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By Kim Ross
In February 2000, the United
States marked the longest economic expansion in its history. Its
clear American businesses are doing well, but are they doing good?
The answer is yes and no.
Businesses account for only 5 percent of all charitable contributions
in the U.S. A 1997 Conference Board survey showed big companies increased
their charitable contributions 20 percent over the previous year. But
in 1999, as the economy continued to roar, The Chronicle of Philanthropy
found contributions by the nations largest companies rose a mere
6.1 percent.
According to Alan Andreasen,
a professor of marketing at Georgetown University, businesses that are
not involved in philanthropy are missing a valuable opportunity. Philanthropic
partnerships, he said, make good strategic sense.
Some companies in the travel
industry have been quick to understand the strategic value of corporate
giving. In fact, a Harvard Business Review article by Andreasen noted,
The tremendous potential of affiliations between nonprofit and
for-profit organizations was first recognized by American Express in
1982 . . . .
Amex donated 5 cents to San
Francisco arts organizations for every local transaction and $2 for
each new local cardholder. Andreasen wrote. In just three months,
American Express contributed $108,000 to the arts organizations and
saw a considerable increase in transactions with the card. The company
also found that its relationships with participating merchants improved
and that more local merchants decided to accept the card.
The campaign was so successful,
American Express then tried a nationwide program: raising $1.7 million
for renovation of Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty. As a result,
Andreasen wrote, use of the card increased 28% compared with the
same period the previous year.
Besides increased sales,
companies in the travel industry and elsewhere realize other benefits
from strategic philanthropy. One is the opportunity to reach new markets.
In addition, a nonprofits image can burnish or change a corporations
image. From a corporate marketers point of view, a nonprofit
organization s most valuable asset is its image, Andreasen
said.
In todays tight labor
market, philanthropy also has pays off in employee recruiting, morale
building and retention. Andreasen noted wryly, It lets a
company say to employees, Were holier and more community-involved
than that money-grubbing guy down the street.
Lastly, he pointed out, corporations
can gain valuable knowledge. When executives serve on boards or volunteer,
they stretch themselves and learn to think in new ways, said Andreasen.
Its like tuning up your strategic thinking.
If your organization is not
currently using philanthropy to meet its strategic goals, consider the
following examples of travel companies that are doing well by doing
good.
Noel Group Follows Its
Values
Where our direction is led by our values, is the motto of
the Noel Group, a family of travel companies that includes Travel Guard
International. One of the groups most closely held values is community
service.
We have the added responsibility
to take the financial strength we have attained and . . . strengthen
our commitment to humanitarian activities in our local and global community,
said company founder John Noel.
In 1992 Noel put this philosophy
into action with the Make a Mark program, which funds charitable projects
in locations around the world. We look for countries that have
given us travel opportunities, where our businesses have benefited from
taking our tourists to their countries, he said. It is our
attempt to go back to those countries and show them our gratitude for
sharing their culture, their people, with us.
Among other things, Make
a Mark has built a kindergarten near Dubrovnik, Croatia; and constructed
a medical facility in Rostov-Veliky, Russia. The contributions came
from the Noel Group and from solicitations to its travel industry partners,
vendors and clients. In 1997, for example, John and Patty Noel led a
tour of paying and contributing passengers to Kenya. There they helped
build staff quarters at the Nyumbani Orphanage and visited such popular
tourist sights as Mount Kenya and the Masai Mara Game Reserve. A total
of $77,000 was donated.
Since charity begins at home,
Noel created the Compass Foundation to provide scholarships for Wisconsins
minority students. Since the four-year awards are for the University
of Wisconsin in Stevens Point, the companys hometown, scholarship
winners intern at Noel subsidiaries.
Employees also play a big role in Noel Group philanthropy. In 1999 they
held a lunchtime Cookout for Kosovo in the companys
parking lot each Friday for a month. In addition, they had bake sales
and raffles. The fundraising just snowballed into a community-wide
effort, said Dan McGinnity, head of public affairs. Of the $73,000 collected
in Stevens Point to help Red Cross relief efforts in Kosovo, $40,000
came from the Noel Group and its employees.
Employees also created and
distributed Easter baskets of food to the needy. As an incentive to
reach the goal of 60 baskets, the human resources department issued
a challenge. Ordinarily, the company observes casual Fridays,
however, HR promised one extra day of casual attire for meeting the
goal and one additional day for every 10 baskets over the goal. The
project was so successful, McGinnity said, we ended up with
28 days straight of casual after Easter.
The companys values-based
charitable activities have paid off in more than just warm fuzzies.
McGinnity said American Express chose the company to provide travel
assistance to cardholders because it wanted a partner that shares its
blue box values. Since one of those values is giving back
to the community, the Noel Group got the nod.
Recruiting also benefited.
With local unemployment at 3 percent, the hiring competition in Stevens
Point is fierce. We are competitive in terms of salary and benefits,
he noted, but employees are looking for what else they can get
from an employer. Because of its community service, McGinnity
said applicants come in saying, I know about the Noel Group and
its the kind of company I want to work for.
Ramada Reaches Out to
Needy Children
Being a founding corporate
sponsor of Childreach has brought our company together,
said Steven J. Belmonte, president & CEO of Ramada Franchise Systems.
Its truly part of the Ramada culture.
Childreach, formerly the Foster Parents Plan, is an international humanitarian
organization that helps improve living standards for children in 42
developing countries. During Ramadas five-year partnership with
Childreach, its hotels, employees and guest have raised $750,000 and
sponsored 1,000 children. One property alone sponsors 100 children.
At a San Francisco property, the housekeeping staff, people often considered
Americas working poor, sponsors a child. Belmonte himself sponsors
a child whom he met last year during a visit to Egypt.
Besides helping individual
kids, Ramada holds fund raising events on behalf of Childreach, prints
and distributes literature to guests, produces public service announcements
and allows members of its loyalty program to use points to sponsor a
child. Ramada contributions have built medical centers in Zaire, renovated
schools and housing projects, and built a youth recreation center in
a poor area of Cairo.
Belmonte said, Hundreds
of thousands of sponsors know Ramada is involved, so franchisees
recognize that this corporate-initiated charitable effort adds value
to the brand and to their properties. As a result, they too have embraced
Childreach. We dont have to cram it down their throats. They ask
for more.
In fact, said Belmonte, the
idea for a large and successful systemwide fundraiser came from two
franchisees. On May 1, 1999, nearly 200 Ramada properties across the
U.S. tried to set a Guinness world record for the largest simultaneous
yard sale ever. Employee-volunteers collected donations from the company,
their own homes and the community. All together, the sales many
of which were held in Ramada banquet rooms, parking lots and courtyards
raised $70,000 to build a health center in Zambia.
Royal Caribbean Helps
Keep Communities Afloat
Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines
vision statement calls for enhancing the well being of our communities.
That means the company focuses its charitable activities on its ports
of call in Southern Florida, Caribbean, Alaska and the West Coast. According
to Lynn Martenstein, vice president of corporate communications, the
department that oversees corporate giving, Were most useful
if we stay where we have a presence. She added, working with the
community is good business because it promotes positive relationships
with potential employees, government regulators and local vendors.
To determine which elements
of community life the company should seek to enhance, RCCL polled its
officers. They identified three areas: marine conservation and education,
children and families, and education. In 1998, the company and its employees
gave away $2 million to help these causes.
Besides community service, Martenstein said maintaining good employee
relations is a primary motivator of RCCL corporate philanthropy. G.I.V.E.
meets both objectives. The acronym stands for Get Involved, Volunteer
Everywhere, and the program facilitates employee involvement in the
places where they live or work. It was launched in 1998 with a series
of one-day service projects in Miami; St. Thomas, Virgin Islands; and
Juneau. More than 500 ship-board and shoreside volunteers painted buildings,
pulled weeds and planted trees. In 1999, G.I.V.E. volunteers did an
assessment of the coral reef near Key West, performed beach clean-up,
planted Palmettos, dusted library shelves and escorted inner city kids
on a tour of the Everglades.
The company organizes G.I.V.E.
events, pays for supplies, provides transportation to the work sites,
feeds the volunteers and even offers child care. The program is strictly
voluntary, Martenstein said, but it became a kind of competition
among the sites to see which location or ship could get the greatest
participation.
Why would busy employees
spend their precious free time on these projects? Because they feel
good about doing something for their community, Martenstein said. These
activities also give them a sense of pride in the company and their
co-workers. She added, As a team building tool, I dont think
you can top getting sweaty with somebody.
Giving isnt just a
once-a-year event at RCCL. For example, when Hurricane Mitch devastated
Honduras and Nicaragua the crews of four of its ships raised $26,000
to help the victims. The corporation reached into its own deep pockets
in 1996 to create the Ocean Fund, which underwrites marine conservation
and education initiatives. So far, the Fund has awarded grants to 33
projects with a total price tag of nearly $2 million, which aint
fish food!
Its something
the company should have done years ago, Martenstein said. The
whole cruise industry should do it. We use the ocean, we should be involved
in its conservation.
Among the Ocean Funds
initiatives are an interactive exhibit at the Alaska SeaLife Center
in Juneau; a permanent buoy system to protect marine habitats in Exuma
Cays, Bahamas; a bio-diversity assessment along the 1,000-kilometer
Mesoamerican Reef; and research into sea turtle deaths on the lower
Atlantic Coast.
RCCL found other creative
ways to further its charitable goals. Giving new meaning to the term
pay per view, the company trades its spectacular view of
Biscayne Bay for donations from film and TV producers and fashion photographers.
In 1999 HBO donated $7,500 to a Miami childrens charity in exchange
for using the RCCL headquarters for a live broadcast during the Super
Bowl. The Explorer of the Seas, a ship scheduled for launch in 2000,
will have a working science laboratory on board as well as an environmental
education classroom, computers and interactive displays to help passengers
learn more about the seas they are sailing.
Tauck Tours Celebrates
Mesa Verde
When Tauck Tours celebrated
its 75th anniversary in 1999, it gave America an enormous gift
$250,000 for much-need restorations at Mesa Verde, the archeological
crown jewel of the national park system. But Tauck didnt stop
there. It also donated the time and knowledge of its tour directors
who compete to spend time working as interns at the site in the Southwest.
Robin Tauck, the tour operators
co-president, got help finding a project worthy of its gift from Julie
Goebel, executive director of the Travelers Conservation Foundation.
The United States Tour Operators Association created the foundation
in 1999. Its mission is to bring the tourism industry together to protect,
restore and conserve the worlds natural, cultural and historic
treasures. Arthur Tauck, the tour operators chairman, is a founding
member of the foundations board.
The foundation works in two
ways. As in the case of Tauck Tours, it consults with individual USTOA
members. The foundation also identifies viable, high-priority projects
and then solicits funding from USTOA members. The nine projects underwritten
in 1999 included stabilization of the Art Deco ferry building at Ellis
Island; a master plan for preserving historic Cuzco, Peru, capital of
the ancient Incas; and conservation research on the wild elephants in
Kenyas Amboseli National Park.
In her search for the ideal
project for Tauck Tours, the foundations Goebel worked with Save
Americas Treasures, a partnership between the White House Millennium
Council and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Save Americas
Treasures was created to identify and rescue significant historic structures,
monuments, documents, objects and collections that are symbols of what
define us as a nation. First Lady Hillary Clinton is its honorary chair.
Mesa Verde, an ancient Anasazi settlement, is one of its more than 100
official projects.
From the short list of worthwhile
options Goebel provided, Tauks tour directors selected Mesa Verde,
which is visited by all the companys tours to Colorado. Although
many of the magnificent cliff dwellings at this popular tourist attraction
are well preserved, others are deteriorating at an alarming rate and
the Park Service only has funds to maintain 40 or 50 of the sites
600 structures.
Robin Tauck, who accompanied
the First Lady on a highly publicized tour of Mesa Verde in May 1999,
said, Our donation is going toward cutting-edge, interactive uses
as well as restoration. Specifically, it will underwrite assessment
and restoration of Spruce Tree House, which receives 270,000 visitors
per year. It also will pay for Internet-based documentation that will
be used by other endangered cultural sites around the world.
More Ideas to Prime the
Creative Pump
If the foregoing examples
havent generated any ideas about how your organization can make
philanthropy work to meet its strategic goals, heres a quick list
of other tactics used in the travel industry:
Ashton Hotels works
with the Red Cross to provide rooms for victims of fires and other
disasters in Hawaii.
Billy Bobs Texas, the worlds largest honky-tonk,
held a fund-raiser for Fort Worth-area firefighters killed in the
line of duty. The company contributes concert tickets to 1000 charity
events each year.
Carnival Cruise Lines donated its smoke-free ship Paradise
to the American Cancer Society for one day during the Great American
Smoke Out. Educational programs and a gala fundraiser on board raised
$600,000, including $100,000 from Carnival.
Deer Valley Resort employees donated the funds for employee
parties to local charities.
Heritage Park Inn donates three gift certificates annually
to the United Cerebral Palsy Association of San Diego so parents of
severely disabled children can have refreshing mini-vacations
away from their demanding daily care routines.
The Idaho Governors Conference on Tourism contributes
money and bedding to homeless shelters in the communities where the
annual event is held.
Kaanapali Beach Hotel brought together a council of native
Hawaiian elders to talk story so Mauis oral history
could be recorded for future generations. Also, employees helped form
the statewide Native Hawaiian Tourism & Hospitality Association.
Lee Travel Group, a travel agency, and b-there.com, an on-line
event reservation/registration service, sponsored an Internet raffle
of travel products to benefit the local Leukemia Society chapter.
The Newport Yachting Center holds six family-oriented festivals
throughout the summer and fall. The proceeds are donated to local
charities such as Literacy Volunteers and a camp for inner-city youth.
The New York Convention & Visitors Bureau organized local
restaurants to host Souper Winter 99. Special soups were featured
for five days and for each bowl sold, $1 was donated to Share Our
Strength and Citymeals-on-Wheels.
Orchard Hill Country Inn donates lodging as a membership premium
for San Diego Public Television/Radio. The inn also hosts station-sponsored
conferences.
The Oregon Country Fair annually donates $10,000 to the local
school district, entirely funding the schools art curriculum.
Park City Mountain Resort donated old ski and snowboard uniforms
to the Seventh Day Adventists for distribution in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
An employee of the Portland Convention & Visitors Bureau
organized a city-wide household goods and clothing drive for Kosovo
refugees. Local hotels donated linens, housekeeping supplies and toys.
Priceline.com, along with Marriott and Starwood, offered free
hotel rooms to relief workers in Wichita and Oklahoma City after tornadoes
ripped through these communities.
Shannon Resort & Club Group donates the banquet facilities
and golf course of its Resort at Long Boat Key Club for the annual
Florida Winefest & Auction, which raises money for local childrens
charities.
Other commonly used ideas
include adopt a park, highway clean-up, loaned executives, walkathons,
holiday dinners for the homeless, visiting sick children or senior citizens,
and donating surplus food and used computers.

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