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Girl Scout cookie

Good news for you and your Thin Mint Addiction!

The Girl Scouts are making it easy to find out where those dang cookies are being sold!

(Now I don’t have to drive to Walmart and get the cheaper but less meaningful generic imitations!)

The Girl Scouts have an online cookie locator– just type in your zip code and (in most cases) you get all you need to know to fulfill your cookie cravings.online cookie.jpg

This is a great innovation, since it’s much easier to buy cookies when you know when and where they’ll be available, right?

But there is one interesting tweak with the Girls Scouts’ online sale program — you can’t actually “buy” the cookies with a few mouse clicks.

You can let your local Girl Scouts know that you want to but cookies, and in some areas you can place an order, but in all cases an actual Girl Scout has to deliver the cookies to you and collect your payment.

Obviously, this extra step adds ‘friction’ to the sales process, and may deter some customers from buying cookies.

Is it smart for the Girl Scouts to have this limitation on their cookie e-commerce?

Absolutely. This may be a little annoyance for the cookie buyer who wants a quick fix. BUT, this obstacle serves an important purpose.

By having the cookies delivered by actual Girl Scouts, this step in the sales process –

  1. Reminds buyers that there are actual Girl Scouts connected to the cookies. These are Cookies with a Mission, sold by Girls who are doing Great Things.
  2. Allows buyers to meet a few Girl Scouts in their town. Heck, they may even recognize these girls as neighbors– supporting a sense of community.
  3. Allows buyers and Girl Scouts a chance to talk about Scouting, about the girls’ troop’s plans for the money and/or their activities in the community.
  4. Keeps the girls themselves actively involved in the sales process, so that they keep learning the right lessons about business.

Girl Scout Cookie Sales exist for several reasons, only one of which is fundraising.

As we discovered in the responses to my posts about Girl Scout Cookies, Walmart, and social media, there is a great deal of misunderstanding, as well as general lack of understanding, about how cookie sales support the Girl Scouts. (I’ll address these issues in some upcoming posts. )

This little tweak in the online-assisted Girl Scout Cookie Sales process might look like it is limiting the number of cookies the Girl Scouts might sell — but it also makes sure that the cookie sales support the Girl Scouts’ overall brand. This may cost them a little in lost sales, but it contributes to the overall program for rebranding the Girl Scouts and reinforcing their mission.

I can’t imagine that anyone who loves authentic Thin Mints, or authentic organizations, will be deterred by a little face-to-face brandbuilding, do you?

[Fortunately or unfortunately, the specifics & ease of these online-assisted sales will vary with your Girl Scout Council (the region assigned by your zip code). Some Councils ask you to enter your email and then have a particular troop contact you. Other regions just have a landing page with basic info about the sale program. My own Council has an inert and not-very-helpful landing page. And yes, I have already sent them an email with suggestions on how to improve it quickly. We'll see how they respond.]

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When I got an email last month from a reader who wanted me to know that some Wal-marts in Arizona had forbidden ceased to allow Girls Scout Troops to set up cookie selling booths in front of their stores, I didn’t believe it.

“What a dumb move,” I thought. “There’s no way this could be true. After all, in their very own press release Walmart claims that they support the Girl Scouts. They claim that nothing about their plans to sell knock-off Girl Scout Cookies should hurt the troops themselves. Plus, letting the Girl Scouts sell cookies in front of their stores is the very proof they offer when they claim that they support the Girl Scouts.

Am I naive, or what?  It turns out that this is no rumor.

Girl Scout Brownies Selling Cookies.jpgAt the Tega Cay Wal-mart, procedural violations by some groups have lead the management there to temporarily forbid fundraisers in front of their store. (Check out Jason Foster’s article in The Charlotte (South Carolina) ObserverOnlinefor all the details.)

Walmarts’ decision demonstrates that Walmart only supports the Girl Scouts when it’s convenient. Walmart’s claimed “support” of the Girl Scouts and other community groups is limited, tenuous and provisional.

Girl Scouts are now forbidden to sell their cookies in front of (at least one) Walmart.

It is certainly possible that the ‘real‘ reason for banning these non-profit fundraisers is that some groups haven’t followed Walmart’s rules. It’s also likely that Walmart’s rules and guidelines are largely sensible. The guidelines probably address safety concerns (e.g., setting the booths up in the right places) and encourage a welcoming sales style (e.g., not yelling at or accosting shoppers as they enter and exit the Walmart). However, the outcome of this decision is that several Girl Scout Troops are now unable to sell cookies in front of their local Wal-mart– the same Wal-mart that (by the way) recently launched generic versions of Girl Scout Cookie classics.

Is this ban on fundraisers targeted at the Girls Scouts per se? Is it in any way related to ThinMinty Gate and the Cookie War?

It doesn’t seem so, and yet…. as reported by Jason Foster in the Charlotte Observer:

Girl Scout troops in Fort Mill and Tega Cay have set up outside the store to raise money before, but it wasn’t immediately clear how much they would lose in sales if the Wal-Mart ban continues, said Katherine Lambert, executive vice president for the Hornets’ Nest Girl Scouts Council in Charlotte, which oversees Fort Mill and Tega Cay troops.

The policy appears to not be limited to the Tega Cay Wal-Mart store. Troops across the country are reporting recent difficulty in soliciting outside Wal-Mart, Lambert said.

“Through the grapevine, nationwide, there are some (troops) that are having success and some that are not,” Lambert said.

Regardless of the reason, regardless of the unilateral ban — what does this look like? It looks like Walmart is punishing the Girl Scouts. In the media as in larger life, perception is realityWal-mart is punishing the Girl Scouts.

Bad for Walmart’s Image

This action is going to hurt Walmart’s image. People use specific incidents to construe their understanding of an organization’s image, “who” an organization is. When people use this particular decision as data for considering Walmart’s corporate characteristics, to define “who” Walmart is, they will quite likely construe that Walmart’s first response is to punish those who don’t go along with it.

They will quite likely also construe that Walmart punishes unfairly, hurting both those who behaved well and those who behaved ‘badly’.

gscookies.jpgIn addition, they will quite likely construe that Walmart is not a “partner”of any community group. Rather, they will believe that any relationship that Walmart has with other organizations must be on Walmart’s terms, only.

Thus, these observers, stakeholders and customers many wonder:

Whatever happened to Walmart’s effort to be a Good Corporate Citizen?

A good corporate citizen would have worked proactively and enthusiastically to help the non-profits who weren’t following the rules.

Instead, Walmart has decided to punish not only the groups that broke their rules, but also the groups that followed the rules. As any kid will tell you, it’s not fair for all the other kids if you take the crayons away from everyone just because one kid left a few crayons on the floor. It’s not fair; it’s mean.

Bad for Walmart’s larger community

This decision by the Tega Cay Walmart management is bad for Walmart and even worse for community groups.

Girl Scouts, The Lions Club, the high school band, and any other community group that previously held fundraisers in the Walmart parking lot and is now banned will have to find another place to set up. These other places are limited, and few have the same kind of foot traffic as a Walmart on a Saturday.

For the Girl Scouts and others, being banned from Walmart means finding a less busy location. Less busy locations mean fewer sales. Fewer sales mean less revenue. Less revenue means less support for programs. By banning the Girl Scouts and other groups, Walmart has had a negative – not positive – impact on these groups’ ability to raise money. Walmart’s decision takes support away from these groups and their missions. Oops, looks like Walmart is contradicting its own claim to support the Girl Scouts.

Bad for Walmart’s Reputation

Based on my previous experiences writing about Walmart, Girl Scouts and “ThinMinty Gate”, I can confidently predict that this move by one store will get blown out of proportion in the “media” if/when it is picked up. The way this story gets shared will likely damage Walmart’s reputation.

Consider just the example of the headline of this post. I personally exercised some restraint when I wrote it. If I wanted to generate traffic to this blog or get the post picked up by folks who track Walmart, I’d have written something more dramatic, like “Walmart Bans Girl Scout Cookie Sales” or “Walmart Punishes Girl Scouts”. These headlines are ‘true’, even though they leave out the details that it’s a single store, that more than the Girl Scouts were banned, and that the ban is assumed to be temporary. None of those details will be in the first paragraph as this story travels. Nobody really cares about those details.

This single action confirms what many people already believe about Walmart.

Nobody wants to know the specifics, because the general impression confirms people’s predictions and fears: Walmart will retaliate against the Girls Scouts, treating the Girl Scouts as they treat every other competitor– as just another competitor to be “beaten” in “the marketplace”.

So much for Wal-mart’s effort to change its image and reputation. Actions seem to speak more loudly.

Sure, this is a dumb move by the Tega Cay Walmart management.  These Walmart managers may be competent, they may be well meaning, but they sure aren’t supporting their claims with their actions.

So now, what has a stronger impact on your feelings about Walmart? Walmart’s claims of good citizenship? Walmart’s old-fashioned press release? Or Walmart’s “everyday” behavior?


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5 Blogs Every MBA Student Should Be Reading

September 8, 2009

Every MBA student is pressed for time. Balancing demanding priorities, like classes, learning teams, job hunting, and family, while also getting some sleep, leaves little time for cruising the web looking for insightful posts.
Lucky for you all, I can recommend 5 terrific blogs that can help you link what you’re learning in your MBA management [...]

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Can Walmart Earn the Girl Scouts’ Good Citizenship Award?

August 14, 2009

You don’t earn a merit badge for Good Citizenship by picking on the Girl Scouts. But what if Wal-mart wanted to?
Commenters here and on other blogs that picked up my story that Wal-mart has chosen to compete with the Girl Scouts by knocking off the Girls Scouts’ two most popular cookies have criticized Wal-mart for [...]

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Wal-Mart Knocks Off the Girl Scouts

August 3, 2009

(Welcome MacLeans Readers… Please join the conversation! )
Just when you think your opinion about Wal-mart might be changing…
Just when you think that maybe, just maybe, Wal-mart was learning to be a better citizen…
Wal-mart turns around and does something really … despicable.
It’s not discriminating against women, strong-arming suppliers, polluting neighborhoods or racing to the bottom [...]

Read the full article →