How to Get a Mob of Customers to Your Liquor Store
Hold a sale on high-end vodka? Give away free samples of your latest bourbon shipment?
These could work. But for Kansas City’s World of Spirits, the answer is committing revenue to greening the store… really.
Yep, the Carrotmob has come to town… remember them? Started in San Francisco, Carrotmob is an activist organization dedicated to greening business. Rather than using traditional, “stick” tactics (protesting, street theater, etc.), Carrotmob offers a “carrot” to businesses that commit to greening themselves: as they put it, “Carrotmob organizes consumers to make purchases that give financial rewards to those businesses who agree to make socially beneficial choices.” Though the organization is new, they’ve already been quite successful: their first event resulted in about five times the normal revenue for K&D Market on 16th St. in San Francisco.
In Kansas City’s choice, this involved approaching fifteen Midtown businesses with a proposal: “We’ll bring a mob of paying customers, if you commit the highest percentage of revenue to going green.” A bidding war broke out, and World of Spirits won by committing 24% of the revenue from its “mob event” towards making the business more energy efficient. Take a look:
- » See also: Octavia Butler’s Prescient “Parable of the Sower”
- » Get EcoLocalizer by RSS or sign up by email.
So, Kansas Citians… how ’bout buying some booze? Be at World of Spirits from 5-10pm tomorrow (39th and Bell), and restock that bar!
UPDATE: Carrotmob KC’s first event was a success! According to Scott Connerly at the group’s Facebook page, “325 Patrons, $7,015 Gross, $1,683 Towards Green. SUCCESS! FYI avg gross for those five hours was $1,500, so Carrotmob quadrupled that for them.” Congrats!






The all-important link to their website:
http://carrotmobkc.com
Whoops… thanks, Scott!
[...] hate to see the city punish all flash mob organizers because of one careless stunt. Flash mobs like the Carrot Mob do a great job of applauding eco-friendly businesses without causing any [...]
[...] When a Valentine’s Day pillow fight cost the city of San Francisco $20,000, officials started talking about a crackdown on flash mobs. [...]