity to do that allows for them to lean in and they really do like take it, take advantage of it.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:19] And they take it.

Charaun Cash: [00:11:19] Seriously. Yes, it’s very serious to them.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:21] Now, have you found that when given that opportunity, that this is transferable skills, no matter what they want to do later in life, these are skills that can transfer to the to whatever it is.

Charaun Cash: [00:11:34] They’re absolutely. So not all teens that come to Vox are coming to learn how to be a journalist. Some of them come because they want to, you know, have a safe space after school. Some of them need access to a computer. Some of them just want to build community. And so regardless of what your career aspirations are, you can come to Vox and you have a place here, but the skills are transferable. So right now in this day and age, digital media is so huge. As you can see, during the pandemic, there was a lot of, you know, a need for people to tell stories and storytelling. And you saw that on social media. You saw teens or you saw organizations and companies utilizing Zoom and virtual technology to bring their programs to teens or in their constituents. So yeah, I think no matter what it is that you’re doing, you can you can use those skills. But it’s more than just the media making as well. We’re also a youth, like a holistic youth development organization. They’re learning how to use their voice to make positive change. So that means impacting the systems that are impacting them the most, influencing the systems, impacting them the most, and like the school systems and, you know, lunches are things. Do you see an injustice? If so, can you call it out? And do you know what to do with your voice now?

Lee Kantor: [00:12:59] What is a kind of a day in the life look like? So say school ends, they head over to Vox, so it’s in person. In real life, It.

Charaun Cash: [00:13:07] Is in person. We are located. We’re located in the Peachtree Center Hub. Like right on the Internet, like on top of the MARTA station, right in the heart of downtown. And so after school ends, you can come over to Vox. We have computers, we have music going, there’s snacks, there’s a healthy meal so that they can, you know, be nourished and they can think and then their friends are. There. We have like soft furniture that they can like lounge on if they want to. And then, you know, if we have a podcast studio as well, so much like the table that we’re sitting at right now, they can go in the podcast studio and and talk about whatever it is that they’re interested in.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:48] And then what’s the fee for them to participate in this?

Charaun Cash: [00:13:51] Oh, no, it’s absolutely free. So there’s.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:53] No charge for them to participate.

Charaun Cash: [00:13:54] No charge. And that’s why we exist right now.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:58] How did they get there typically?

Charaun Cash: [00:13:59] Yeah. So that’s that’s that’s huge. So transportation, our teams come from all over. We have someone who is coming from Alpharetta, downtown Atlanta, because that’s how much how much it’s so important to her. But we they come on the MARTA, they come on, they use the bus. We provide free transportation. So Marta, marta, Station fair. And then we also validate all the parking for volunteers as well as our teams who are getting dropped off or parking and coming to the space.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:33] Now, do you have a success story that you found? I know you’ve only been there a short time, but is there anybody that stands out maybe that’s now working with you that started through the program?

Charaun Cash: [00:14:44] Yeah, absolutely. So I would love to spotlight one of our alumni. Her name is Zariah. She is very talented and she is very passionate. She has gone through the program and now she is working to be one of our largest advocates, not only for herself but also for the organization. She speaks on panels at Vox. We believe in this idea of distributed leadership, not only amongst our team but also into the teams. And so she has definitely proven herself to be a leader, shows up when needed, and then she’s very active in with our community partners. So we take teens, we take teens who are interested in becoming leaders, and they have the opportunity to lead programing for our community partners and showing them how to employ and include youth Voice into their curriculum in their programs. So we’re not only just making an impact at Vox, we’re taking it out into community as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:46] Now Vox is a well known media platform that goes beyond what you’re doing. How do you kind of what are your metrics of success that gets them all fired up, that, hey, this is a good thing we should be investing our resources in?

Charaun Cash: [00:16:01] For the teens.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:02] For like how is Vox defining success? Like what? What’s something that you’re excited to share with the Vox corporate people to let them know that, Hey, this is a program you should keep investing in?

Charaun Cash: [00:16:14] So we’re actually unaffiliated with Vox Media. Oh, right. Unaffiliated. You know what? We’ve been in the we’ve been in the business for 30 years. We got our name first. I don’t know if we should put that in there, but. But we do want to partner with them. Vox means voice in Latin. And so you see a lot of organizations out there who have the word vox in their name because it’s such like, that’s what we’re totally independent, we’re completely independent, teen led organization. And you know, but they would love to be contributors on books. So if you’re looking for.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:48] A sponsorship.

Charaun Cash: [00:16:49] We definitely are. We absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:52] And they should know about you.

Charaun Cash: [00:16:53] I’m sure they should. And we would love to connect.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:56] So if somebody wants to connect with you and either volunteer or be part of the program, what is the website?

Charaun Cash: [00:17:02] Absolutely. So you can get connected with Vox ATL at Vox, ATL, org. You can also find us on social media at Vox Rox ATL. That’s Vox ATL.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:14] Good stuff. Well, thanks for sharing your story.

Charaun Cash: [00:17:16] Thank you.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:17] All right. Next up on this episode of Atlanta Business Radio, we have Josh Rodgers with Habitat for Humanity. Welcome.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:17:24] Thank you.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:25] Well, tell us about Habitat for Humanity for the three people out there that don’t know what your work is,

Joshua Rodgers: [00:17:31] For sure.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:17:31] So Habitat for Humanity International is a global nonprofit focused on providing affordable housing to people who typically wouldn’t be able to afford it. So we’re working in all of the 50 states in the United States, and then we have offices in the Americas. So that’s North and South America, the Middle East, Africa. And then we have our office down in Southeast Asia as well doing that work.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:52] Can you share a little bit about the history? How did this idea get started? Because it’s now, like you said, a global organization, but it didn’t start that way. It did.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:18:00] Not. So it started in Americus, Georgia. That is a real city in town for people who do not believe that. But our founder, Millard Fuller. So he had this idea of wanting to basically build out what Dr. King described as the beloved community. People from different spaces and races and socioeconomic statuses coming together and building this community where people can have access to equity specifically through housing. So it started there on what is now considered Koinonia Farms. And as it continued to grow and build, we began to see expansion in several different areas of the United States. And it has blossomed into this wonderful global organization that the world knows today.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:39] And it isn’t just a handout of here’s a house, right? There are some sweat equity and there’s some involvement of the people that are getting the housing.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:18:48] Sure, Absolutely. So I think one idea that people kind of misconstrue about habitat is that exactly that that we’re just giving away homes. But there is a full application process. There is financing that has to take place. People are qualified based on their median income, the median income within the respective areas that they’re in. But there is a sweat equity portion that goes into it. So every family is required to go through certain financial literacy classes. They’re also required to help build the home that they’re a part of, or if their home is at a certain completion point, they’re assisting another family with the building of their home. So it is an entire process and at the very end, they own their home at the same way that any traditional person who’s seeking home ownership would.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:30] Now, why was that important component of this? Because a lot of organizations are like, here, we’re giving you something and this is saying you have to earn some of this.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:19:41] Sure. I think a part of it is to get them invested in the process. And I think another part of it, if I’m going to be really honest, is to provide them a I don’t have another word, but a sense of normalcy around acquiring their home. Right. So it doesn’t make them feel like it is just a handout more so than it is a hand up, as we like to say at Habitat. And it gives them this sense of pride that they they earned it, maybe not through the traditional sense of having a set amount of money, but this is their home. So it puts them in a similar space with the community members around them.

Lee Kantor: [00:20:11] Now, do you find that when they go through the process in that manner that they take more care or more like, do they stick around to pay off the loan more than somebody who doesn’t go through a process like that? Like is there any statistics around that?

Joshua Rodgers: [00:20:26] Absolutely. I don’t have the exact numbers, but we do know for sure that individuals who have habitat homes, they their children. Number one, Georgia Tech did a research study for us a few years ago. Their children have greater retention and graduation rates than people who are considered low income, who do not have access to affordable housing. So one of the things that we do understand is that if we can take away the housing cost burden off of families, it opens up so much more of their income to be able to do additional things like after school, care for their children, to even provide transportation to opportunities like Sharon talked about it. Have asked him another level of access to health equity and just a myriad of things, right, that they probably would not have the financial means to tap into if it were not for relieving that housing cost burden that habitat provides.

Lee Kantor: [00:21:14] And then can you share a little bit about affordable housing? Because this always confuses me, because when you have affordable housing like this, they have equity in the home. This is their home, right? Sure. So as most people who have a home, they want that home to appreciate and value. And sometimes when an area becomes desirable, then the housing price goes higher and then it’s no longer maybe affordable to the people that started out there. But then they get that wealth that’s created by the appreciation. How is that? Are you finding that habitat homes are appreciating and they are generating that generational wealth from their homes? Absolutely.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:21:54] So Habitat homes are just like any other home. The difference is, is that it is particularly financed in a special way for low income families. So once they complete the process of the home being built, they are qualified, they have the same access as anyone else. So if that home appreciates because the area is changing based on some community development norms that we’re seeing across the United States, then they have access to that same level of wealth, right? So it is creating and generating generational wealth for those families. If they find themselves in the space where they are looking to possibly sell that home before their 30 year mortgage is up. You know, in good faith, I think some affiliates, our local affiliates are the ones who are doing the work. They would love if a family would donate the home back to Habitat so it can go back to another low income family. But because it is their home. Right. And it’s still financed through traditional financing means, they just have very low interest rates that allows it to be affordable. In that sense, they have the right to sell their home at market value, so they’re able to tap into their generational wealth that’s created with that home as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:22:59] So it really is a win win for everybody.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:23:01] It is a win win for everyone for sure.

Lee Kantor: [00:23:02] So what do you need more of? How can we help you?

Joshua Rodgers: [00:23:05] Yeah, so my role specifically is helping our affiliates diversify their volunteer base, right? So what we’ve found at Habitat is that sometimes our staff and our volunteers do not always represent the communities that we serve. So our community, the communities that we serve are in high percentage persons of color, right? And our staff and our volunteers do not always represent that. So what we the help that we would need, is going to your local habitat affiliate. And if you have connections with very diverse organizations and they don’t have to be diverse and just race forward work, I think a lot of times we think about diversity, we think about race first, and that is okay. But if we can find younger volunteers because we have we have a problem with attracting youth, if we can find more women who are interested in being volunteers because some people believe, because it’s construction based, that it is a very male dominated volunteer corps. So just think about the myriad of ways that diversity can show up. And if you have any connections or you yourself want to volunteer just from a different perspective, be it your background, your socioeconomic status, we welcome all of that level of inclusivity onto the volunteer site, and it helps us be a greater representation, which then allows us to be a greater community trust and continue to work within the communities that we serve. Now, you.

Lee Kantor: [00:24:19] Mentioned that a lot of people’s first thought is, Oh, I have to be great with a hammer or saw. What are some of the other kind of job requirements or job needs that you have to fill that maybe aren’t necessarily climbing on a roof? Yeah.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:24:32] So the thing about that as well as though is that even if I am not handy at all, but I’ve been on several habitat builds something, right? Yeah. They’re going to find something for you to do and they give really great instructions prior to. However, Habitat also needs skilled volunteers, so if you’re really good in, if you have a finance background or we have a really great advocacy program. So if you have a political background or a public policy background, there are many different ways that you can tap into our work and help advance the mission of affordable housing as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:03] So if somebody wants to connect with you and have more substantive conversation about that, what is the website?

Joshua Rodgers: [00:25:08] Yeah, so they can go to habitat.org. It’s really that simple. And then we’re Habitat for Humanity across all social media platforms.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:15] Good stuff. Well, thank you for sharing that for sure. Now I’d like to get a little bit of your perspective about the American Express Leadership Academy. Anybody here want to volunteer and share what their experiences was with that program, and was it worth your time?

Cat McAfee: [00:25:32] I’ll start us off.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:33] I’ll start us off.

Cat McAfee: [00:25:33] All right. I think it was definitely worth our time. It was an incredible way for so many of us to connect that have never met each other, but are doing similar work in the same types of spaces. And there was a lot of collaboration. So I think just the benefit of all of the nonprofit leaders coming together was extremely powerful. Of course, then you take that and you provide all of these incredible opportunities to deepen the work that we do and provide additional trainings. It was it was really, really impactful. I think for me, I enjoyed the storytelling components of it and working with the TEDx Talk people and getting an opportunity to take a deeper dive into how do you do that, do that extremely well and and tell your story. It’s such an important part of what we do every day. So those types of trainings I think were extremely beneficial.

Lee Kantor: [00:26:27] So how did you hear about it?

Charaun Cash: [00:26:30] Well for me. I heard about it on LinkedIn, actually. I mentioned earlier that I was a new leader. I just started my role in January and so I was just looking for ways to kind of increase any knowledge or any resources that could help me just continue to strengthen my leadership style and just my leadership opportunity. I was hoping to to find, you know, a book, but I found I found the American Express Leadership Academy. So I’m really grateful for that. So what was the program?

Lee Kantor: [00:27:06] How long was the program?

Charaun Cash: [00:27:08] It’s a six month program. We had a couple of online Zoom sessions before a session with Ted to prepare for our in-person. And then we spent, what, 3 or 4 days in New York City, all of us together in one room, which was really great, especially after the pandemic. That was my first large conference that I had attended. And so we we got training from amazing leaders. We got training from one another. And it’s just been a really great experience.

Lee Kantor: [00:27:37] Josh you want to share what you what was the most kind of memorable thing you got out of the program?

Joshua Rodgers: [00:27:42] Sure. So I got to go out on a limb and say that this was one of the best professional development programs that I’ve ever been a part of and I’ve been a part of a few. So shout out to American Express and Common Purpose for putting that together. But I’m out. Ditto with the ladies just expressed. The storytelling component of that was really great. Being able to really marry our passion and our work together and tell that in a way that is impactful not just for, you know, future donors, because we need those as well, working with nonprofits, but also to be able to communicate our work in a real holistic way. And I think beyond that, for me, it was stretching our leadership skills in a way that not only advances the work we do with our organizations, but allows us to stretch our capacity and to think beyond. I know for me what I was doing on a day to day basis, so how can I grow as a leader? What is my capacity as a leader and what strategies can I put in place that just not only, you know, like this program wasn’t the cap of my growth, but how can I take what I’ve learned today and really continue to expand across the course of my career?

Lee Kantor: [00:28:42] Now, all of you mentioned the importance of having that community and having a cohort where it was people doing similar things, but a little different than you’re doing. Do you find that that type of community exists here in Atlanta? All of you are from the metro Atlanta area. Is there a community of nonprofits that serve you in that manner, or is that something you would like wish there was?

Charaun Cash: [00:29:06] I would say so. I mean, I feel like Atlanta has a very strong nonprofit sector. Like we’re doing amazing work. I’m involved in Impian. It’s a young nonprofit. You know what? I’m not even going to try to figure out. I’m involved in Impian, so I’m connected to other nonprofit leaders as well. You know, I’m just trying to find ways to build community myself. And so, yeah, I would say that Atlanta does offer those opportunities.

Lee Kantor: [00:29:37] And then is there anything that you wish Atlanta provided more for you all? Mm. Because now that you’ve had kind of got a taste of what nationally, what could be, is there anything here in Atlanta you wish you could take some of what you learned and incorporate it here in the metro area?

Joshua Rodgers: [00:29:57] I would say probably if we could duplicate this on a local level, even if it was biannually, I think that would be great. One of the biggest takeaways as well was the opportunity to be in smaller groups and really talk through challenges, gain inspiration, get really great ideas about some of the problems that we’re facing. So if we were I know for me specifically, if I was able to have that on a more consistent basis with my peers, it would be really helpful to some of the work that I’m doing right to learn best practices.

Lee Kantor: [00:30:27] I mean, all of you deal with similar things in the sense of, Oh, we need volunteers, Oh, we need funds. You know, there are certain common things that each of you needs and to learn from each other and to share these kind of best practices. I would think everybody would benefit from that.

Charaun Cash: [00:30:43] Yeah. And I would just add that, you know, I really got a chance to know people personally during that experience in New York. And so I would just love to understand the humans that are you know, running these amazing nonprofit organizations. And what’s your story? How did you come to the work? So I guess opportunities like this at Atlanta Business Radio to come up here and just get, you know, get a better sense of who you are on a human level, right?

Lee Kantor: [00:31:09] Because everybody’s paths are different now that each of you obviously are a part of nonprofits. Is that something you feel like your career is going to be in that area moving forward?

Charaun Cash: [00:31:20] Yes. For me.

Cat McAfee: [00:31:22] Yes, for me too.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:31:23] Yeah, I think I’m open to the possibility of that.

Lee Kantor: [00:31:26] Now, any advice for a young person out there that’s listening and maybe hasn’t considered going down the path of non profits? You know, a lot of people are kind of taught, oh, you got to get a real job out there in enterprise level business, a big business, something like that. And they don’t even consider non profits as a career path. Is there anything you can share to that person that maybe some of the trade offs you get from being part of? You know, there’s good and bad about being part of any industry but non profit specifically. Anybody want to share any advice for young people?

Cat McAfee: [00:32:01] I’ll start by saying non profit work. It is a real job and we have real positions in every single position you’ll find in a traditional corporate environment. You’ll find in the non profit space as well. Coupled with the fact that it allows you to have really impactful work, which is the biggest difference, you can work for corporate America all day. But when you work with people and you see folks lives changing because of the work that you do and you feel and see that impact, it’s life changing for you as well. And so this is this these are the reasons why I would never leave this work, because you not only can, you know, pay your bills by creating a good salary, but at the same time, you’re also making a huge impact on the lives of the folks that you serve. And to me, there’s just nothing like it.

Lee Kantor: [00:32:48] And that impact is real and it’s personal. And that is something that in corporate America, maybe you don’t get to see kind of the results of your work that specifically with an individual, you know, with tears in their eyes thanking you for what you’re doing.

Charaun Cash: [00:33:02] Absolutely. And I will say that there are large organizations and there are small organizations, and you might have different experiences working at both. So with a larger organization, you might feel like, you know, it is more like a traditional corporate position because they have departments. But with a smaller organization like Fox, you know, we we have to kind of know the ins and outs of the business all the way through because we’re a smaller organization. And so for someone starting out their career who wants to get experience or who wants to, you know, really learn really fast, I think nonprofit, especially at a smaller nonprofit organization, could really give you that experience really quickly.

Lee Kantor: [00:33:40] And that is also great advice for a young person. You may not have to become an employee of that organization, but volunteering in this organization can give you those leadership opportunities that you might not be able to get in a in a traditional corporate job. All right. Before we wrap one more time, your websites.

Cat McAfee: [00:34:00] Cat Sure. La Amistad, Inc. Org. La Amistad. I Encore.org.

Lee Kantor: [00:34:07] Good stuff.

Charaun Cash: [00:34:08] Sharon Yes, we are Vox ATL and our website is vox atl.org vox atl.org.

Joshua Rodgers: [00:34:17] Josh Yes, and we are a Habitat for Humanity International and you can find us at habitat.org or across all social media platforms at Habitat for Humanity.

Lee Kantor: [00:34:25] All right, this is Lee Kantor. Thank you all for listening to this very special episode of the American Express Leadership Academy. We’ll see you next time.

Outro: [00:34:37] Today’s episode of Atlanta Business Radio is brought to you by Onpay. Built in Atlanta, Onpay is the top rated payroll and HR software anywhere. Get one month free at on paycom.

 

Tagged With: American Express Leadership Academy, Habitat for Humanity, LaAmistad, VOX ATL

Catherine McManus with Habitat for Humanity

September 1, 2022 by Mike

Orlando Studio
Orlando Studio
Catherine McManus with Habitat for Humanity
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Catherine McManus and Scott Wall

“Regions Business Radio Orlando” covers financial topics such as banking and lending, mortgages, wealth management, and more, while also introducing you to many of the top executives with Regions Bank in the Orlando market.

Hosted by Scott Wall, Commercial Banking Leader with Regions, all episodes of “Regions Business Radio Orlando” are available for download on Apple iTunes, iHeartRadio, Spotify, Google Podcasts, or wherever you enjoy your favorite podcasts.

Catherine McManus/Habitat for Humanity Greater Orlando & Osceola County

Driven by a belief that everyone deserves a safe place to live, Habitat for Humanity Orlando & Osceola County builds affordable housing, revitalizes neighborhoods, and strengthens communities.

Families and individuals in need of a hand up partner with Habitat Orlando & Osceola to build or improve a place they call home. Habitat homeowners help build their own homes alongside volunteers and pay an affordable mortgage. Working together by providing financial support, volunteering or becoming an advocate, everyone can help advance access to safe, decent and affordable homes.

About Regions:

Regions Financial Corporation (NYSE:RF), with $145 billion in assets, is a member of the S&P 500 Index and is one of the nation’s largest full-service providers of consumer and commercial banking, wealth management, and mortgage products and services. Regions serves customers across the South, Midwest, and Texas, and through its subsidiary, Regions Bank, operates approximately 1,400 banking offices and 2,000 ATMs. Regions Bank is an Equal Housing Lender and Member FDIC. Additional information about Regions and its full line of products and services can be found at www.regions.com.

Regions-Business-Radio

This information is general in nature and is provided for educational purposes only. Regions makes no representation as to the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, suitability or validity of any information presented and Regions does not accept liability for any direct or indirect loss stemming from the application of any material. Information provided and statements made by employees of Regions should not be relied on or interpreted as accounting, financial planning, investment, legal or tax advice. Regions encourages you to consult an appropriate professional concerning your specific situation and irs.gov for current tax rules.

Tagged With: Catherine McManus, Habitat for Humanity, Habitat for Humanity Greater Orlando & Osceola County, regions bank, regions business radio orlando, scott wall

Decision Vision Episode 40: Should I Align My Business with a Cause? – An Interview with Mollye Rhea, For Momentum

November 15, 2019 by John Ray

Decision Vision
Decision Vision
Decision Vision Episode 40: Should I Align My Business with a Cause? - An Interview with Mollye Rhea, For Momentum
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Mike Blake and Mollye Rhea

Decision Vision Episode 40: Should I Align My Business with a Cause? – An Interview with Mollye Rhea, For Momentum

Does cause marketing really help my business? What factors should I consider in selecting a cause to align with? Answers to these questions and much more come from Mollye Rhea, For Momentum, on this edition of “Decision Vision.” Mike Blake is the host of “Decision Vision,” presented by Brady Ware & Company.

Mollye Rhea, For Momentum

For Momentum unites companies and brands with nonprofits in a way that benefits both organizations. Benefits include enhanced visibility, high-touch relationships with employees, customers and donors and significant social impact. Within the industry, this is referred to broadly as corporate social responsibility (CSR) or more concisely as cause marketing. At For Momentum®, they call these carefully designed partnerships strategic cause alliances.

Mollye Rhea

Founded in 2003 by corporate marketing and nonprofit executive Mollye Rhea, For Momentum has emerged as a leading cause marketing agency that helps companies and nonprofits prosper through partnership. Corporate Responsibility Magazine has recognized For Momentum as one of the top five cause marketing firms in the United States. Their work has been featured in the books Cause Marketing for Dummies and Corporate Social Responsibility: Doing the Most Good for Your Company and Your Cause as well as in numerous other industry publications.

While many factors set For Momentum apart from other cause marketing firms, these are the top five unique selling points (USPs) mentioned most often by their clients and industry experts. For Momentum is 100 percent focused on strategic cause alliances versus offering cause marketing as one service among many public relations, marketing and advertising options.

For Momentum’s accomplished cause marketing consultants possess a deep understanding of national/local dynamics—both corporate HQ/franchise and national nonprofit/chapter affiliate relationships.

For Momentum maintains a hiring criterion that each staff member has experience in both nonprofit and corporate environments, which equips them to provide valuable “translator” skills. Experience on both sides of the table allows them to link shared values and mutual challenges cohesively and meaningfully, leading to strategic, integrated cause marketing programs that achieve nonprofit mission objectives while delivering marketing, sales and PR benefits to the corporation.

No other cause marketing agency offers For Momentum’s proven system of identifying partnership prospects, conducting partner outreach and negotiating corporate partnerships. They customize each strategy and cultivate each pipeline for the specific client or project. With For Momentum, you won’t find cookie cutter plans, stale templates or impersonal outreach using the same tired list of prospects.

For Momentum provides a fresh, outsider perspective to help clients realize strategic priorities and adds a depth of experience and actionable plans that enable agencies, companies and nonprofits to meet their goals more quickly and efficiently.

For more information and to access resources mentioned in the show, go to the For Momentum website.

Michael Blake, Brady Ware & Company

Mike Blake, Host of “Decision Vision”

Michael Blake is Host of the “Decision Vision” podcast series and a Director of Brady Ware & Company. Mike specializes in the valuation of intellectual property-driven firms, such as software firms, aerospace firms and professional services firms, most frequently in the capacity as a transaction advisor, helping clients obtain great outcomes from complex transaction opportunities. He is also a specialist in the appraisal of intellectual properties as stand-alone assets, such as software, trade secrets, and patents.

Mike has been a full-time business appraiser for 13 years with public accounting firms, boutique business appraisal firms, and an owner of his own firm. Prior to that, he spent 8 years in venture capital and investment banking, including transactions in the U.S., Israel, Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus.

Brady Ware & Company

Brady Ware & Company is a regional full-service accounting and advisory firm which helps businesses and entrepreneurs make visions a reality. Brady Ware services clients nationally from its offices in Alpharetta, GA; Columbus and Dayton, OH; and Richmond, IN. The firm is growth minded, committed to the regions in which they operate, and most importantly, they make significant investments in their people and service offerings to meet the changing financial needs of those they are privileged to serve. The firm is dedicated to providing results that make a difference for its clients.

Decision Vision Podcast Series

“Decision Vision” is a podcast covering topics and issues facing small business owners and connecting them with solutions from leading experts. This series is presented by Brady Ware & Company. If you are a decision maker for a small business, we’d love to hear from you. Contact us at decisionvision@bradyware.com and make sure to listen to every Thursday to the “Decision Vision” podcast. Past episodes of “Decision Vision” can be found here. “Decision Vision” is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Visit Brady Ware & Company on social media:

LinkedIn:  https://www.linkedin.com/company/brady-ware/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bradywareCPAs/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BradyWare

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bradywarecompany/

Show Transcript

Intro: [00:00:02] Welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast series focusing on critical business decisions brought to you by Brady Ware & Company. Brady Ware is a regional full-service accounting and advisory firm that helps businesses and entrepreneurs make visions a reality.

Michael Blake: [00:00:20] And welcome to the Decision Vision, a podcast giving you, the listener, clear vision to make great decisions. In each episode, we discuss the process of decision making on a different topic, rather than making recommendations because everyone’s circumstances are different. We talk to subject matter experts about how they would recommend thinking about that decision. My name is Mike Blake and I’m your host for today’s program.

Michael Blake: [00:00:41] I’m a Director at Brady Ware & Company, a full-service accounting firm based in Dayton, Ohio, with offices in Dayton; Columbus, Ohio; Richmond, Indiana; and Alpharetta, Georgia, which is where we are recording today. Brady Ware is sponsoring this podcast. If you like this podcast, please subscribe on your favorite podcast aggregator and please also consider leaving a review of the podcast as well.

Michael Blake: [00:01:02] So, our topic today is should my business align with a cause? And I was brought to thinking about this topic because it was in the late last year, early this year, I think it was late last year, you know, I observed Nike pretty much going all in with the Colin Kaepernick scenario with the NFL. And I’m not going to comment specifically on that matter, but I did make an observation on social media that, it struck me that if I were a shareholder of Nike, I would at least like to know in advance if a company in which I was invested was going to take a polarizing or potentially polarizing position like that.

Michael Blake: [00:01:52] And I think I was kind of motivated in that viewpoint by the fact that there was a pretty demonstrative response by what turned out to be a very small minority of customers. I know that the massive response is everything from burning shoes to tearing up sweatshirts and wherever it is else that Nike sells. And, you know, quite frankly, most people who looked at that on social media said, “Blake, you’re dead wrong.” And I said, “We’ll see.”.

Michael Blake: [00:02:28] And you know, to a couple of my friends’ credit, they actually went out and bought Nike stock. So I got to give them credit, they put their money where their mouth was. And, well, you can see the history for yourself. Nike is still around. They are doing fantastically. Their stock has never been at a higher level, I believe. I think they had one of their best years ever in terms of return on that stock.

Michael Blake: [00:02:51] And clearly, I was wrong about that. And I owned up on that on social media. Imagine that, somebody saying they were wrong on social media. But, you know, the facts are the facts. And as Bill Gates likes to say, “Success is a lousy teacher.” So I had a great teacher in failure there. But it led me to sort of think about, you know, what goes into the process of a Nike when they decide that they’re going to support, in their case, a polarizing cause?

Michael Blake: [00:03:18] Not all causes are polarizing. There are many cause we can all get behind, whether it’s the United States Olympic movement, whether it is fighting cancer, whether it is stopping human trafficking, right? Not every single cause that people believe in is a polarizing one. But nevertheless, there is also a viewpoint, and Warren Buffet, I think, would agree with us because he’s written about this, that, you know, it’s really not company’s business to engage in causes at all, that business should be in the business of generating return for its shareholders.

Michael Blake: [00:03:51] And if shareholders then want to take their returns and use that to support a cause, then they should do that. And that’s how the economics should work. And again, I’m not going to necessarily debate that directly, but I want to put that out there that that is a widely held view by a person who’s been pretty successful at this whole business thing. And so, that kind of sets the stage as a platform for today’s discussion, because my bringing this on social media showed me very clearly that there’s, you know, something more that I can understand.

Michael Blake: [00:04:22] And many of you who are in business may be thinking the same thing about, you know, is there an opportunity for me to align with a cause, an organization of some kind? Is that the right thing to do? How do I kind of figure that out? And I’m not qualified to talk about that, but I have somebody here in the studio who is very qualified to talk about that. And joining us today is Mollye Rhea, founder and president of For Momentum, a cause marketing agency here in Atlanta.

Michael Blake: [00:04:54] When Mollye founded For Momentum in 2003, she recognized that she was leading one of very few agencies that specialized in cause marketing. I think that’s still true today. Since then, as cause-related marketing and corporate social responsibility have grown to a $2.6-billion industry, For Momentum has grown into one of the leading cause marketing firms in the United States. And they’re doing fantastic.

Michael Blake: [00:05:18] Through work in nonprofit development, brand marketing, and cause marketing, Mollye has acquired a unique 360-degree perspective of what fosters success and strategic cause partnerships. In her over 25 years in the field, she has created and executed cause engagement and marketing programs, strategic fundraising campaigns and organizational development strategies with dozens of nonprofit organizations and hundreds of brands, including the American Cancer Society, Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Habitat for Humanity, International—InterContinental Hotels Group, Lane Bryant, and Novartis to name a few.

Michael Blake: [00:05:53] She is a graduate of the Leadership Atlanta Class of 2012. And by the way, that’s the second best class ever. You had to be an insider of Leadership Atlanta to get that joke, but I was class of 2014. And I did not know that about you. She sits on a bunch of nonprofit boards and holds a bachelor’s degree in economics and psychology from William & Mary. Mollye, thanks so much for coming on the program.

Mollye Rhea: [00:06:18] Well, thanks so much for having me, Michael. I’m excited to be here. And wow, what a provocative promotion you started the discussion with.

Michael Blake: [00:06:26] Well, yeah, you know, you got to do something attention-grabbing to get attention on social media, right?

Mollye Rhea: [00:06:31] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:06:32] And what’s nice about that is that I learned something and it made me think more about this topic. So, thanks for coming in to talk. I don’t think I’m the only person that’s thinking about this question, right? The fact that you have the thriving business you have, I think, is Exhibit A that this is a topic that’s of a lot of interests, but it’s not a cut and dried one. So, why don’t we dive into it? So, what I like to do with a podcast is to sort of set our vocabulary. When we talk about cause marketing, what does that mean?

Mollye Rhea: [00:07:05] Well, I’m really glad you started with that, because so many people, in my experience, come to that term with a different point of view. And so, I think it’s really important to lay that groundwork right from the get go. So, I’ve been doing this type of work for a very, very long time. And back in the olden days, it was called corporate relations or something like that. And it’s really the practice by which a company is supporting a nonprofit as a part of their business practices.

Mollye Rhea: [00:07:35] And I really encourage the listeners today to take a more open-minded viewpoint to realize that that can bring many different—that can come to life in many different ways. So, some of the terminology that you hear, you know, bandied about, you know, corporate relations, community relations, cause marketing, strategic philanthropy. But these days, a really popular term, which kind of plays off of the story you told is social impact marketing. And so, companies today are looking to really engage in generating impact into our society as a side part of their business, but as a primary part of their business as well.

Mollye Rhea: [00:08:18] So, some people think of cause marketing as, you know, I’m going to buy this bottle of water and 10 cents is going to go to a charity. That is one type of cause marketing. It’s a very specific type called commercial co-venture. And we can talk about that more later. But also, different types of cause marketing, I would argue, would be, you know, the Nike program that you talked about. Other campaigns, even in employee engagement these days, in terms of really getting your employees involved in making a difference on a social issue. So, it’s a very broad landscape that we’re talking about.

Michael Blake: [00:08:54] So a question comes up, and I apologize, I’m going off the script right away, but I think it’s—I just got to get your answer on this, because I think it’s so interesting. You know, in recent months, we’ve seen a number of companies pull back in terms of their willingness to sell firearms and firearm ammunition supplies, and so forth. Is that a kind of cause marketing in your mind?

Mollye Rhea: [00:09:21] In my mind, yes.

Michael Blake: [00:09:22] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:09:22] I mean, I put those into the same landscape.

Michael Blake: [00:09:27] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:09:27] Right? So, again, cause marketing itself might be one term within this landscape, but it’s the most commonly used term.

Michael Blake: [00:09:35] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:09:35] So, I think, in fact, I was going to bring up that example based on what you said, you know, about the Colin Kaepernick Nike campaign. You know, there are a variety of societal issues where companies are starting to make a difference through their business decisions, whether to sell something. There’s a local firm called Kabbage that makes business loans and they will no longer loan to anybody who’s in ammunitions-

Michael Blake: [00:10:01] Oh, really? Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:10:03] … type of business.

Michael Blake: [00:10:03] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:10:04] So, there’s things like that. So, I think those sorts of deep integrated business decisions are more of the recent trend we’re seeing in this landscape, but you do have to be very careful. And I want to say that I think that we can continue to use this Nike example as a grounding case study, if you will. They did lose a segment of their customers. You know, their overall numbers went up, but there was a segment, just like there was a strong segment who spoke out against it and burned-

Michael Blake: [00:10:34] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:10:35] … things. And then, there was, you know, on the other end, strong, you know, affiliation with it. You have to really understand your customer base and not make those decisions based on your personal opinions, but really take into account the community that you serve if you want to make sure that you aren’t having that, you know, the tail wag the dog, so to speak, you know.

Michael Blake: [00:10:57] Yeah. And that’s a great point that I think we’re going to get back to. But it does it does bear emphasizing that, you know, cause marketing for its own sake may or may not be a great thing, but it sounds like an integral part of that notion is make sure you understand who your target market is, right?

Mollye Rhea: [00:11:15] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:11:16] And it may not be necessarily the target market that I, as a CEO or board or a decision maker, chief marketing officer, thinks as the right cause, right?

Mollye Rhea: [00:11:25] Mm hmm. That’s right.

Michael Blake: [00:11:26] So, again, using the Nike sort of the platform for this discussion, there was some risk there, I think. That turned out well for Nike, great for them, right? But, you know, because of that risk, why should a company consider taking that risk in embarking on a cause marketing campaign?

Mollye Rhea: [00:11:47] Yeah. And you know what? I think I want to interject here a different example, because I don’t want the listener to think of that as the guiding light of an example-

Michael Blake: [00:11:57] Yeah, please.

Mollye Rhea: [00:11:57] … because it’s an extreme example.

Michael Blake: [00:11:59] Yeah, please.

Mollye Rhea: [00:12:00] So, you know, there are many, many ways that companies can support nonprofit’s, you know, strict sponsorship of events or activities, things like that. They can get behind a campaign that is going to raise funds or awareness for an issue that isn’t controversial. And it doesn’t change their business model, but it’s more of a programmatic way that they can support. So, let’s talk about some of those more standardized types of campaigns, because I don’t want the listener to be frightened that, oh, it’s got to be this big extreme-

Michael Blake: [00:12:33] Yeah, good.

Mollye Rhea: [00:12:33] … you know, thing. So, let’s talk about the business benefits of a company supporting a social impact or a nonprofit mission. You know, either space. Often, they’re very interlinked. There are clear and documented benefits to a company for this type of marketing behavior. And they are things like increased sales, heightened PR, heightened awareness of the company and positive awareness of a company. So, there are a lot of great business benefits. But what I also want listeners to know is that, you know, in the trends in this space, an increasingly important target audience is your employee base. Because today our unemployment rates are very, very low.

Mollye Rhea: [00:13:21] The cost of finding a good candidate and retaining a good employee are real cost that we have to be very careful about. And there’s a mounting amount of evidence that cause marketing or a company’s support of the local community is a positive differentiator for job selection. And that when employees join a company that they feel is doing good things in the community, they’re more likely to be engaged and they’re more likely to stay employed with that company. So, why should a company consider cause marketing? Lots of different reasons. It could be PR, it could be HR.

Michael Blake: [00:13:58] You know, and I want to underscore that point as well. You know, marketing, when many of us think of marketing, frankly, myself included, we think about an outward message, right? How do we get more customers? How do we get the customers we have to love us more, buy more from us, and so forth. But you’re right, there is a marketing element internally, right, to make your employees and your associates feel great about where they are. Because at the end of the day, raising salaries can only take you so far.

Mollye Rhea: [00:14:30] That’s right. Yeah. You know, part of the overall compensation package is psychic income, right? And so, you want to feel good about the work you’re doing and you want to feel good about the company that you’re working for. And this is becoming—you know, we hear a lot about millennials, you know, we’re starting to hear now more statistics from the Gen Z population.

Michael Blake: [00:14:51] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:14:53] But these younger cohorts are absolutely motivated by community impact. And so, you know, it’s becoming more and more important as companies want to attract those younger talent.

Michael Blake: [00:15:07] And that’s been something of an adaptation for Gen X’ers like myself, right? The Gen X’ers are the, I think, last of the kind of the old school workforce where just put your head down, getting your hours, do your thing, and, you know, get in and get out. And that’s an adaptation outlook that my generation has had to change, right? Because if we try to treat our workforce in a Gen X way, we’re not going to have a workforce very long or at least not one with which we’re very happy.

Mollye Rhea: [00:15:44] Mm hmm. I think that’s right.

Michael Blake: [00:15:45] So, it sounds like you’ve segued again very nicely into the next question, which is it sounds like there’s evidence that cause marketing does have a positive impact on company performance.

Mollye Rhea: [00:15:55] Absolutely. You know, there are an increasing number of studies out there. The most common are from an agency called Cone, C-O-N-E. And if readers are interested, you can certainly Google that and you will find all sorts of different studies on this topic. But I like to cite more resources than just the primary one, because I think sometimes we can get into a rut or a routine and I think their work is fantastic. I’m not dissing that at all.

Michael Blake: [00:16:23] Right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:16:24] I follow that. But, you know, we’ve been able to find many, many other sources of information that point to the validity of this notion. I also want to point out that there are increasing numbers of corporate associations focused on this topic. One of those is the Committee to Encourage Corporate Philanthropy, CECP. And they are a group of CEOs of large organizations that very much track the benefits of this type of investment, because this is not just a, you know, flash in the pan idea.

Mollye Rhea: [00:16:59] This is something they realized they have to pay a lot of attention to. And according to CECP, 87 percent of companies are now measuring and tracking societal outcomes and using that data to inform their program development. And 80 percent of those same corporate leaders think that, they believe, it is enhancing customer loyalty and 89 percent of them feel that it’s enhancing collective purpose amongst their employees.

Mollye Rhea: [00:17:27] So, those are just some of the types of statistics. I could go on and on. I don’t want to do that because probably, a lot of your listeners are driving. And I don’t want them to fall asleep. But, you know, on our website, at For Momentum, we have a variety of resources. We compile this type of research all the time because we’re in it, you know, 365. So, free downloadable tidbits are there if your listeners want to go and download those.

Michael Blake: [00:17:53] Well, yeah, perfect. It’s all about data nowadays. So, let’s shift gears in a little bit. So, let’s say that one of those driving listeners now is saying, “You know what, this cause marketing thing is something I ought to pay more attention to.” I think the next obvious question to my mind is, is my company a good fit for it, right? Is there a profile of a company that has a good or a best fit for cause marketing as opposed to maybe a company that isn’t as good with that?

Mollye Rhea: [00:18:22] Yes and no. I mean, I think that there are some companies that, you know, have an easier footprint into the community. So, like a retailer, you know, where they can really, you know, engage, “Would you like to add a dollar? Would you like to make a donation and get a bounce back coupon?” Things like that. They have a natural affinity. But what I like to say is that when you, whoever you are as a company, are looking at putting your toe in the water on this, think about what companies—or what nonprofits, rather, what social impact mission is going to advance your business and what is the right footprint for you.

Mollye Rhea: [00:18:59] So, if I am a local company based in Atlanta, Georgia and my footprint is 100 percent Atlanta, Georgia, I probably want to pick a comparative nonprofit that impacts that same geographic space. So, you know, I need to find someone who’s like-minded, like-sized, you know, and find the right match for me. So, I’m not, as my company is not going to compete with what Nike is doing.

Michael Blake: [00:19:28] Right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:19:29] Because I don’t have the same profile or footprint.

Michael Blake: [00:19:31] Right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:19:33] So, I really think it can be any type of company, but with the right connection to a cause that makes sense. And another thing I want to point out about that is that sometimes, companies fall into a natural rut, where they just want to pick something that they care about individually. So, you know, I’m going to support, you know, something that matters to me individually, but it has no tie to their brand, whatsoever.

Mollye Rhea: [00:19:58] That’s confusing to the consumer and confusing to the employees, frankly, because it needs to be a charitable choice that matches, I call it, the three-second rule. It’s like, “Oh, I understand why this restaurant is supporting hunger issues because they’re both about food”, you know, or something basic like that. But that can really enhance the validity of the campaign when there’s a natural fit between the brands.

Michael Blake: [00:20:23] It’s almost like a joke. The second you have to explain it, you’re done.

Mollye Rhea: [00:20:26] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:20:27] Right? The joke is just never going to have the impact.

Mollye Rhea: [00:20:30] That’s right.

Michael Blake: [00:20:31] So, one thing that kind of strikes me about cause marketing is that you’re trying to find a partner. You need a partner, probably, in some constraints. I guess you could have a completely unidirectional cause marketing campaign, but I don’t think that’s what you’re all about. What is the role of the partner, the nonprofit or philanthropic partner in the cause marketing relationship?

Mollye Rhea: [00:20:56] Yeah. So, actually, I want to go back and talk about what you’ve just said.

Michael Blake: [00:20:59] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:21:00] Which is that, you know, it doesn’t make sense for it to be unidirectional, but in fact, that is one of the trends we’re seeing, which I am really sad about. You know, I think there are a lot of companies that have decided to do their own—they’ve picked their own issue and they’re going to create their own solution to it. You know, and some companies can do that. I mean, they have enough wherewithal to really, you know, go in there.

Mollye Rhea: [00:21:25] I’m a big proponent that if there is a nonprofit that is working in that issue space, find a way to work with them because it does help to bring multiple voices to an issue and not later get maybe accused of self-dealing or, you know, something that’s self-serving. There are many, many benefits that the nonprofit can bring to the partnership table. And you have to have a really robust business discussion about that. So, it’s really important to find a partner who is going to match your business objectives.

Mollye Rhea: [00:22:02] So, for example, the nonprofit partner brings, first of all, an expertise into the issue space that you are wanting to address. They live in this space 24/7, so they should be bringing some special expertise. With that comes connections with stakeholders and opinion leaders in the space. They bring a level of awareness, a level of authenticity. They can bring marketing benefits. They have followers and they may have social media following or they may have, you know, donors, constituents. So, they do have their own audience that they can bring to the marketing equation.

Michael Blake: [00:22:39] You know, that unilateral element brings to mind something that just came up in the news. Apple just announced they’re going to put, I think, $2 billion into building housing in Silicon Valley because California has a massive housing problem. Basically, their own employees cannot afford to live in the state.

Mollye Rhea: [00:22:57] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:22:58] Facebook is doing something similar. And what struck me about that was, you know, I don’t know that necessarily building houses is the answer. And I hope—it wasn’t clear from what I read that they’re partnering with anybody. But, you know, perhaps, they should be. I certainly hope that they are, because Apple is not in the multi-family real estate business, as far as I’m aware, right? And simply building houses may not be the issue, right?

Michael Blake: [00:23:28] In my view, I think the issue is most likely zoning or something of that nature that prevents homes from being built where they ought to be built. And it would be interesting to see how the Apple initiative unfolds, right? Because they’re clearly targeting a cause somewhat self-serving. But that’s okay, because there is a collateral good that’s coming out of it. But it would be interesting to see if that winds up being part of a partnership or not. Right now, it’s not clear.

Mollye Rhea: [00:23:55] Yeah. And I don’t know because I haven’t studied that particular topic. But I do know of many nonprofit players that could be excellent in that space. You know, I think it’s called Community Enterprise Partners that we did some work with few years ago, whose mission is to talk about the fact with the increasing amounts of rent in key cities and how people can’t afford to live in the places where we need them to.

Mollye Rhea: [00:24:19] So, they obviously are working in this space 24/7 and at least could bring thought leadership to that process. So, that’s a great example, Michael, where I hope that whatever the issue is, I think it’s imperative that companies look to others in the space to see what they can learn before they go running down a path, you know, without all the information available.

Michael Blake: [00:24:42] So, let’s say we go through some process, we identified that nonprofit partner, you know, what are some of the typical contributions a nonprofit partner makes to that relationship?

Mollye Rhea: [00:24:53] So, again, it depends on the nature of the relationship. It can be extremely directed. It could be that the company is funding a specific project of the nonprofit and they are literally delivering, you know, the project. But many times, nonprofits can bring—you know, as I was saying earlier, people are aware of the nonprofits, so they’re bringing awareness to the topic. They are bringing constituency. They are bringing, you know, increase. I’ll give you an example. So, one of our clients is Habitat for Humanity, and they do a program called Home is the Key. And they’re a variety of corporate partners that engage in that campaign.

Mollye Rhea: [00:25:35] And in that case, what Habitat is bringing to it is, you know, obviously, the expertise on the issue. But they are also bringing celebrities to the floor, right? So, the Property Brothers are celebrity spokespeople for this event. They are investing in a big PR campaign that then the companies receive the spotlight of as a part of that initiative. So, instead of building the whole program from scratch on the corporate shoulders, the corporate can engage in a program that the nonprofit is bringing to the marketplace. And they are tremendous amounts of marketing and sales benefits, you know.

Michael Blake: [00:26:11] Okay. So, often, the nonprofit brings their own infrastructure-

Mollye Rhea: [00:26:15] Yes.

Michael Blake: [00:26:15] … basically. And the benefit there is, yeah, you could do it unilaterally, but why are we reinventing the wheel, right?

Mollye Rhea: [00:26:21] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:26:22] And especially in that case, you know, they’ve got celebrities, which, you know, most companies want to line with and so forth. And it sounds like—and I appreciate that it sort of depends. You know, it could be as simple also as simply using, you know, doing co-branding logos, trademarks, things of that nature.

Mollye Rhea: [00:26:41] Absolutely.

Michael Blake: [00:26:41] So, as I understand it, there’s really a sort of a whole spectrum of the sky’s the limit. And of course, another function of that is going to be, you know, how big the nonprofit itself is, right?

Mollye Rhea: [00:26:50] Yes.

Michael Blake: [00:26:50] The united way can do more than, say, you know, the local Chamblee chapter of St. Vincent de Paul, which is a thrift store that, you know, helps people in poverty in the Chamblee area.

Mollye Rhea: [00:27:04] Yeah, but that’s a good example of if I am a company based in Chamblee, you know-

Michael Blake: [00:27:10] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:27:10] … St. Vincent de Paul is gonna be more attractive to me-

Michael Blake: [00:27:12] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:27:13] … because there is an authentic connection between my business and that nonprofit’s mission. So, just to kind of tie that back to what I was saying earlier about, you know, finding the right partner, don’t forget those local ones-

Michael Blake: [00:27:27] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:27:27] … if you’re a local company.

Michael Blake: [00:27:27] Is it hard to mix the for profit and nonprofit cultures? Are there any issues with them sort of having being able to talk the same language? Because there are probably cases where their goals are not 100 percent aligned all the time.

Mollye Rhea: [00:27:43] Yes, absolutely. 100 percent of the time, they are not 100 percent aligned.

Michael Blake: [00:27:48] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:27:49] I can tell you that. They may come together for a common objective in, you know, a particular program or initiative. But it’s very important to take into account the respective needs of each of the partners and their business realities, their business resource mixes, their stakeholders and who they’re reporting to. I would say that you could make the same argument in any business to business relationship building. Whenever you bring two partners together, they’re going to have different goals and different missions. But I will say the nonprofit environment is more starkly different from a corporate environment, you know, just given the fact that it’s a nonprofit.

Mollye Rhea: [00:28:28] However, where you can really bridge that gap is by having very straightforward communication and collaborative planning and really authentic clear conversations. So, you know, Business A wants this set of benefits and the nonprofit needs be able to say, this is what I can do and this is what I can’t. And some of those are regulatory-related. You know, like, for example, a nonprofit can’t overly promote a corporate entity or it becomes unrelated business income tax. There are implications for EBIT. So, you know, the company needs to respect the nonprofit’s, you know, boundaries and vice versa.

Michael Blake: [00:29:08] Okay. And to that end, I believe that some companies will actually create a role inside the company for somebody to be their, in effect, cause marketing ambassador, their person that represents the company for the nonprofits with whom they cooperate. And I suspect that model can work well because then, that person is fluent in both languages, basically, if you will. Is that a necessity in your mind? Is that best practices? Can you live without it? Can you talk a little bit about, you know, how important that role is?

Mollye Rhea: [00:29:43] Yeah. So, I don’t think it needs to be someone’s full time job, but there needs to be someone who’s put in charge, if you will, of managing the relationships. And so, I guess I want to answer this in a couple of different way. So, it doesn’t have to be—you know, I don’t want to dissuade companies that can’t afford a full-time position because you can certainly do this. You can have effective partnerships without it being a full-time role.

Mollye Rhea: [00:30:08] In fact, some of the largest companies that we work with as customers only have a couple of people and they’re doing billions of dollars, sometimes, of good. So, you don’t have to have a full-time person to get engaged in cause. The other thing I want to say is that we’ve been doing a piece of research. We’ve now completed our third cycle of this research with corporate partnership decision makers. And, you know, in the trends and in the way that the landscape changes, there came a time where there was this individual who was responsible. And what we’re seeing now is that that’s not the case, that it’s actually a shared responsibility across many different departments.

Mollye Rhea: [00:30:50] And so, we asked the question in our research, who from your corporate structure is involved in the decision making? And we found marketing, PR, HR, Community Relations, C-suite and sometimes, a special committee. So, I think that the company needs to make those decisions about where the most natural fits are and don’t work in a silo. Recognize that you need to engage counterparts from all those departments that I just mentioned in your planning process or you will end up with a silo, and that’s not good.

Michael Blake: [00:31:24] Okay. So, I want to switch gears a little bit. What are some trends you’re seeing out there that are, for lack of a better term, hot in terms of cause marketing? What are some emerging things that a lot of companies are looking to do? Whether it’s practices, nature of the cause themselves. What are you seeing out there?

Mollye Rhea: [00:31:40] So, let’s go back to your first topic of the morning, which was the, you know, Colin Kaepernick, you know, taking on a social issue. That is a trend. It’s not for everyone. It’s for a select few of brands that have an avant-garde element to their brand personality. But increasingly, we are seeing some companies taking this very strong stance on a particular social impact issue. So, that is a trend. And we actually have some resources on that, if anyone’s interested. But sort of to the more broad-based approach, actually, a trend is that the United Nations came out with some sustainable development goals. And I think it was 18 different areas of impact, where, you know, United Nations members from around the globe identified 18 common areas that any country needs to be sustainable.

Mollye Rhea: [00:32:34] So, poverty, education, hunger, water, you know, et cetera, and health. And what I’m seeing is an increasing trend as that companies are identifying from these sustainable business goals, development goals from the United Nations, they’re identifying we’re going to impact, you know, area 2, 8, and 12, whatever their numbers are that they pick. And companies are starting to speak in lingo, in that lingo of, “Well, in, you know, goal 12, we’re making this, you know, headway, this much headway. So, it’s a way of really working collaboratively across different corporate segments towards mutually beneficial goals. Does that make sense?

Michael Blake: [00:33:19] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:33:19] And so, that’s a trend. And then, the other trend that I want to highlight sort of as a top three trend is the increasing incidence of digital. So, as our society becomes more and more digitally focused, we are seeing lots more partnership activations in the digital realm.

Michael Blake: [00:33:39] Okay. And actually, to that end, is there a risk to defy, embark on cause marketing? And, you know, I’m not doing it yet. Is there a risk of it being somehow disruptive to my existing conventional marketing efforts? I imagine there must be some integration issues because I think that’s the expertise that you lend. So, if that is true, can you talk about kind of what some of those challenges might be?

Mollye Rhea: [00:34:08] So, how cause could be disruptive to the rest of your business plan?

Michael Blake: [00:34:12] Yeah, or, you know, cause marketing is a different kind of marketing, just like digital marketing has become disruptive to more conventional analog methods, right? I guess I’m posing a hypothesis that cause marketing has the potential to be similarly disruptive because I think the way you have to go about, the skill sets required, the stakeholders are different, right? And so, I guess my question is, is it fair to characterize this cause marketing as somewhat disruptive? And if so, is that something that needs to be actively thought about, managed by a company that is thinking of pursuing it?

Mollye Rhea: [00:34:52] So, I guess where this takes my mindset, Michael, is to think about, you know, all good things in moderation, right? So, if you were to abandon, if a company was to abandon some of their traditional marketing methods toward strictly cause, I think they could lose themselves, frankly, in it, because they need to—it needs to be a piece of your overall communications or employment objectives, not the only thing you do.

Mollye Rhea: [00:35:22] So, that’s something that I think you have to like integrate it into a bigger plan as opposed to, like, for instance, if a company suddenly went 100 percent digital and forgot all their other kinds of marketing, those repercussions will be clear. I think anybody can understand that analogy. So, I’m saying the same thing would happen if you went too top-heavy in cause. And maybe I’m honestly just a little too close to it, but I don’t see it as a risk, in general.

Michael Blake: [00:35:53] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:35:53] Here’s another example of where it could be risky. It could’ve been risky with Nike. You know, if they don’t understand their audience or if they choose a cause activity that doesn’t resonate with their target audience. That could become disruptive because they’ve suddenly changed their brand personality, probably unintentionally.

Michael Blake: [00:36:15] Right. And another example, we’ve talked about Nike, but Gillette with their “Me too” ad about a-year-and-a-half ago, right? That had some ramifications as well. In some cases, somewhat stronger, I think.

Mollye Rhea: [00:36:26] If you’re thinking of the ad where it was like the gentleman that they were trying to encourage men to be, it wasn’t “Me too.”

Michael Blake: [00:36:37] Well, but they sort of aligned—okay, you’re the marketing expert.

Mollye Rhea: [00:36:42] Yeah.

Michael Blake: [00:36:42] I’m not. I’ve heard it referred to as that.

Mollye Rhea: [00:36:44] Yeah.

Michael Blake: [00:36:45] So if it’s not, then I stand corrected. But I’m referring to the ad where they try to redefine a sense of what it means to be a man.

Mollye Rhea: [00:36:54] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:36:55] Which is a different relationship with women, which is a different relationship with other men, which is different relationships with people who are vulnerable. And I think that—is that a fair characterization?

Mollye Rhea: [00:37:06] Well, you know, it’s interesting. I think that your perception of it is a great example of where it can get dangerous, right?

Michael Blake: [00:37:11] Okay.

Mollye Rhea: [00:37:12] Because the campaign, in its essence, was designed supposedly to educate men to make more responsible choices that consider other people’s feelings more, like, you know, the way they raise their sons or the way that they talk to women or whatever. That is a great example of a campaign that had a really positive and negative reaction in the marketplace. I think they’ve—I haven’t seen it lately, so I don’t know if they’ve withdrawn or gone back to the drawing board or exactly where they stand on that, but I don’t think they expected that big of a reaction on the negative side.

Michael Blake: [00:37:51] Right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:37:52] So, that’s a good example of really needing to understand your target audience. And if a portion of your target audience resonates with that, you know, that could be a strategic decision. It could have been a mistake. And I don’t know because I wasn’t involved. And so, I don’t know the inner workings.

Michael Blake: [00:38:09] Right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:38:10] But I’ll give you another example and I don’t feel comfortable saying who it is because it was a business-to-business conversation.

Michael Blake: [00:38:16] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:38:17] But it was a, again, company that targets men and they had decided to, in their own way, try to redefine how men relate to their emotions. This was, you know, the stance that this brand took was, “We’re going to teach men that it’s okay to be in touch with their emotions.” And they did some, you know, post-campaign research and their audience didn’t like it. Like, “Don’t tell me how I’m supposed to feel.” So, you really do need to understand your audience. And especially if you’re going for something that’s provocative or brand changing, potentially could have people have a different perception of your brand, those are good examples of where it can be very disruptive. So, what could they have done differently? They could have picked a—those are also cases where there was no cause. There was no nonprofit partner. They’re just stating like, you know-

Michael Blake: [00:39:15] I hadn’t thought about that. Yeah, that sounds exactly right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:39:18] So, if they wanted to generate something, maybe that would have been a good time to find a partner that has a mission that they could say we’re supporting their mission, not we are changing who we are.

Michael Blake: [00:39:29] Interesting. Okay. And to that point about picking partners, I would imagine not all partners are created equal, right? And even if you identify with the partner’s potential cause, they may not be the right partner for you, right?

Mollye Rhea: [00:39:46] That’s true.

Michael Blake: [00:39:48] And sometimes, there can be a size mismatch. You know, an interesting story, you know, one cause I paid some attention to is Lou Gehrig’s disease research, ALS Society—ALS Association. And, you know, as everybody knows, it had the ice bucket campaign, which I did, and boy, ice water’s cold.

Mollye Rhea: [00:40:12] Yeah.

Michael Blake: [00:40:13] But an interesting thing about that was that all of a sudden, the ALS Association of America came into a windfall, about $130 million. They just did not have the infrastructure-

Mollye Rhea: [00:40:23] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:40:25] … to manage that kind of cash, right? Their organization had to completely reorient to make sure that that money was used well, right, and wisely. Can that be an issue in the cause marketing space, too? Maybe there’s a size mismatch or just fundamental characteristics of certain nonprofits that may not make it a good partner, even if you agree with the cause?

Mollye Rhea: [00:40:49] Yeah. So, I just want to go back just to clarify for a moment about the wonderful, fabulous ice bucket challenge phenomenon.

Michael Blake: [00:40:56] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:40:58] That was not cause marketing.

Michael Blake: [00:40:59] I understand.

Mollye Rhea: [00:40:59] Okay, okay. I just want to make sure your listeners understand that that is an example of a movement that caught wind. And I think every nonprofit in the world dreams of having that problem-

Michael Blake: [00:41:11] True.

Mollye Rhea: [00:41:12] … of creating that magic in a bottle, you know, where they can create something. Another beautiful example of something that was a game changer was cystic fibrosis.

Michael Blake: [00:41:22] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:41:22] So, they literally invested in research and the research paid off. And so, they became a part-owner of a pharmaceutical product that serves cystic fibrosis. I might not be getting this 100 percent right.

Michael Blake: [00:41:37] I think that sounds right. I’ve read that.

Mollye Rhea: [00:41:39] And it created just a tremendous amount of income. So, I think it’s incumbent on the nonprofit board to be prepared with, “This is our plan and this is our plan if we grow this much and this is our plan if we grow that much”, you know, so that they are strategically staying aligned to their mission and bringing that to life. In terms of a cause program that just has taken off and changes the direction, I think—I can’t think of a real example.

Mollye Rhea: [00:42:07] But I can tell you that, you know, if the nonprofit or if the message of the campaign was focused on a tiny issue and then, you had too much funding and you couldn’t spend all that on the issue, I think it’s really important to make sure that the focus area is broad enough that you’re not going to get into that topic. So, it gives me the chance to say this, many times companies decide that they want to create impact on a particular subset of a bigger issue. And sometimes, it’s better just to help the broader issue and not get so singularly focused on this small little piece.

Michael Blake: [00:42:45] Sure. Yeah. Because even if, say, Coca-Cola decided there is hook of the firehose and dumped, you know, $10 million into that St. Vincent de Paul charity in Chamblee, right? They’d be overwhelmed.

Mollye Rhea: [00:42:58] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:42:58] Most likely. And it wouldn’t work very well for everybody. So-

Mollye Rhea: [00:43:02] Right.

Michael Blake: [00:43:02] … you know, pick not just the cause, there’s a bullet point I want to kind of tease out, I think we’re doing that, is that picking the partner for a match is just as important as picking the cause. Is that fair?

Mollye Rhea: [00:43:14] Picking the partner that is delivering into the mission space that you’re interested in?

Michael Blake: [00:43:21] Correct. That’s right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:43:21] Yes. Yes, I do agree with that. And an example that I wanted to share, you know, when you think about that, so let’s say that your organization, you know, one that many of us know is breast cancer, right?

Michael Blake: [00:43:33] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:43:33] So, lots of people want to support breast cancer. And, you know, you really need to do homework on your nonprofit partner because, you know, there’s one breast cancer organization that works, let’s say, on funding research. And there’s a different breast cancer organization whose mission is to serve people who currently are dealing with breast cancer and make it easier for them, make it—help them get to their doctor’s appointments or things like that. And yet, a third breast cancer organization is all about prevention messaging and warning signs and things like that. So, really look at what it is you’re trying to accomplish within the mission space and make sure that you’re finding the right partner who will help you with that particular goal.

Michael Blake: [00:44:11] All right.

Mollye Rhea: [00:44:12] Not all nonprofits focus on exactly the same things.

Michael Blake: [00:44:15] Yeah.

Mollye Rhea: [00:44:16] Even if they’re all about, say, breast cancer.

Michael Blake: [00:44:18] Yeah, that’s true. I mean, many of them are new ones and that the cause itself is so big that there are subsectors of that cause and effect.

Mollye Rhea: [00:44:26] That’s right.

Michael Blake: [00:44:27] Well, Mollye, we’re running out of time but this has been great, I’ve learned a lot. And if I’ve learned a lot, I’m confident at least some of our listeners have learned something. So, thank you for doing this. There’s a lot more we could talk about. I’ve only gotten through about half the questions I want to talk about today, but that’s a good thing. How can people contact you if they want to find out more about this and explore maybe this for their own business, their own nonprofit?

Mollye Rhea: [00:44:52] Okay, great. Well, so, you know, I have been working in this space for a very, very long time, so I’m hyper interested in it. And as a part of our return to the community, we conduct research every year into different factors of how to bring a cause partnership to life, what sorts of benefits can you seek and things like that. So, I would hope that some of your listeners might find it of interest to go to our website, to our resource page and download some of our free resources.

Mollye Rhea: [00:45:20] So, that’s For Momentum, formomentum.com/resources. If you have specific questions for us, there’s a Contact Us page. We’d love to hear from you. Be more than happy to help direct you to resources or point—answer questions, things like that. That’s just a part of our giving it back to the industry practices kind of things. But I do want to shout out to a couple of others in the cause landscape that I think produce excellent resources for the listeners. So Engage for Good is the association of people in this profession. And they do a fantastic job of constantly bringing, you know, information to light.

Mollye Rhea: [00:46:00] They have research resources, they have free webinars, they have newsletters for free that listeners can sign up for. And a third one that I would mention is a newsletter called Selfish Giving. And it’s produced by a guy out of Boston named Joe Waters, who’s a pal of mine. And he is really funny. And so, most of his, you know, articles have some entertainment flair to them as well, but really, really great examples. And he tends to focus a lot on small companies. So, you know, some of your listeners, if they’re not the Nikes of the world, but they’re a more moderate-sized company, they might find Joe’s content very realistic.

Michael Blake: [00:46:37] Very good. All right. Well, that’s going to wrap it up for today’s program. I’d like to thank Mollye Rhea so much for joining us and sharing her expertise with us. We’ll be exploring a new topic each week, so please tune in so that when you’re faced with your next business decision, you have clear vision when making it. If you enjoy these podcasts, please consider leaving a review with your favorite podcast aggregator. It helps people find us so that we can help them. Once again, this is Mike Blake. Our sponsor is Brady Ware & Company, and this has been the Decision Vision podcast.

Tagged With: CPa, CPA firm, Dayton accounting, Dayton business advisory, Dayton CPA, Dayton CPA firm, Decision Vision, Employee Engagement, employee retention, Enterprise Community Partners, Facebook, For Momentum, Gen X, Habitat for Humanity, Michael Blake, Mike Blake, millennials, Mollye Rhea, Nike, Non-Profits, social impact, St. Vincent de Paul, sustainable development, United Nations

Tracy Jardine, Tributes by Tracy, and Jack Spicer, Kitchen Tune-Up Atlanta/Roswell

October 15, 2019 by John Ray

North Fulton Business Radio
North Fulton Business Radio
Tracy Jardine, Tributes by Tracy, and Jack Spicer, Kitchen Tune-Up Atlanta/Roswell
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John Ray, Tracy Jardine, Jack Spicer

North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 170:  Tracy Jardine, Tributes by Tracy, and Jack Spicer, Kitchen Tune-Up Atlanta/Roswell

Choosing thoughtful executive gifts and upgrading your kitchen were just two of the topics featured on this edition of “North Fulton Business Radio” as we welcomed Tracy Jardine, Tributes by Tracy, and Jack Spicer, Kitchen Tune-Up. “North Fulton Business Radio” is hosted by John Ray and is broadcast from inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Tracy Jardine, Tributes by Tracy

Tracy Jardine

Tracy Jardine is the Owner of Tributes by Tracy – Executive Gifting & Holiday Giftables. Tracy guides business owners, human resource directors, marketing directors and other professionals to the perfect message and products that set them apart from competition. Their style of executive gifting helps companies increase referral streams and positively effect client/employee retention. Outsourcing executive gifting functions allows Tributes’ clients to focus on areas where they make the biggest impact  – revenue generating tasks.

To learn more, go to the Tributes by Tracy website, or call Tracy directly at 678-836-1558.

Jack Spicer, Kitchen Tune-Up

Jack Spicer

Jack Spicer owns Kitchen Tune-Up Atlanta/Roswell. The business offers five different levels of kitchen and bathroom remodeling with five different price points. Kitchen Tune-Up’s services range from cabinet/wood restoration to cabinet painting, cabinet redooring (changing out the existing doors and drawer fronts), cabinet refacing (putting on new doors, drawer fronts, and new veneers to give a brand new look to the kitchen while using the existing cabinet boxes) to installing completely new cabinets.

Services also include replacing countertops and backsplashes. Jack has emphasized that Kitchen Tune-Up differentiates itself from competitors by providing a much higher level of professionalism and customer service than the industry is known for.

In volunteer work, Jack has provided cabinetry for Habitat for Humanity for more than 20 years.

For more information, call Jack at 404-594-5050 or go to the Kitchen Tune-Up website.

“North Fulton Business Radio” is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®, located inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with approximately $12.9 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Tagged With: executive gifting, giftables, gifting, gifting partner, Gratitude Gifting, Habitat for Humanity, holiday giftables, home improvements, Jack Spicer, kitchen design, kitchen remodeling, Kitchen Tune-Up, north fulton business community, North Fulton Business Radio, outsource gifting, professional services firms, Tracy Jardine, Tributes by Tracy

Susan O’Connell with Habitat for Humanity International

May 8, 2013 by angishields

Learning Insights
Learning Insights
Susan O'Connell with Habitat for Humanity International
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David Adelman with TrainingPros and Susan O’Connell with Habitat for Humanity

Susan O’Connell/Habitat for Humanity International

Susan O’Connell is a fifteen year veteran in the learning field, leading and advising on strategic and cost-effective learning programs that develop staff skills, enhance productivity, and support organizational change.

In 2009, she successfully transitioned from the Fortune 50 business setting to the international non-profit sector where she played a key role in increasing online course enrollments by 50% over a one-year period. Susan serves as the Learning and Organizational Development Manager with Habitat for Humanity International.  She holds a Master of Education in Human Resource and Organizational Development from the University of Georgia.

 

 

 

Today’s show is brought to you by TrainingPros.

Tagged With: Habitat for Humanity, Susan O'Connell, TrainingPros

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