Archive for the ‘Political activism’ Category

If you weren’t at one of the rallies in January you probably heard about them. Thousands of people, organized through a Facebook group and Web site, converged on cities across Canada to protest Stephen Harper proroguing Parliament.

The Web site, noprorogue.ca, was started by Colin Carmichael after he realized the Facebook group was different from the many others he was perpetually asked to join.  This one had lots of interaction with people talking about actually hitting the streets.

In his Podcamp Toronto 2010 presentation Colin detailed why he started the site and the WordPress plug-ins he used to manage it.

Enjoy!

ps. Apologies for missing the first part of Colin’s presentation.  I was a busy volunteer at Podcamp T.O. and it took me a while to remember that, in the spirit of podcamp, I could get someone to start my tape recorder for me. :-)

I’ve been thinking more about what I said in my last post about cellphones and the Congo, specifically on the issue of the power of consumers to make a difference…

I’ve been thinking about something I’ve heard a lot in marketing and political circles that political ministers and CEO treat hand written letters like the voices of 1000 constituents or customers.

So this post is to launch a letter writing campaign to cell phone manufacturers to demand they take action to rid their products of Congo coltan.

How many letters should get written? Well, I figure if one letter represents a thousand people then 6000 letters represent the nearly 6 million Congolese people who have died in the Congo wars. So that’s the goal: 6000 letters for 6 million people. 6 for 6.

6 for 6 by Christmas as our gift to the Congolese people.

When you write your letter leave a comment on this post. If you know someone who doesn’t have access to the Internet spread to word to them and help them out by leaving a comment for them or tell them they call in to my audio comment line at 1-206-202-6340 and tell us they’ve written one. (And someone please step up to help me turn the audio comments into blog comments because I’ll need it)

So what does this have to do with marketing the social economy? Well, I’ve always known that marketing the social economy is different from regular marketing in some key ways and the issue of coltan in cell phones has highlighted one of those ways. Social economy marketers are activists in the sense that, by definition, they are trying to change the world. And they are trying to change it in one of the most fundamental ways: through providing fair alternatives to the dominant economic system. Sometimes that means going beyond just focusing on the product and sometimes that means choosing sides. This is one of those times on both counts.

So, here’s a draft letter you can use:

Dear [CEO name],

I am writing to you as a concerned [COMPANY NAME] customer about a very important issue.

It has come to my attention that most electronics equipment, mainly cell phones and video game consoles, contain the element tantalum that comes from the substance coltan. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has anywhere from 64 – 80 percent of the world’s reserve of coltan which has helped fuel vicious wars for over a decade. However, although these wars have contributed to the deaths of nearly 6 million people since 1996, the conflict continues virtually unnoticed by the world in spite of the direct link between the illegal exploitation of coltan and the conflict in the DRC. So, instead of the vast resources of the DRC benefiting its people they are getting them killed. Meanwhile, companies such as Germany’s HC Stark and the American company, Cabot Corp., are making large profits selling tantalum extracted from coltan, some of which, without doubt comes from illegal Congolese mines.

Given this, I am writing to ask you to take immediate steps to use your power to demand that companies down your supply chain provide you with independent third party verification that any Congolese coltan they sell you comes from legal sources and benefits the Congolese people.

Thank you.

Nokia – Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, President and CEO, Nokia Corporation, P.O. Box 226, FI-00045 Nokia Group, Finland

Motorola – Greg Brown, President and CEO, Motorola, 1303 E. Algonquin Rd., Schaumburg, Illinois, USA 60196

Apple – Steve Jobs, CEO, Apple Corp., 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino, California, 95014, USA

I am also curious to really test the power of social media to see if it can help make this campaign fly.

Let the writing begin!

The Fair Copyright for Canada Facebook group does. You read right: 70,000. The group was started by University of Ottawa Internet law professor Michael Geist, and jumped in numbers last week when the Canadian government tabled its proposed new copyright law, C-61. Oh, and by the way, the 70,000 are against the bill.

The huge number shows two things: that lots of people hate C-61 and the power of Facebook as an organizing tool.

The most direct implication for social economy marketers is to encourage all your partners that are so inclined to use Creative Commons licensing because if they don’t everything they produce is completely copyright protected by default and, therefore, harder to share.

For great info on the bill see Michael Geist’s blog and Wayne MacPhail’s rabble.ca column.