tankman1989
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 5
This is not something that I ever really considered as having a place in the business world but in the last few years there have been a number of events where a company, or person, takes a public stance on a political issue. Examples are Chic-Fillet owner coming out against gay marriage, Rush Limbaugh making the comment about the woman paying $3,000/yr for birth control and most recently a store in PA boycotting a sportsman show b/c the show banned "assualt" rifles - leading to the cancellation of one of the largest sportsmans shows in the US.
After each of these public stances the businesses saw a huge increase in business - much more than what they lost in alienating the groups against which they stood. Rush lost a number of advertisers but the waiting list for advertisers increased almost 4 fold. The store in PA said they can't answer all the calls or deal with the number of customers coming in the store - and they are sold out of a lot of inventory.
Now the thing that all of these have in common is that they received at least local news coverage if not national.
It seems that many companies tend to market towards specific groups of people. Conservative talk radio tends to have the same companies between varying shows and stations. I don't know if this can be seen that these companies have a similar political/religious point of view or if this is strictly a marketing ploy.
The effect of the increase activity at businesses after taking a public stance seems to say that customers are willing to support business with whom they have similar political beliefs. It also seems that by taking a public stance that the alienation of those whom you oppose isn't significant enough or detrimental enough to stop the company from making their belief public.
So, I'm curious what your thoughts are as a business owner and a customer. If you had the choice of 2 business to frequent and one had similar political views as you, would you choose that business? how much would their view influence your choice even if they might be further away or more expensive?
Where I'm from there is a lot of tight knit religious communities and they tend to frequent others of their community and it seems that these groups tend to do pretty well and have a closer relationship with their customers. This is also a benefit when doing B2B work as finding another business is easier when you pick from within that community.
So, what are your thoughts on this and would you be more willing to frequent a company whose political views were close to that of yours?
After each of these public stances the businesses saw a huge increase in business - much more than what they lost in alienating the groups against which they stood. Rush lost a number of advertisers but the waiting list for advertisers increased almost 4 fold. The store in PA said they can't answer all the calls or deal with the number of customers coming in the store - and they are sold out of a lot of inventory.
Now the thing that all of these have in common is that they received at least local news coverage if not national.
It seems that many companies tend to market towards specific groups of people. Conservative talk radio tends to have the same companies between varying shows and stations. I don't know if this can be seen that these companies have a similar political/religious point of view or if this is strictly a marketing ploy.
The effect of the increase activity at businesses after taking a public stance seems to say that customers are willing to support business with whom they have similar political beliefs. It also seems that by taking a public stance that the alienation of those whom you oppose isn't significant enough or detrimental enough to stop the company from making their belief public.
So, I'm curious what your thoughts are as a business owner and a customer. If you had the choice of 2 business to frequent and one had similar political views as you, would you choose that business? how much would their view influence your choice even if they might be further away or more expensive?
Where I'm from there is a lot of tight knit religious communities and they tend to frequent others of their community and it seems that these groups tend to do pretty well and have a closer relationship with their customers. This is also a benefit when doing B2B work as finding another business is easier when you pick from within that community.
So, what are your thoughts on this and would you be more willing to frequent a company whose political views were close to that of yours?