background preloader

Toms

Facebook Twitter

Toms shoes infographic - Google Search. Infographic: Tom’s Shoes, Giving Back One-For-One. TOMS Social Media Marketing. Virally. Give a little, get a little: Toms Shoes finds niche - Business - Small business. Toms Shoes is in many ways a zeitgeist for our times.

Give a little, get a little: Toms Shoes finds niche - Business - Small business

It’s a shoe company run by a former reality television contestant. It uses social media far more than traditional advertising, and it takes advantage of socially conscious ideals to build a for-profit business. Founder Blake Mycoskie, a serial entrepreneur who once appeared on the show “The Amazing Race,” got the idea to start the company after noticing during a trip to Argentina that many children didn’t have shoes. He created a company with the premise that for every pair of the shoes a person purchases, the company will donate another pair to a needy child. Founded in 2006, Toms currently has 160 employees — more than triple the number it had a year ago — and has given away more than 1 million pairs of shoes. Mycoskie recently visited the offices of msnbc.com, where he told us that there is no way Toms would have existed 10 years ago. Video: 'It's all the social media platform' (on this page) Video: 'Who is Tom?

' Give a little, get a little: Toms Shoes finds niche - Business - Small business. Toms Shoes is in many ways a zeitgeist for our times.

Give a little, get a little: Toms Shoes finds niche - Business - Small business

It’s a shoe company run by a former reality television contestant. It uses social media far more than traditional advertising, and it takes advantage of socially conscious ideals to build a for-profit business. Founder Blake Mycoskie, a serial entrepreneur who once appeared on the show “The Amazing Race,” got the idea to start the company after noticing during a trip to Argentina that many children didn’t have shoes. He created a company with the premise that for every pair of the shoes a person purchases, the company will donate another pair to a needy child. Founded in 2006, Toms currently has 160 employees — more than triple the number it had a year ago — and has given away more than 1 million pairs of shoes. Mycoskie recently visited the offices of msnbc.com, where he told us that there is no way Toms would have existed 10 years ago.

Video: 'It's all the social media platform' (on this page) TOMS Shoes: Marketing Success Story AND Social Benefit « Mommy CEO. Today, according to TOMS SHOES, is ONE DAY WITHOUT SHOES day.

TOMS Shoes: Marketing Success Story AND Social Benefit « Mommy CEO

I love the idea. I am barefoot today. But more interesting to the business world, and especially those trying to understand how social media marketing can work for them, and how to market a concept or idea over a product, TOMS SHOES is a fascinating case study. TOMS is a for-profit company with a social cause. TOMS has a model of buy one, give one. “When I first decided that I wanted to do something about this problem, I had a few options. In the world of entrepreneurship, I admire and respect Blake Mycoskie. It’s interesting though, that people feel the need to point out, that if TOMS really wanted to put a dent into helping developing countries take care of their people, the TOMS model is not as efficient. Meanwhile, regardless of anything else, it feels good to participate in something that raises awareness for a good cause — and one that is not impossible to fix. TOMS Shoes Generation Y Strategy.

TOMS Shoes Generation Y Strategy: Generation Y wants it all: to shop, socialize, and save the world all at the same time.

TOMS Shoes Generation Y Strategy

Social Media Face Off: TOMS vs. Warby Parker. Here at uberVU we are huge fans of pitting one brand (or type of candy) against another, taking bets and watching the results unfold.

Social Media Face Off: TOMS vs. Warby Parker

In our last Social Media Face Off, we put Starbucks and Dunkin’ Donuts in the ring. This week, we took a look at two similar “one-for-one” retailers: TOMS and Warby Parker. To find our “winner”, we set up search streams in the uberVU platform for each brand, including variations on brand names (e.g. “TOMS” and “TOMS shoes”) and removing any obvious unrelated terms (e.g. “Toms of Maine”). Overall, we declare the winner of this Social Media Face Off: Warby Parker has been more successful in gender neutralization, a common goal for these two brands.Conversations online about Warby Parker revolve primarily around their unique social marketing and their customers’ fondness for the products.Although Warby Parker’s audience is about half the size of TOMS’, their growth seems to be quickening and catching up to TOMS’. The Contenders at a Glance: Round 2 – Gender. Toms ads - Google Search. TOMS Blog. Toms shoes. TOMS (TOMS) TOMS. One for One.