CAUSE RELATED MARKETING
For most, marketing is a management process that identifies, anticipates and satisfies customer requirements profitably.
In the pre-modern economies, due to the predominance of small enterprise and monopolies, there was no recognition of marketing as a separate field. However today with the changing needs, wants, preferences, attitudes and behaviour of consumers, as well as globalization and an increase in purchasing power, we see a paradigm shift in marketing techniques and strategies used, including the need to support the local.
It is evident that companies cannot exist in isolation. Both society and businesses need each other for support and growth and it is this understanding that has brought about a drastic change in how companies view and treat the communities they live in. What started off as plain philanthropy and sponsorships today as taken many forms, including corporate social responsibility, societal marketing, cause marketing and cause related marketing.
Today businesses strive to achieve what they call the triple bottom line, which includes financial accountability, social responsibility and environmental responsibility. More over being socially responsible makes perfect business sense for them, due to the heightened consumer and societal expectations, the reach of the media and the demand for greater transparency.
Also today the market place has got more cluttered, it has reached a point where it is difficult for most to “out innovate” or “out advertise” competition, differentiation based on product quality and benefits is no longer effective, also consumers are more aware and concerned not only about themselves but also the society they live in. It is a result of these factors that has lead to the emergence of social responsibilty which helps companies strike a chord with the consumers aligning business with social commitments.
However since the final bench mark for a business is revenue and profits, the emergence of cause related marketing programs, have heralded a dramatic shift in non profit and for profit relationships, helping establish a concept that community development and support can be positioned at the intersection of business objectives and societal needs. Wherein this support gives companies identifiable personalities, demonstrating what they stand for and helping them connect with customers, suppliers, investors, employees and the community, at the same time making sure, some of the revenue is donated towards the benefit of society at large.
Cause Related Marketing (CRM) refers to a type of marketing involving the cooperative efforts of a “for profit” business and a “non-profit” organization for mutual benefit
Brand spirit: Hamish Prigle, Marjorie Thompson
“The firm’s contribution to a designated cause being linked to customers’ engaging in revenue-producing transactions with the firm-essentially an exchange of goods and services for money”
(Varadarajan and Menon, 1988, p.60)
Simply put cause related marketing can be understood as a strategic positioning and marketing tool which links a company or a brand to a relevant social cause or issue for mutual benefit. It is the initiation and funding of deserving causes.
Companies today use cause related marketing as a strategic marketing activity, a way for them to do well by doing good, distinct from sales promotion, corporate philanthropy, corporate sponsorship and public relations, though it is often an amalgam of such activities.
It acts as a way for companies to build brand loyalty among today’s increasingly hard to please consumers by way of a proven commitment towards a worthy cause. Also other things being equal many consumers prefer to do business with a company that stands for something beyond profits.
Cause Related Marketing and other Corporate Social Initiatives

The beginning
It was Jerry Welsh, the former American Express marketing guru that first coined the term “Cause Related Marketing” in 1983. It was a three-month marketing program around the Statue of Liberty Restoration Project, with the objective to increase card usage and new card applications, at the same time raising money, awareness and support for the non profit Restoration fund.
American Express donated one cent for every card transaction and one dollar for every new card application and backed the program with a $4 million advertising campaign aimed at reaching existing customers and drawing new ones.
The results were impressive. In just three months, the Restoration fund raised over $1.7 million with American Express Card usage increasing 27% and new card applications increasing by 45% compared to the previous year. A fitting outcome to a well planned strategic effort.
“The wave of the future, isn’t cheque book philanthropy, it’s a marriage of corporate marketing and social responsibility”.1
Mr. Welsh
Some truly remarkably examples include the pink ribbon campaign for breast cancer awareness, the change campaign by British airways where fliers were encouraged to donate left over change towards a social cause, the P&G Shiksha campaign as well as certain companies that have integrated cause related marketing in their business models, like body shop (no animal testing), or Arvind eye care- providing free medical assistance to the poor.

























