Movember’s social media reach

Most companies seek ROI when running a big social media campaign. But can charities do the same? This year it seems, Movember is proving that not only can a charity movement have a wide social reach but it can actually convert those Facebook ‘likes’ into real charitable action.

The Movember movement has social media at its core. The website has social profiles for each ‘Mo bro’ and an interactive space to show off your handlebar. Movember is using the social media platform Promoveo for scientists and other interested parties to share data and research to drive break throughs in men’s health, one of the first of its kind. Although these platforms have aided the cause, notoriety has occurred due to Movember’s dominance on Twitter and Facebook. All with the help of viral videos (supported by heavyweights like Google Chrome), excellent content and good hash-tagging, of course. However, it is the everyday Facebook and Twitter posting of those taking part that has really helped spread the word.

All this social activity is great but haven’t we all clicked ‘like’ on a charity Facebook page and never done anything else about it? Charities face this issue everyday: exposure is great but action is better. Well, Movember seems to be bucking this trend. An infographic produced after last years efforts looked at the reach of the campaign and has shown that not only was Movember mentioned in over 900,000 online conversations but there was a massive increase in people talking about going to get checked out at the doctors. According to www.sport.monash.edu.au 90% of people who take part in Movember take time to think about men’s health issues when they otherwise wouldn’t.

So why has this charity campaign been so successful? Movember has tapped into the primary function of social media- to share human experiences. Facebook, Twitter and other platforms have let Mo-communities grow by uniting people in their efforts to aid a good cause, and excellent content has given the campaign solid groundings. Movember has achieved the ultimate goal for charities who use social media campaigns- they have turned social interactions into real, physical actions. Their return on investment can be measured not only by the thousands of online conversations but by the men heading to the doctors in part thanks to the  power of social media.

Latest Posts

B2B marketing feels slower because you’re selling to a buying group, not a decision maker. Forrester says the average buying decision involves 13 people and 89% of purchases involve two or more departments. Add three generations with different trust cues and you get rework, internal debate, and “one more version” forever. Buyers are also doing more research without sales, which makes guessing expensive. This LinkedIn Live with Tejal Patel is about buyer behaviour, trust cues, and what social is doing in research and validation, so you can build one narrative that travels across the group and saves your team time.
Read More
We’re only a couple of weeks into 2026, and social already feels…different, in the best way possible. This year isn’t just about flashy new features or the next viral sound; it’s about making the internet feel more human, more useful, and a lot less exhausting.
Read More
Buyers are hunting answers, and social is deciding who they trust The short answer Mahoosive behaviour change for customers is already here. Search is being replaced by an answer layer, and social is feeding it. When Google’s AI Overviews show up, people click less, sessions end sooner, and your carefully-crafted…
Read More