December 3, 2012
Social media helps to fill up food pantries
Advertiser

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- From now through New Year's Eve, if you "like" either the Facebook or Pinterest pages for T.G.I. Friday's restaurant, the equivalent of a can of food will got to Mountaineer Food Bank, up to 5,000 cans.

The "Can for a Fan" campaign, now in its third year, was created by the Bistro Group, which has T.G.I. Friday's franchises in Cross Lanes and on Corridor G. Pinterest was added this year as the company experiments with community-focused social media marketing.

"It's a virtual food drive," said Amie Dancu, Bistro's director of marketing. "This gave us a way to reach our consumers and, in essence, connect them into the community."

After the 'likes' are counted, Bistro will actually donate a check equivalent to the equivalent number of that many cans of food, which will likely mean a larger amount of food going to the food bank. "The definitely can make the dollars go farther with their grocery partners a little better than we can," said Dancu.

Given the geographically widespread mission of Mountaineer Food Bank, they'll take help anywhere they can find it, said the food bank's executive director, Carla Nardella.

Based in Braxton County, the food bank distributed more than 9.5 million pounds of food last year to 48 counties in West Virginia. The food was redistributed to more than 600 feeding programs across the state. The food bank is an affiliate of Feeding America, the largest non-profit feeding program in the United States, she said.

Nardella has been working at the food bank for 29 years come this January. She recalls the thinking in pre-social media days on how to grab the public's attention for a food drive.

Bright yellow or green paper on your media press releases was one good idea, Nardella said. "I can remember having a workshop at a Feeding America conference and they said make sure you put your press release on really bright paper to catch their eyes."

These days, web and social media campaigns bolster the food bank's work in ways large and small.

"We also participated in a Wal-Mart Facebook promotion that happened back in late Spring, early Summer and because of that ended up receiving $50,000," she said.

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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