(02-23-2006) A Red bandwagon - Los Angeles Times*

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HelloAngel

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A Red bandwagon


EDITORIAL

IF IT WORKED FOR YELLOW, WHY NOT RED? Those yellow rubber "Livestrong" bracelets created to raise money for cyclist Lance Armstrong's cancer-fighting foundation quickly turned from a social statement to a fashion accessory. Rock star Bono has a similar idea, only bigger (and considerably more chic).

Last week in Davos, Switzerland, the U2 frontman and anti-poverty activist used the occasion of the World Economic Forum, an annual gathering of the global business and political elite, to announce a remarkable new product line. The Gap, Converse, Giorgio Armani and American Express have agreed to offer products under the Red brand, with a share of the proceeds going to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Red products will include shoes, T-shirts, sunglasses and credit cards — and yes, most will be red (although apparently some of the gear will be available in other colors). American Express promises to donate to the Global Fund an amount equal to the value of 1% of the purchases made on its Red cards, which initially will be available only in Britain. The apparel will be entirely or partially made in Africa, thus boosting the continent's economy and fighting its most pernicious diseases at the same time.

Bono is noted for taking unusual and savvy approaches to tackling Africa's vast poverty and disease problems, and the Red line is no exception. The project simultaneously offers big corporations a valuable "social marketing" opportunity — generating goodwill for their brands by positioning themselves as do-gooders — while raising money for one of the most worthwhile organizations on the planet.

The Global Fund supplies money for smart, badly needed projects to fight its three eponymous diseases, which together kill millions annually in the Third World. Most of its money comes from governments rather than philanthropists, but international donors are falling short of their commitments. Red products could help keep the fund in the black.

The Global Fund needs billions every year, and the Red project initially will generate only a tiny fraction of its budget. If it takes off, and more corporations get involved, that could change. As Bono asked last week: If you're trying to decide between two pairs of jeans, and buying one could help save somebody's life, while buying the other wouldn't, which would you choose?

http://www.latimes.com/news/printed...1,1560574.story?coll=la-sunopinion-editorials
 
"Bono is noted for taking unusual and savvy approaches to tackling Africa's vast poverty and disease problems,"

What else has he done thats unusual?
 
He is unusual in that he actually does something to bring about change to help Africa where the rest of the world sit back and just hope it all goes away or chooses to ignore it. He is an activist.
 
Carek1230 said:
He is unusual in that he actually does something to bring about change to help Africa where the rest of the world sit back and just hope it all goes away or chooses to ignore it. He is an activist.

right on!
 
this is a brilliant idea I think...

get corporations to make eradicating global poverty and fighting disease be part of their branding, brilliant.
instead of having the 1% go to your college or toward airline tickets make it go to fight HIV. if people are interested in switching to the card (I would), then you not only reward the company willing to commit money as it does, but you make larger that global lobbying pressure he tries to rally with the ONE campaign.

So much monetary and marketing energy goes into creating brand allegiances, why not make this campaign part of the mix?
I think one would have to grant it's an unusual pitch, based on similar things (like selling t-shirts for a cause, e.g.) but taking it a step further to get more foothold in the big capitalist systems...
it's beyond socially conscious mutual funds in its scope potentially!

And to have the product lines made in Africa is extra fantastic. As it is, I feel much better buying say clothes for my kids at stores like "Children's Place" because when I look at their labels they seem to have a lot of stuff made in Namibia or LeSotho. I am never sure whether the labor used is exploited or not, but I still feel much better buying those clothes than at places like Target where *everything* seems to be made in China these days, cheap cheap imports that flood markets and prevent the development of industries in africa. If the Red Campaign makes people pay attention to that, and rewards retailers for getting their stuff made in Africa by giving it some bono-cache, more power to it!

cheers all!

edit: and btw all the clothes I've seen on the admittedly low end of the market pricewise made in african countries are as well made...with possibly nicer quality cottons than some...as anything from elsewhere...cheers!
 
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