The business of giving back
Deirdre Newman
Since Frank and Faye Clarke founded Educate the Children -- a
nonprofit organization in Huntington Beach that donates books, computers
and software to impoverished schools around the country -- they have
mostly relied on word of mouth, media exposure and a dollop of divine
intervention to market their company.
“We have looked up into the stars and said, ‘Heaven help us,”’ joked
Frank Clarke.
Now the Clarkes are armed with a more earthly strategy that relies on
both old-fashioned and high-tech efforts, courtesy of three UC Irvine
business students from the Graduate School of Management.
The collaboration enabled the company to receive bona fide marketing
strategies while the students gave back to their community. The school
encourages students to work with nonprofit groups as part of its Social
Responsibility Initiative.
“The main goal is to provide students with a sense of personal and
corporate responsibility to the community,” Director Shaheen Husain said.
“They need to be aware of this, so even when they go back and start
working in a private, for-profit company, they can institute programs
there for corporate social responsibility.”
Students on the Social Responsibility Initiative committee visit
classes throughout the business school, letting students know what kind
of nonprofit projects are available.
Beau Schindler, Dobin Yim and Michael Goldberg chose to focus on
Educate the Children for an assignment about marketing strategies because
of the challenges it presented.
“It’s not your standard run-of-the-mill marketing plan for an American
corporation,” Schindler said. “It is certainly unique, and I think the
opportunity for an emotional reward was greater with this plan than with
a for-profit organization.”
The students visited Educate the Children’s headquarters in Huntington
Beach and applied marketing strategies they had learned in professor Mary
Gilly’s class.
“It’s very hard to do a lot with a little,” Goldberg said. “You can’t
tell a nonprofit to do a huge marketing campaign. You have to be
extremely creative.”
Because of the company’s limited financial resources, the students
recommended an integrated marketing plan that included enhancing the
Internet content and streamlining the donation process.
The students presented the outline of their marketing plan to the rest
of Gilly’s marketing class last week and are now writing a formal plan.
The Clarkes were delighted with the students’ suggestions.
“The concept of using the Web site as a marketing tool is fantastic
because we’ve had it for a long time and never used it for that,” Frank
Clarke said. “We’re going to take the plan and run with it, hopefully for
a touchdown.”
The students also intend to follow up with the Clarkes to help them
implement their marketing plan and facilitate its success.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Deirdre Newman visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa area and writes
about her experience.
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