Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Earthkeepers Campaign 2008 Until Now Due: April 19, 2011
Earthkeepers Campaign 2008 Until Now Due: April 19, 2011
Sarah Arrazola
Rachel Raddatz
Christy Sio
Michelle Tomao
Table of Contents
Executive Summary…………………………………………………………………3
Research……………………………………………………………………………….5
Objectives……………………………………………………………………………..13
Programming…………………………………………………………………………17
Evaluation ……………………………………………………………………………..25
Conclusion…………………………………………………………………………….28
Bibliography…………………………………………………………………………..30
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Executive Summary
Research
Timberland, an Earthkeeper is someone who wants to protect and maintain the environment.
Without Earthkeepers, many believe the planet will suffer and face serious long-term
consequences. With this notion, Timberland set out to make a good idea into a positive reality.
sustainability, the Earthkeepers campaign of 2008 is one that is still occurring today. Working
toward complete transparency between itself and consumers, the company focuses on four
main areas in terms of strategy: energy, product, workplaces and service. These four “pillars”
set the ground work for Timberland’s research, and they will be discussed further in our report.
Objectives
For the purposes of this case study, we focused on three objectives. As an awareness
environmental leader to latent publics. For acceptance, the company wanted to recruit one
change among aware audiences. Timberland also wanted to communicate with active publics
We revised the objectives and made them time committed and number specific. We
also stated which groups of targeted audiences should be placed into specific levels of
awareness.
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Programming
key messages. To improve its reputation as an environmental leader, the company wanted to
draw a link between purchasing products and being an active and educated individual. It also
wanted to meet this objective by being transparent and honest through the Earthkeepers blog,
Facebook page and YouTube account. Through this type of programming, the acceptance
objective was met. By implementing logos, ethos and pathos, the campaign used multi-faceted
communication techniques to activate communities toward improving the environment. For all
of its objectives, the Earthkeepers campaign relied heavily on two-way communication through
Evaluation
We found this campaign to be very effective in terms of its research, objectives and
formative research would have enhanced the success of the campaign. Reaching out to
sponsored groups could have also enhanced the campaign in terms of programming.
Our team rewrote each original objective into revised versions while keeping the
targeted audiences in mind. We also placed targeted audiences into specific groups based on
levels of awareness.
Timberland could have improved its programming techniques by utilizing its sponsored
groups to further its campaign. These five groups could have reached more audiences than
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Research
Issue
Earthkeeping. It’s the way Timberland makes its products. It uses revolutionary breakthroughs
like Green Rubber compound to make 42 percent recycled rubber outsoles. Earthkeeping is
the way the company stands on issues that affect the environment, like climate change. On
The idea was to create a way to translate lots of passionate talk and ideas into positive,
practical action. Studies showed that consumers’ concerns for the environment are at large,
but they are confused about how to go about making a positive difference. About half of those
surveyed said they would do more for the environment if they had the tools and the knowledge
on how to do so. Timberland launched the Earthkeepers campaign, reinforcing the importance
of ‘living green, while making it easy and fun for people to make simple, practical changes and
share ideas about how to lighten their environmental footprints.’ ("Corporate social
responsibility," 2008)
Organization
Mission
by creating outstanding products and by trying to make a difference in the communities where
Size
As of Dec. 31, 2009, The Timberland Company operated six specialty stores, 59 factory
outlet stores and four footwear stores in the U.S. There were 44 company-owned specialty
stores and shops and 16 factory outlet stores in Europe. There were also 67 company-owned
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specialty stores and shops and 19 factory outlet stores in Asia. (Timberland company profile)
Location
Timberland has locations throughout the United States, United Kingdom, Deutschland,
Osterreich, Spain, France, Italy, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan.
History
In 1952, Nathan Swartz bought a half interest in the Abington Shoe Company in
Abington, Massachusetts. He bought the remaining half in 1955, when his sons joined the
company, manufacturing private label shoes for leading brand manufacturers for about 10
years. In 1965, the Swartz family introduced a revolutionary technology into the footwear
industry, producing waterproof boots and shoes. The Timberland brand name was developed
in 1973, but it wasn’t until 1976 that the company launched its first advertising campaign. The
Swartz family changed the name of the company to The Timberland Company in 1978, the
same year that it manufactured its first hand sewn casual shoe.
The 1980’s was a period of growth for The Timberland Company: it introduced its first
international market in Italy, began its first field-tests, opened its first store in Newport, Rhode
Island, became the first boot manufacturer to advertise on national TV and entered with the
men’s and women’s clothing and accessories markets. Timberland partnered with City Year,
Inc., the Boston-based youth “urban peace corps” and model for national youth service, to
support community service. Timberlands relationship with City Year has since grown into a
$10 support to expanding its service program to 13 cities around the United States. As one of
its first environmentally friendly efforts, Timberland introduced a lightweight hiking boot, with a
rubber lug sole designed to provide maximum traction without harming the trail.
Timberland’s growth continued into the 1990’s, by opening its first European store in
London. During this time, Timberland also introduced women’s apparel into its collection. In
1992, Timberland developed what would later be known as The Path of Service program, a
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progressive corporate policy that offers its employees 16 hours paid leave to delve into
proposed a set of environmental ethics, which Timberland signed onto in 1993. These
documents guide corporate conduct and enable corporate investors to make informed
decisions on environmental issues. The following year, Timberland launched its Model People
print campaign, encouraging and honoring individuals who put on their boots and make a
difference. Keeping up with its corporate social responsibilities, Timberland increased its paid
The second campaign in Timberland’s history, its Beliefs print campaign, was very
similar to the philosophy of its first “pulling on your boots and making a difference” campaign.
For its 25th anniversary, Timberland held its first annual Serv-a-palooza on June 18 1998; this
was the largest company-wide day of community service. The company had made a previous
commitment to serve 40,000 hours in communities by the year 2000, and had surpassed it by
1998.
In its 2004 Corporate Social Responsibility Report, the company focused on new levels
worldwide. Its growth continued into 2005 when Timberland’s product line in the UK introduced
The Timberland Boot Company collection. Keeping its routine of community service during
Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast region of the U.S., the company established a short-term
service sabbatical for employees wanting to help with disaster relief efforts.
At the beginning of 2005, Timberland set new standards for its product transparency
and increased its efforts to minimize environmental impact. It did this by introducing new,
more eco-conscious packaging to its footwear products and a “nutritional label”, a product
information label that details aspects of the company’s environmental and community footprint.
The company was recognized in 2008 as the first footwear manufacturer to commercialize
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Green Rubber technology. Partnering with the Green Rubber Inc. led it to launch new
footwear collections featuring outsoles made using recycled rubber from discarded tires.
million people to become part of an online network designed to inspire real environmental
behavior change. By 2009 it shrunk the carbon footprint of all its U.S. stores by an additional
11 percent by switching 70 percent of its North American stores to LED lighting. ("Corporate
timeline")
The company is committed to reducing its environmental impact through the use of
more renewable energy, more recycled/reusable materials, less waste, fewer chemicals and
values that define our community: humanity, humility, integrity and excellence. The corporate
Energy: “Timberland has a target to become carbon neutral by 2010. In addition to this
goal we are working on designing climate impacts out of our product and giving resources to
Product: “Recyclable product is another way of saying designing product that has an
afterlife. This aspirational goal leverages our outdoor heritage and environmental credentials in
a competitive and green marketplace by providing durable products that meet our consumers’
beliefs we practice in our own. We know that we can make high-quality products in a way that
respects the human rights of the craftspeople who work on the factory line.” (“Fair and safe”)
Service: “At our core is a belief in the power of people to transform their communities
and make a difference in the world. To give our employees an opportunity to make their
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difference, we provide them with up to 40 paid community service hours per year through our
Reputation
Selected as one of 1998’s “100 Best Companies to Work For” by Fortune Magazine in 1999.
Recognized with the Community IMPACT! Corporate Leadership Award at the Kennedy
For the fifth consecutive year, Timberland was placed on Fortune magazines “100 Best
Ranked on Fortune magazine’s “Platinum 400-The Best Big Companies in America” list for
2001.
Ranked No.5 in the apparel category on Fortune Magazine’s list of “Most Admired Companies”
in 2003.
Named to the list of “100 Best Companies for Working Mothers” by Working Mother magazine
in 2004.
Named one of the “100 Best Companies to Work For” by Fortune magazine for the 10th
consecutive year.
U.S. Green Building Council awarded LED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)
Gold certification for Timberland’s Peabody, MA retail store location and LED Silver
Fast Company magazine’s annual Most Innovative Companies issue honors Timberland as
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Ranked No.4 in the Most Innovative Company for Fashion by Fast Company in 2010.
Ranked No.6 in the Most Innovative Company for consumer products by Fast Company in
2010.
Ranked No.2 on Climate Counts’ list of companies making aggressive strides fighting climate
change.
Notable PR Practices
1992 Give Racism the Boot awareness campaign supporting diversity and standing up against
oppression internationally.
1994 Model People Print Campaign, honoring individuals who pull on their boots and make a
difference.
Beliefs Print Campaign, which reflected the company’s philosophy of “pulling on your boots
Why it Matters
As a company that is passionate about the outdoors, its responsibility to its stakeholders
demanded they address what they considered to be the most important environmental issue in
2008: global warming. Timberland wanted to become a solution by reducing its energy,
procuring renewable energy and investing in renewable energy development through the
The global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel hit a high in 2008 at 8.5 billion tons of carbon.
Over the 10 previous years before 2008, global CO2 emissions rose by an average of 2.5
percent a year, nearly four times as fast as in the 1990s. The accumulated carbon emissions
resulted in devastating temperature increases, melting ice sheets and rising sea levels. The
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United States was the world’s top greenhouse gas polluter after China in 2008. U.S. emissions
in 2007 were estimated to have reached 16.7 percent above those in 1990. (Heinzerling, 2010)
The year 2008 was one of the most devastating ever in terms of natural disasters. The
climate change was suggested as the reason for the boost of destructive power of disasters
like hurricanes and flooding. It called for stricter curbs on emissions to prevent further
uncontrollable weather scenarios. To put the effects of the disaster into perspective, more than
220,000 people died in events like cyclones, earthquakes and flooding, the most since 2004.
Of those interviewed, one said world leaders must put in place “effective and binding rules on
CO2 emissions” to curb climate change and ensure that “future generations do not have to live
with weather scenarios that are difficult to control”. ("Huge year for," 2008)
Similar Situations
In 2007, Timberland introduced its Green Index Rating which gives consumers clear
and easy-to-understand information about the impact their footwear choices have on the
Target Publics
Those Affected
The health of the planet, people living on it and the economy are all affected by the
campaign. Recycling paper and plastic enables the public to reuse its limited resources and
cut down on landfill accumulation. Carpooling helps reduce emissions and shopping locally
Target Publics
The Earthkeepers campaign targeted latent, aware and active publics. The company
participation.
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Earthkeeper: Someone who cares about the environment and is willing to do his or her
Timberland’s decision to target all three publics was a good decision. By targeting the
latent public Timberland changed its reputation among all people, not just those who are aware
and active with the company. In a survey it found one-third of respondents felt guilty in past
years about not living a more environmentally friendly lifestyle. This group was knowledgeable
about helping the environment more but had not taken the measures to do so, falling into
polluters, planned to be more environmentally responsible in 2008. That means that roughly
three-quarters of Americans fell into Timberland’s active target public category. ("Many
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Objectives
Introduction
living green by making small changes and collaborating with others on how to be
environmentally friendly. Our team analyzed three formal objectives for the campaign and
Objectives
The campaign’s awareness objective was one that could have used some fine tuning.
Rather than breaking it into two individual awareness objectives, it was provided as one
objective:
The targeted audience for this objective is considered a “latent public”. (Smith, 2009)
The identified audience is considered latent because they share similar values with the
Timberland company, but they may not recognize Timberland specifically as an Earth-friendly
brand. Considerably, the objective may also target “nonpublics,” since Timberland wanted to
change its reputation among all people, not just those who are interested in the company or its
cause. Ultimately, the objective is to bring those who are unaware, the latent public, of
Timberland’s position on the environment to recognize them as a brand that is aware and
Though the campaign was named Earthkeepers, it does not necessarily mean that
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specific awareness objective, targeting the latent publics, was too broad in determining what it
was to accomplish. To form a clearer objective, the campaign could have focused on what it
In public relations, practitioners must remember to avoid the “curse of knowledge” while
creating a campaign. (Smith, 2009) What may be plain and obvious to one individual could be
a completely new concept to another. With this type of objective, Timberland would have been
able to move the latent public to being an aware public. Many people who are loyal to the
Timberland brand may not be thinking about the environment; it would have been a great
A second objective of the campaign was to recruit one million people to join an online
network in order to motivate each other toward real environmental change. Here, two
The targeted audience of this acceptance objective is the “aware” public. The aware
public recognized Timberland as an Earth-friendly company, and the public is also educated
on environmental aspects. (Smith, 2009) The Earthkeepers campaign works to move those
who are aware of the situation at hand to taking the next step, the acceptance stage, and
becoming part of a network of Earthkeepers. Though inspiring, this acceptance objective has a
few flaws. First, it has too many ideas for an objective; not only does Timberland want to
recruit one million people to join the network, but it also wants them to change their behaviors
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toward the environment. To make a useful objective, it must have a clear and distinct goal
This objective either needs to be divided into two objectives or shortened to one. This
2009.
By dividing the formal acceptance objective into this suggested objective, the campaign
receives more clarity in what it is trying to achieve. This allows for more specific tactics to be
This objective would target the aware publics and move them into the acceptance
category. By including current Timberland customers, the objective covers the customer
category of publics, including occasional, current, loyal, potential, former and regular
customers. (Smith, 2009) Through this objective, the company is attempting to change the
of public”)
The targeted audience for this action objective was the “active” publics. This objective
represented a call to action by becoming involved in green projects, such as planting trees.
To give a more definitive timeframe for accomplishing the objective, we rewrote the
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To strengthen communities by increasing the amount of volunteers by 25 percent by
May 2010.
To recruit one million people from around the globe to join the EarthKeepers’ online
This established time gives a more realistic deadline for the objective, rather than simply
accomplishing it at any given time during the year. This objective is effective in that many
tactics can be put toward it. An objective would have two or three tactics implemented in order
to accomplish the objective. One instance is Timberland could strengthen communities and
increase volunteerism through community service groups, by word of mouth and other forms of
communication.
A second action-level objective the company should have implemented is one that
involves other active publics. A specific category of publics that the Earthkeepers campaign did
not address were the enablers. Enabling publics include community leaders, professionals,
businesses, government officials and opinion leaders. These leaders have the ability to
influence potential customers and other audiences that can help Timberland succeed in its
Though this objective does not directly involve Timberland and improving its sales, it
continues toward the goal of protecting the environment, a duty clearly implied when taking on
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Programming
Key Message
The key message Timberland conveyed to its public was in purchasing Timberland
keepers products, the consumers were helping the environment and becoming a “hero”, thus
their slogan, “Nature needs more heroes.” (“Timberland community”) The products Timberland
made were produced using recycled plastic (products) and renewable energy, while being
produced in a manner that used less chemicals and waste. (“Timberland community”)
Earthkeepers used engagement to bring consumers closer to the brand. Through the
purchase of an Earthkeepers product, the consumer was helping the environment, but also
becoming an Earthkeeper.
Strategies
Timberland used proactive methods in their newly created campaign. It wanted the
public to become aware of the cause, attain acceptance and have them take action.
The company aims to be transparent to its public to show trustworthiness and it is fully
publishing annual reports, covering all of their environmental goals, accomplishments and
current statistics and being proactive through sponsored events in the community.
audience. The campaign was based almost completely off online media tactics. In one
instance, through the Earthkeepers Facebook page, “friends” could respond to post put up by
the campaign, comment on the wall, ask questions and exchange information with others who
used the Timberland Earthkeepers page. The company used very interactive forms of
communication in order for the audience to make a connection with the company and the
campaign. Through the YouTube uploads, users could also comment on the post and read
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others thoughts on the commercials posted by Earthkeepers. (“Youtube lost bottle,” fall ‘10
campaign)
Effective Communication
The Earthkeepers campaign effectively used ethos, pathos and logos tactics.
Timberland holds characteristics for each of these points, giving it an edge over other brands.
Timberland is a reputable brand, known not only for its high quality merchandise, but
community”) They also provide accurate and clear information, allowing their consumers to
understand exactly what product they are purchasing as well as how their purchases have an
effect on the planet. Timberland used a “green scale” on each of the Earthkeeper products,
which rated how that product would impact the earth. These scales made the consumer aware
of how much their purchase could help change the planet. (“Timberland community”)
The brand continually assured it was sharing achievements and shortcomings with its
consumers. This transparency through annual reports, blogging and other means allowed
For ethos, the spokesman Jeffrey Swartz, Timberland CEO, is often the designated
contributor to posting updates in regards to the company, making the information trustworthy
and accurate, as well as giving the company a recognizable “face.” Swartz fills the three C’s of
effective communication. He is credible because he knows the products, has input on how they
are made and has control over his audience. His involvement with other organizations and
businesses has earned him respect for his knowledge. Although charisma was not his strong
point, he is an easy going individual who uses sarcasm to keep situations light heartedly. He
presents himself physically as being low maintenance and relatable with others.
Logos was achieved by Timberland Earthkeepers using less waste, more renewable
energy, fewer chemicals and recycled or reusable items to make products ecologically-friendly.
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Making such a change in their production and products aligned the company with having good
Pathos was reached by appealing to guilt. They made the consumer believe that it was
in their own hands to make a change in the environment. A consumer was making a choice on
how they were going to affect the environment every time they made a purchase. The
consumer who bought a shoe was making a larger negative impact on the earth in comparison
to the consumer who took the time and effort to buy a product that was beneficial to the
environment.
The company let its audience know that although it is an American company and have
planned on expanding environmental efforts across the world. This idea demonstrated to
Timberland customers that the company was also responsible in making this move happen. By
being involved in the initiative here in America, it was helping in making it grow and reach other
slogan, “Nature Needs More Heroes,” sends a positive message although implying the need
for more people to reduce their carbon footprint. The slogan mentions nothing about negative
issues in the environment, yet is effective because it calls for its audience to step up and do
their part. The four words, “Nature Needs More Heroes,” are effective, strong and clear:
Timberland Earthkeepers is calling for its consumers to be heroes by being aware of their
environmental impact and taking action to lessen their carbon footprint. The language is
campaign, using very subtle touches to get the environmental feel of the campaign to the
viewer. The color green throughout, vegetation all over, music and the website’s choice of
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photography make the viewer understand the beauty of nature. (“Timberland community”)
Each piece has a description of what it is composed and explains what makes it better for the
environment. Their website contains videos, summaries and links to help the viewer better
understand their products, how they are made and how it is related to the impact on the
environment.
Media Tactics
Timberland Earthkeepers used a variety of different media tactics to reach its target
audience.
One of the more interactive and appealing methods was the interpersonal
site which allows social and environmental innovators to get connected with sponsors who
wish to help them. (“Timberland community”) This partnership helped Earthkeepers spread
awareness to the public about the problems the environment was having and ways in which
groups and individuals on projects that went to helping the earth. These sponsored groups
offered one-on-one interaction with the public audience who although may not have seen the
Timberland brand logo posted all over, were still receiving the same message Earthkeepers
was trying to put out. These sponsored groups and individuals were a very persuasive form of
communication, especially since they fulfilled the three C’s for effective communication. These
groups made more of an impact on the public than if the company would have sent someone
of its own office to use their name and logo to raise awareness of environmental problems.
Using unbiased sponsor groups, or third parties, made the issue of the environment more
understands that as a corporate company, they had a responsibility to lessen their carbon
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footprint. This form of organizational media was a good tool for achieving transparency. The
annual reports demonstrated what Timberland was doing to keep up with its Earthkeepers
project and their promise to better the environment. Hard data provided by the reports are
persuasive in that it provided numbers that could not be manipulated. These reports were
straightforward and provided exactly what was going on with the company.
While group sponsorships and annual reports were both very important tactics, the
Facebook page/virtual forest, the Earthkeepers blog and YouTube videos allowed for a wide
The Earthkeepers virtual forest allowed the campaign to spread awareness and action
through Facebook by asking its users to send the link to five people in order to plant a tree in
the virtual forest. For each tree successfully planted in the Earthkeepers virtual forest, a real
one would be planted on Earth. This application on Facebook not only spread word of the
Earthkeepers campaign, but forced users to take action by actually spreading the word to
others.
The YouTube commercials also allowed commentary, but mostly portrayed what being
keep waste from littering the earth. The male consistently chases the waste down until he is
able to throw it into a recycling bin. These commercials portrayed what an Earthkeeper was
and what the lifestyle really consisted of: doing what it takes to better the environment.
The Earthkeepers blog was a good way of giving more detailed information and updates
to those interested. This form of communication focuses more on active publics that is
interested in receiving Timberlands information. The blog discussed anything from changes
going on in the company all the way down to how Timberland Earthkeepers would be
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celebrating Earth Day. Since the blog always had a writer sign off their name, it gave the
reader a sense of reliability in knowing that the entry was done by a real person sitting in front
of the computer.
The communication tactics used were effective in meeting the Earthkeepers campaign’s
objectives.
The awareness objective of the company, to advance Timberland’s corporate and brand
These tactics included encouraging its employees to find alternatives to flying for corporate
meetings, installing LED light in stores across the nation as well as their offices and using
recyclable materials to produce their products. Most importantly Timberland began publishing
annual reports covering their contributions to helping the earth and the reduction, or change, in
its carbon footprint. These reports were available to the general public.
audience. The acceptance objective of recruiting one million Earthkeepers to become part of
an online network was reached in April 2009. The Facebook forest was very well liked and a
popular application. Although the one million Earthkeepers that joined cannot be considered a
friendly company, it does demonstrate the audience’s awareness and tentative acceptance of
The company reached its action objective of strengthening communities and improving
green spaces and access to outdoors by using their company planned service events. In
addition, the company involved company employees to make an impact in the world by using
their “Path To Service” hours in the local community. Through sponsored events and
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employees’ initiatives to make changes, it was able to excite customers and local communities
Campaign Spokesman
Jeffrey Swartz, Timberland CEO, was also the representative for both the campaign and
the company. He successfully met all three of the effective communication characteristics.
Credibility
Control
Through Swartz’s position, he ultimately is able to make the major decisions. Swartz
has the ability to implement new tactics or alter old ones. His control is the ultimate in this
Charisma
As seen in interviews and through his blog, Swartz is very candid. His choice of
wording is relatable and understandable to the general public. (“Timberland bootmakers blog”)
His sarcasm is comforting and enjoyable. Swartz is not uptight and rigid like many
businessmen are portrayed to be. The ease Swartz provides allows him to be a relatable yet
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Evaluation
Because the campaign is continuous, we can only evaluate up to this point in time.
Analyze content
Awareness Objective
We want to know what the targeted public feels about the company and how things can
be changed. Also including what the public wants to see changed and how much they know
Evaluation
In evaluating the awareness objective, we suggested using after-only since the targeted
public is all North Americans. Before the company implemented the campaign, the employees
Acceptance Objective
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This content will be used to compare previous attitudes with present attitudes that may
Has Timberland convinced you to become more concerned for the environment?
Evaluation
before-after to see the change in those participating. This should be measured qualitatively
Action Objective
Retain the number of past volunteers or members of the Earthkeepers online network
How many more environmentally friendly Timberland products do you purchase per
year?
Evaluation
The action objective should be evaluated quantitatively and should be controlled before-
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Our team proposes Timberland conducts focus groups and interviews to fine-tune the
campaign. Since it is continuous, the company can conduct them now for improved results in
The proposal is to include no less than 100 people, since the company reaches so
many people both nationally and internationally. It can also conduct interviews to have a better
understanding of what the consumers saw as beneficial to the campaign and what they would
communication instead of one-way. The focus groups will be recorded as answers from the
change (who to target), how to change the publics’ perspective, what the consumer feels
would increase involvement and any other concerns they have that would help the campaign
Contact all Facebook fans, YouTube subscribers and anyone involved for their
feedback on the campaign. The questions should include: how they found out about the
campaign, how their life has changed, how Timberland can reach more consumers and other
Timberland used ethos and pathos when it would have been more effective to focus its
The most used and most beneficial message strategy was logos was the
environmentally-friendly logic utilized and showed the consumers the transparency of the
campaign and company as well. It helps to achieve the mission of equipping people to make a
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difference in their world through outstanding products and trying to make a difference in the
communities. (“Timberland: about us) The company created the Green Rating Index and also
allowed consumers to post their testimonies on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and its blog.
Stewardship
Timberland used the four R’s model for stewardship. (“Timberland community”)
Timberland achieved reporting through being open to interviews regarding their campaign and
followers’ comments and allowing them to be involved. Reciprocity was met by thanking
followers for their efforts every time a goal or objective was met with the help of the
community. This was often achieved through Facebook posts or posting on the company blog.
Responsibility was clear through its promise to match up to one million trees planted on the
Earthkeepers forest application. Through CSR and company transparency the campaign was
established. It raised awareness and allowed people to get involved by taking action.
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Conclusion
Effectiveness of Campaign
The campaign was effective because, according to their objective, they wanted to reach
one million people by 2009 and they made 109,862,099 impressions on Facebook and had
more than 950,000 trees planted. More than 150,000 people have registered on the
Evaluation Recommendations
Research
The company needed to provide an explanation for why the targeted publics should be
a part of the campaign by giving benefits and explaining the campaign further. Timberland’s
report, the Green Rating Index, was very informative but was a long document that should
have been summarized and given to the public in a shorter explanation to increase
effectiveness.
Timberland’s research was effective in the sense that the CSR reports and Green
Rating Index were a good source of information for internal and external publics, but only if
they were inclined to read a lot of in-depth, detailed material. On the other hand, the
company’s research conducted to decipher which publics to target was very minimal and
looked into the problem at large more than what an individual consumer needs.
Objectives
numbers. Our group has revised the objectives to make them time-committed and number-
driven.
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Our team stated which level of awareness consumers belong to (aware, latent,
apathetic, active and nonpublic) which the company should use to better engage its publics.
The objectives Timberland formed were not effective since they did not have a solid
deadline, but instead a general idea of what they would like to accomplish. It didn’t state a
deadline to reach or how many people it wanted to affect. This was detrimental because the
team could not evaluate whether or not the objectives were achieved.
Programming
Timberland based everything off of online media, but rarely referenced the five sponsors
they provide money to through www.changents.com. These five sponsors could have reached
different publics that Timberland was unable to reach. If the company continues to sponsor
The programming conducted was effective in reaching the aware, active and latent
publics. The company could have been more effective by using the sponsored groups from
www.changents.com to reach more publics and further the campaign. Overall, programming
wasn’t effective and needed fine-tuning to make the campaign a larger success. Communities
were involved and changed, but more across the nation and possibly the world could have
purchase Timberland products, still plant trees and promote on social media websites.
Because of the relationship with target publics, the company introduced a more
ambitious campaign in 2010 called Yéle Vert in Haiti to plant five million trees in the next five
years. The Earthkeepers campaign successfully planted more than one million trees in less
than two years to help prevent erosion, green urban areas, protect wildlife habitats and
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How to Continue the Campaign
The campaign does not have an end date and Timberland has produced another
campaign off the success of the Earthkeepers campaign. The company is international, from
its work with Haiti in the new campaign as well as work done with the Earthkeepers campaign.
From social media use, the company and its objectives can be viewed worldwide. A
suggestion is to remove privacy settings on the social media sites to allow anyone access to
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