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Charities hook up with Wal-Mart to spread message

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Posted 8:26AM on Thursday 14th March 2002 ( 23 years ago )
LITTLE ROCK - For decades, manufacturers have fought to get their products into the nation&#39;s largest retail chain. Now, nonprofit groups are reaping the benefits of pairing up with Wal-Mart Stores. <br> <br> A nonprofit group called Speaking of Women&#39;s Health announced Wednesday that it&#39;s teaming up with Bentonville, Ark.-based Wal-Mart to spread its message nationwide. <br> <br> The Cincinnati-based group works to educate people about women&#39;s health, well-being and safety. Wal-Mart now offers women&#39;s health information in permanent displays at all of its 2,700-plus stores in the United States. <br> <br> &#34;Wal-Mart is regarded as one of the premier names,&#34; said Ernie Goss, an economics professor at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. &#34;Anytime you can get Wal-Mart to collaborate with you or to showcase your product or your cause, that&#39;s a definite huge plus.&#34; <br> <br> Company spokeswoman Jessica Moser said, &#34;It just goes so well with what Wal-Mart tries to do. When we go into a community, we try to give back.&#34; <br> <br> The retailer also will host events every three months on everything from beauty products to monitoring one&#39;s health. <br> <br> &#34;The Wal-Mart sponsorship with Speaking of Women&#39;s Health increases our reach exponentially,&#34; said Dianne Dunkelman, the group&#39;s president and chief executive. &#34;With the support of Wal-Mart and our other national sponsors, our information will be accessible to tens of millions of women every week.&#34; <br> <br> Moser said Wal-Mart allows local stores to decide which charities to support, but also aligns with some groups on a nationwide basis. <br> <br> Nonprofit associations say such a partnership can be a good deal for both the company and the nonprofit group, if the fit is right. <br> <br> Independent Sector, a Washington-based group of nonprofits, said there&#39;s a growing trend toward such corporate partnerships. <br> <br> Still, the organization noted, the relationship might not work for all charities. Problems could include the logistics of getting a group&#39;s message into a format that can work nationwide, and for groups with a regional focus or those advocating controversial topics, such as mental health issues, the partnerships may not work. <br> <br> Goss also said it can be a fine line for a company. <br> <br> &#34;Once you&#39;ve said it&#39;s OK for this charity, all of a sudden, how do you say no?&#34; Goss said. &#34;Once you delve in that, it&#39;s a slippery slope.&#34; <br> <br>

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