What has your approach been over the past 12 months? Has it been consistently hostile towards veganism?
My assumption is that you’ve previously been targeting people who (1) care about animals and (2) are probably somewhat sympathetic towards the goals of veganism, (3) but want an easier option to help animals than becoming vegan.
This seems like a very promising approach, and I can imagine most of my friends and family falling into this category. Maybe I’m mistaken, but I’ve not otherwise percevied your approach (before this latest campaign) to be overtly hostile towards veganism.
This feels like a really important point to me that hasn’t been addressed yet, so I’m really curious how the FK team is squaring it now and how they thought about it as they planned for this.
I, even as a vegan, find Farmkind’s homepage and core message refreshing, too! The arguments for recruiting compassionate people who aren’t going to go vegan any time soon are plentiful and very exciting to me. But these arguments need to reach pretty far (with the provided research doing little to support that reach) to justify a need for overt hostility—a hostility which mostly serves to be confusing to anyone who isn’t thinking in earnest already about tradeoffs for farmed animals (almost everyone).
FK has made the argument repeatedly that they couldn’t have expected media coverage from these outlets if they weren’t hostile to vegans. I think that’s plausible. But it begs the question: Why go after these outlets in the first place? These outlets not historically having productive conversations about vegans and factory farming as FK says at the end isn’t a strong reason on its own to go after those outlets. In my opinion it’s probably the opposite. These outlets don’t have good conversations about factory farming—and in my opinion continue not to do so in the Forget Veganuary coverage—because that is not what their audience wants to read about. FK has posited that these audiences like to engage with hating on vegans. I agree and think that’s reflected in the not exciting result FK saw in reaching them.
Even in the best of circumstances with very friendly journalists, your press can be framed in unintended ways. Matching this lede, this spokesperson, and these outlets was nowhere near the best of circumstances and I think can only have been expected to be warped by the time it showed up in front of their audiences. It even seems to have been confusing to the journalists that got to hear the full story directly from Farmkind, given that Thom said in the David Ramms interview they didn’t intend for this to be picked up as a “meat eating campaign” in the way it was. So to expect your (frankly very nuanced and sort of arcane to your average conservative) message to be received as intended seems hopeful at best.
If what FK has been doing has been working—seeing significant success in friendlier environments like Dwarkesh’s podcast (really a great example of the right audience fit to their message—people who are opting in to think analytically about a topic and actively seek out discussions about interesting tradeoffs. This was badass and I probably talked too much about how exciting it was to me when it happened), it seems like doubling down on that strategy would have made a lot of sense. A lot of my friends and family would fall into this category of audience as well, @Matt_Sharp.
I’m curious why they felt there was a need to deviate from what was working exceptionally well, especially to do something like take a wild shot at dominos falling into place to get a presence in a (much more hostile) media environment like Piers Morgan. How likely did they think it was that that would work out as expected? What would they have considered a success if it ended up falling short of that? I think even rough answers to these will be really helpful for people across the movement trying to learn from this and win some points for transparency and strategic thinking for FK as well.
The series of dominos they hoped would fall has many points of failure, all of which are made more dangerous by the kind of coordination that results in missed emails and websites that need to be edited shortly after launch. These sorts of misses happen all the time, especially when people are trying to move quickly under pressure of working with journalists. But that should really heavily discount your estimated upside!
The case for taking this wild shot being worth the expected costs (even those estimated by FK as lower than they were) isn’t made strongly by this post. It’s more of a qualitative story about what might have happened if all went to plan that by description alone should be considered worth the risks.
In the various places FK has faced criticism for the campaign, their responses suggest that this was seen internally as the only viable route to try. But even aside from FK’s own success with a different approach on Dwarkesh, there are other options for high-impact media experiments that give non-vegans options to help animals.
Off the dome, a February Farmkind campaign (that wouldn’t distract from Veganuary’s January work or compete for coverage) targeted at those that tried and failed at Veganuary—or even just plan to go back to eating animal products afterward—with some angle like “Turn a new leaf without the kale: Here’s how Veganuary dropouts are helping animals” could be interesting. Instead of competitive eaters (this was truly goofy to me and seemed to be a caricature of how the omnivores think about eating animal products; the most relatable person to a normal omnivore is a normal omnivore, not “Gary Eats 48 Sandwiches on a Normal Tuesday”) your spokespeople could be lifestyle influencers who gave Veganuary a go. The large swath of people that would identify with struggling with veganism/Veganuary already has demonstrated an interest and some level of motivation to seek the benefits of forgoing animal products, so they’re closer to donating than your “I eat twice as much meat to own vegans” conservative.
I could see something like this being very on-beat for more progressive outlets (it’s lifestyle-focused, socially-positive, lends itself to the kind of self-deprecating self help people aged 25-44 like). An approach that works outward from Farmkind’s core message rather than backward from the media opportunity wouldn’t necessitate the hostility that has caused so many problems, simply didn’t feel coherent with the Farmkind brand, and was so unaligned with the organization’s place in a broader movement that they needed to shut the campaign down midway through. It would be more strategically focused, intuitive, and easy for Farmkind to stick to in talking points—all things that would have helped with both reach and impact. Even something like this, though, I’d hope would be undertaken with more Veganuary team input than Forget Veganuary was.
I am very curious what other angles FK has tried that haven’t worked, too. There are less newsworthy organizations than Farmkind that get press in less controversial ways. Timing is often the key consideration for newsworthiness, not just controversy (unless you’ve locked yourself into going after tabloids). So doing something related to Veganuary was a great idea. But I think it takes a lot of assumptions to conclude this was the highest-value way of doing it.
What has your approach been over the past 12 months? Has it been consistently hostile towards veganism?
My assumption is that you’ve previously been targeting people who (1) care about animals and (2) are probably somewhat sympathetic towards the goals of veganism, (3) but want an easier option to help animals than becoming vegan.
This seems like a very promising approach, and I can imagine most of my friends and family falling into this category. Maybe I’m mistaken, but I’ve not otherwise percevied your approach (before this latest campaign) to be overtly hostile towards veganism.
This feels like a really important point to me that hasn’t been addressed yet, so I’m really curious how the FK team is squaring it now and how they thought about it as they planned for this.
I, even as a vegan, find Farmkind’s homepage and core message refreshing, too! The arguments for recruiting compassionate people who aren’t going to go vegan any time soon are plentiful and very exciting to me. But these arguments need to reach pretty far (with the provided research doing little to support that reach) to justify a need for overt hostility—a hostility which mostly serves to be confusing to anyone who isn’t thinking in earnest already about tradeoffs for farmed animals (almost everyone).
FK has made the argument repeatedly that they couldn’t have expected media coverage from these outlets if they weren’t hostile to vegans. I think that’s plausible. But it begs the question: Why go after these outlets in the first place? These outlets not historically having productive conversations about vegans and factory farming as FK says at the end isn’t a strong reason on its own to go after those outlets. In my opinion it’s probably the opposite. These outlets don’t have good conversations about factory farming—and in my opinion continue not to do so in the Forget Veganuary coverage—because that is not what their audience wants to read about. FK has posited that these audiences like to engage with hating on vegans. I agree and think that’s reflected in the not exciting result FK saw in reaching them.
Even in the best of circumstances with very friendly journalists, your press can be framed in unintended ways. Matching this lede, this spokesperson, and these outlets was nowhere near the best of circumstances and I think can only have been expected to be warped by the time it showed up in front of their audiences. It even seems to have been confusing to the journalists that got to hear the full story directly from Farmkind, given that Thom said in the David Ramms interview they didn’t intend for this to be picked up as a “meat eating campaign” in the way it was. So to expect your (frankly very nuanced and sort of arcane to your average conservative) message to be received as intended seems hopeful at best.
If what FK has been doing has been working—seeing significant success in friendlier environments like Dwarkesh’s podcast (really a great example of the right audience fit to their message—people who are opting in to think analytically about a topic and actively seek out discussions about interesting tradeoffs. This was badass and I probably talked too much about how exciting it was to me when it happened), it seems like doubling down on that strategy would have made a lot of sense. A lot of my friends and family would fall into this category of audience as well, @Matt_Sharp.
I’m curious why they felt there was a need to deviate from what was working exceptionally well, especially to do something like take a wild shot at dominos falling into place to get a presence in a (much more hostile) media environment like Piers Morgan. How likely did they think it was that that would work out as expected? What would they have considered a success if it ended up falling short of that? I think even rough answers to these will be really helpful for people across the movement trying to learn from this and win some points for transparency and strategic thinking for FK as well.
The series of dominos they hoped would fall has many points of failure, all of which are made more dangerous by the kind of coordination that results in missed emails and websites that need to be edited shortly after launch. These sorts of misses happen all the time, especially when people are trying to move quickly under pressure of working with journalists. But that should really heavily discount your estimated upside!
The case for taking this wild shot being worth the expected costs (even those estimated by FK as lower than they were) isn’t made strongly by this post. It’s more of a qualitative story about what might have happened if all went to plan that by description alone should be considered worth the risks.
In the various places FK has faced criticism for the campaign, their responses suggest that this was seen internally as the only viable route to try. But even aside from FK’s own success with a different approach on Dwarkesh, there are other options for high-impact media experiments that give non-vegans options to help animals.
Off the dome, a February Farmkind campaign (that wouldn’t distract from Veganuary’s January work or compete for coverage) targeted at those that tried and failed at Veganuary—or even just plan to go back to eating animal products afterward—with some angle like “Turn a new leaf without the kale: Here’s how Veganuary dropouts are helping animals” could be interesting. Instead of competitive eaters (this was truly goofy to me and seemed to be a caricature of how the omnivores think about eating animal products; the most relatable person to a normal omnivore is a normal omnivore, not “Gary Eats 48 Sandwiches on a Normal Tuesday”) your spokespeople could be lifestyle influencers who gave Veganuary a go. The large swath of people that would identify with struggling with veganism/Veganuary already has demonstrated an interest and some level of motivation to seek the benefits of forgoing animal products, so they’re closer to donating than your “I eat twice as much meat to own vegans” conservative.
I could see something like this being very on-beat for more progressive outlets (it’s lifestyle-focused, socially-positive, lends itself to the kind of self-deprecating self help people aged 25-44 like). An approach that works outward from Farmkind’s core message rather than backward from the media opportunity wouldn’t necessitate the hostility that has caused so many problems, simply didn’t feel coherent with the Farmkind brand, and was so unaligned with the organization’s place in a broader movement that they needed to shut the campaign down midway through. It would be more strategically focused, intuitive, and easy for Farmkind to stick to in talking points—all things that would have helped with both reach and impact. Even something like this, though, I’d hope would be undertaken with more Veganuary team input than Forget Veganuary was.
I am very curious what other angles FK has tried that haven’t worked, too. There are less newsworthy organizations than Farmkind that get press in less controversial ways. Timing is often the key consideration for newsworthiness, not just controversy (unless you’ve locked yourself into going after tabloids). So doing something related to Veganuary was a great idea. But I think it takes a lot of assumptions to conclude this was the highest-value way of doing it.