Waterloo Region Record

The woman behind the boycott that is pressuring retailers to dump the Trumps

- Sarah Halzack

Back in October, Shannon Coulter was doing some late-night browsing on the Nordstrom website. Before long, the smallbusin­ess owner had a nagging feeling about the department store’s lineup of Ivanka Trump apparel and shoes — a brand she couldn’t help but see in a different light amid the unfolding events of the presidenti­al campaign.

Just days earlier, news had broken of the explosive “Access Hollywood” footage in which Donald Trump bragged about groping women without their consent.

“Something changed for me when the Trump tapes came out,” Coulter recalled in an interview. “Those words were just ringing in my ears.”

And so she decided to take action: Coulter began a campaign called Grab Your Wallet, which encourages shoppers to stay away from retailers that sell all manner of Trump-branded goods, as well as avoid Trump properties such as golf courses and wineries. She maintains a meticulous spreadshee­t online of the dozens of companies that should be boycotted, including notations about why they’re on the list and updates about the inventory of Trump-branded merchandis­e they offer. Those that cease doing business with the Trumps are removed from the list.

The campaign has been chugging along for months but has come into a particular­ly bright spotlight in recent weeks, when big-name chains started to back away from Trump goods, including Neiman Marcus, Belk and, most prominentl­y, Nordstrom — the store that encouraged Coulter to fire up her laptop in the first place.

None of the companies cited the boycott specifical­ly as the reason for dropping the merchandis­e. Nordstrom said it did so because of falling sales, not politics.

Still, Coulter exemplifie­s the new and potent possibilit­ies that social media presents for ordinary consumers and voters to catapult an idea for activism from their living rooms to like-minded people across the country — and to the centre of the news cycle.

Consumer activist was not exactly a familiar role for Coulter, 45, when she decided to launch the boycott.

“Like many college students, I was more politicall­y minded back then. But that part of my life has been really dormant my entire adult years,” Coulter said.

But now, Grab Your Wallet has practicall­y become a full-time job: Coulter, a resident of the San Francisco Bay area, has outsourced all of her client work at her small marketing firm.

That marketing background, she says, has been a critical component of her ability to grow Grab Your Wallet. For example, an early co-collaborat­or had been using the hashtag #fashionnot­fascism to promote a similar idea.

Coulter said she thought the idea was “brilliant,” but also recognized quickly that it was “too strident and unwieldy for the average person.”

Coulter’s career also has given her experience creating social media content for brands, so she came into this with a feel for what grabs readers’ attention in their newsfeeds, and what encourages them to share posts with their own followers. According to an analysis by Captiv8, a firm that studies social media influence, there have been more than 496,000 “engagement­s” — likes, retweets, and the like — on Twitter or Instagram posts that include #grabyourwa­llet. Captiv8 found that a significan­t share of those posts originate in California or New York, suggesting the campaign has gotten particular­ly strong traction in those states.

Coulter’s day-to-day work on Grab Your Wallet comes in different forms: she regularly tracks how much online inventory individual retailers are carrying of Trumprelat­ed goods. And, perhaps most importantl­y, she spends time on Facebook and Twitter interactin­g with fellow boycotters. They often have the best tips on stores from which Trump merchandis­e has quietly disappeare­d, and she feels like members of the group gets more energized when she communicat­es with them directly.

There are also frequent decisions to be made about what companies should be on the list. Chains such as Lord & Taylor or Macy’s easily make the cut because they carry Trump family merchandis­e. But other times, it is less cut-and-dried. Bookstores are generally spared, but that could change if any agree to host Ivanka Trump during her upcoming book tour. Belk has removed Ivanka Trump gear from its website, but not its brick-and-mortar stores, so it is still on the Grab Your Wallet list.

While Coulter started the campaign as an outcry against Donald Trump’s treatment of women, it has mushroomed into a more sprawling expression of anti-Trump sentiment. Some are worried about the conflict-of-interest issues associated with having a president with such a tangled web of business ties in the White House. Others came into the fold after Trump issued an executive order that barred refugees and people from seven majority-Muslim nations from entering the United States.

But even as the tent gets bigger, Coulter is determined to keep the goal the same: not let it turn into an aimless funnel for outrage but to continue to offer clear, actionable ways for companies to get out of boycotters’ crosshairs.

Coulter is still figuring out what’s next for Grab Your Wallet: she hopes, at some point, not to be a one-woman band. And perhaps the campaign might grow to include other companies that aren’t necessaril­y affiliated with the Trumps, but those that in some other way are perceived to be standing in the way of inclusivit­y. Retreating is not on the list of possibilit­ies.

“I feel a seriousnes­s of purpose that I’ve never felt before in my life,” Coulter said.

 ?? CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK, CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK ?? Shannon Coulter, owner of a small marketing firm in the San Francisco Bay area, is a co-founder of the Grab Your Wallet boycott campaign.
CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK, CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK Shannon Coulter, owner of a small marketing firm in the San Francisco Bay area, is a co-founder of the Grab Your Wallet boycott campaign.

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