Healthier men one moustache at a time Adam Garone

I think the beautiful Mullen put it

perfectly every man deserves the

opportunity to grow a little bit of

luxury ladies and gentlemen more

importantly Mo Bros and Mo sisters for

the next 70 minutes I’m going to share

with you my Movember journey and how

through that journey we’ve redefined

charity we’re redefining the way

prostate cancer researchers are working

together throughout the world and I hope

through that process that I inspire you

to create something significant in your

life something significant that will go

on and make this world a better place so

the most common question I get asked I’m

going to answer it now so I don’t have

to do it over drinks tonight

is how did this come about how do you

Movember start well normally a charity

starts with the cause and someone that

is directly affected by a cause they

then go on to create an event and beyond

that a foundation to support that pretty

much in every case that’s how a charity

starts not so with Movember Movember

started in a very traditional Australian

way was on a Sunday afternoon there was

my brother and a mate having a few beers

and I watching the world go by had a few

more beers and I had the conversation

turned to 70s fashion

and how everything manages to come back

into style a few more beers so there has

to be some stuff that hasn’t come back

then one more beer was whatever happened

to the mustache why hasn’t that made a

comeback so there’s a lot more beers and

then the day ended with a challenge to

bring the mustache back so in Australia

mo is slang for mustache

so we renamed the month November

Movember and created some pretty basic

rules which still stand today and they

are start the month clean-shaven rock

and moustache not a beard not a go to

your mustache for the 30 days of

November and then we agreed that we

would come together at the end of month

have a moustache themed party and award

a prize for the best and of course the

worst mustache now trust me when you’re

growing a moustache back in 2003 and

there were 30 of us back then and this

is before the ironic hipster mustache

movement

it created a lot of controversy so my

boss wouldn’t let me go and see clients

my girlfriend at the time who’s no

longer my girlfriend hated it

parents would shuffle kids away from us

but we came together at the end of the

month we celebrated our journey it was a

real journey and we had a lot of fun and

in 2004 I said to the guys that was so

much fun

we need to legitimize this so we can get

away with it year on year so we started

thinking about that we were inspired by

the women around us and all they were

doing for breast cancer we thought you

know what there’s nothing for men’s

health why is that why why can’t we

combine growing in the stache and do

something for men’s health and I started

to research that topic and discovered

prostate cancer is the male equivalent

of breast cancer in terms of the number

of men that die from it and diagnosed

with it but there was nothing for this

cause

so we married growing a mustache with

prostate cancer and then we created our

tag line which is changing the face of

men’s health and that eloquently

describes a challenge changing your

appearance for the 30 days and also the

outcome that we’re trying to achieve

getting men engaged in their health

having them have a better understanding

about the health risks that they face so

with that model I then cold-called the

CEO of the prostate cancer foundation I

said to him I’ve got the most amazing

idea that’s going to transform your

organization and I didn’t want to share

with him the idea over the phone so I

convinced him to meet with me for coffee

in Melbourne in 2004 we sat down I

shared with him my vision of getting men

growing mustaches across Australia

raising awareness for this cause and

funds for his organization

I needed a partnership to legitimately

do that and I said we’re going to come

together at the end we’re gonna have a

moustache themed party we can have DJs

we’re going to celebrate life and we’re

going to change the face of men’s health

and you just looked at me in laughed and

he said said Adam that’s a really novel

idea but we’re an ultra conservative

organization

we can’t have anything to do with you so

I paid for coffee that day and he’s

parting comment as we shook hands was

listen if you happen to raise any money

out of this we’ll gladly take it so my

lesson that year was persistence and we

persisted and we got four hundred and

fifty guys growing moustaches and

together we raised fifty four thousand

dollars we donated every cent to that to

the prostate cancer foundation of

Australia and that represented at the

time the single biggest donation they’d

ever received so from that day forward

my life has become about a mustache

everyday this morning I wake up and go

my life isn’t about a mustache

essentially I’m a mustache farmer and my

season is November

so in 2005 the campaign got more

momentum was more successful in

Australia and then New Zealand and then

in 2006 we came to a pivotal point we

was consuming so much of our time after

hours on weekends that we thought we

either need to close this down or figure

a way to fund Movember so that I could

quit my job and go and spend more time

in the organisation and take it to the

next level it’s really interesting when

you try and figure a way to fund the

fundraising organization built off

growing moustaches let me tell you

there’s not too many people interested

in investing in that not even the

prostate cancer foundation who had

raised about 1.2 million dollars for at

that stage so again we persisted and

foster’s brewing came to the party and

gave us our first-ever sponsorship and

that was enough for me to quit my job by

consulting on the side and leading into

Movember 2006 we’d run through all the

money from Foster’s would run through

all the money I had and essentially we

had no money left and we’d convinced all

our suppliers creative agencies web

development agencies hosting companies

whatnot to delay their billing until

December so we’d racked up at this stage

about $600,000 worth of debt so if

November 2006 didn’t happen the four

founders well we would have been broke

we would have been homeless sitting on

the street with mustaches

so we thought you know what if that’s

who I think that happens so what we’re

going to have a lot of fun doing it and

taught us the importance of taking risks

and really smart risks then in early

2007 a really interesting thing happened

we had Mo Bros from from Canada from the

US and from the UK emailing us and

calling us and saying hey there’s

nothing for prostate cancer bring this

campaign to these countries so we

thought why not let’s do it so I cold

called the CEO of prostate cancer Canada

and I said to him I have this most

amazing concept it’s going to transform

your organization I don’t want to tell

you about it now but will you meet with

me if I fly all the way to Toronto so I

flew here met down on Front Street East

and we sat in the boardroom I said right

he’s my vision of getting men growing

mustaches all across Canada raising

awareness and funds for your

organization and he looked at me and

laughed and said Adam sounds like a

really novel idea but we’re all true

conservative organization I’ve heard

this before I know I know how it goes

but he said we will partner with you but

we’re not going to invest in it you need

to figure a way to bring this campaign

across here and make it work so what we

did was we took some of the money that

we raised in Australia to bring the

campaign across to this country of the

US and UK and we did that because we

knew if this was successful we could

raise infinitely more money globally

than we could just in Australia and that

money fuels research and that research

will get us to a cure we’re not about

finding an Australian cure or a Canadian

cure we’re about finding the cure so in

2007 we bought the campaign across here

and it was it set the stage for the

campaign it wasn’t as successful as we

thought it would be we’re sort of very

gung-ho with that success in Australia

and New Zealand that stage so that you

really taught us the importance of being

patient and really understanding the

local market before you become so bold

as to set lofty targets but what I’m

really pleased to say is in 2010

Movember became a truly global movement

was just kept at the post in terms of

the number one fundraising campaign in

the world last year we had 450,000

mowbray spread across the world and

together we raised 77 million dollars

and that makes Movember now the biggest

funder of prostate cancer research and

support programs in the world and that

is an amazing achievement when you think

about us growing mustaches and for us we

have redefined charity our ribbon is a

hairy ribbon our ambassadors are the

Mowbray’s and the most sisters and I

think that’s been fundamental to our

success we hand across our brand now

campaign to those people we let them

embrace it and interpret it in their own

way so now I live in Los Angeles because

the prostate cancer foundation of the

u.s. is based there and I always get

asked by the media down there because

it’s so celebrity driven who are your

celebrity ambassadors and I say to them

last year we’re fortunate enough to have

450,000 celebrity ambassadors what what

do you mean it’s like every single

person every single mo bro and mo sister

that participates in Movember is our

celebrity ambassador and that was so so

important and fundamental to our success

now what I want to share with you is one

of my most touching moment moments and

it happened here in Toronto last year at

the end of the campaign I was out with

the team it was the end of Movember we’d

had a great campaign and - we’d had our

fair share of beer that night but I said

you know what I think we’ve got one more

bar left in us so we piled into a taxi

and this was our taxi driver and I was

sitting in the back seat and he turned

around and said where you going

I said how that is an amazing mustache

and he said I’m doing it for Movember

and I said so am I and I said tell me

your Movember story and he goes listen I

know it’s about men’s health

I know it’s about prostate cancer but

this is for breast cancer I said okay

that’s interesting he goes last year my

mum passed away from breast cancer in

Sri Lanka because we couldn’t afford

proper treatment for her and he said

this mustache is my tribute to my mum

and we sort of all choked up in the back

of the taxi and I didn’t tell him who I

was because I didn’t he was appropriate

and I just shook his hand I said thank

you so much your mum would be so proud

and from that moment I realized that

Movember is so much more than a mustache

having a joke it’s about each person

coming to this platform embracing it in

their own way and being significant in

their own life for us now at Movember we

really focus on three program areas and

having a true impact awareness in

education

survivor support programs and research

now we always focus naturally on how

much we raise because is a very tangible

outcome but for me awareness and

education is more important the funds

were raised because I know that is

changing and saving lives today it’s

probably best example by a young guy

that I met at South by Southwest in

Austin Texas at the start of the year he

came up to me and said thank you for

starting Movember I said thank you for

doing Movember I looked at him I was

like I’m pretty sure you can’t grow a

moustache

and I said watch Movember story and he

said I agree the worst miss - ever but I

went home for Thanksgiving dinner and

pretty quickly the conversation around

the table turned to what the hell was

going on and we talked I talk to them

about Movember and then after that my

dad came up to me and at the age of 26

for the first time ever I had a

conversation with my dad one on one

about men’s health I had a conversation

with my dad about prostate cancer I

learned that my grandfather had prostate

cancer and I was able to share with my

dad that he was twice as likely to get

that disease and he didn’t know that and

he hadn’t been getting screened for it

so now that guy is getting screened for

prostate cancer so those conversations

getting men engaged in this at whatever

age is so critically important and in my

view so much more important than the

funds we raise now to the funds we raise

and research and how we’re redefining

research we fund prostate cancer

foundations now in 13 countries we

literally fund hundreds if not thousands

of institutions and researchers around

the world and when we looked at this

more recently we realized there’s a real

lack of collaboration going on even with

institutions that alone nationally let

alone globally and this is not unique to

prostate cancer this is this is a cancer

research the world over and so we said

right we redefine charity we need to

redefine the way these guys operate how

do we do that

so what we did was we created our global

action plan we’re taking 10% of what’s

raised in each country now and putting

it into a global fund

we’ve got the best prostate cancer

scientific minds in the world that look

after that fund and they come together

each year and identified the number-one

priority and that last year was getting

a better screening test so they

identified that as a priority and then

they’ve gone and recruited now 300

researchers from around the world that

are studying that topic essentially the

same topic so now we’re funding them to

the tune of about five or six million

dollars to collaborate and bringing them

together

that’s a unique thing in the cancer

world and we know through that

collaboration it will accelerate

outcomes and that’s how we’re redefining

the research world so what I know about

my Movember journey is that with a

really creative idea with passion with

persistence and a lot of patience

for mates for mustaches can inspire a

roomful of people and that roomful of

people can go on and inspire a city and

that city is Melbourne my home and that

city can go on and inspire a state and

that state can go on and inspire a

nation and beyond that you can create a

global movement that is changing the

face of men’s health my name is Adam

groaning and that’s my story thank you

我认为美丽的马伦说得

完美,每个男人都应该有

机会成长一点

奢华的女士们和先生们,更

重要的是

在接下来的 70 分钟里,Mo Bros 和 Mo 姐妹我将

与你分享我的 Movember 旅程以及如何度过

旅程我们重新定义了

慈善事业我们正在重新定义

前列腺癌研究人员

在世界各地合作的方式,我希望

通过这个过程,我能激励你

在你的生活中创造一些有意义的

东西,一些有意义的东西会继续

下去,让这个世界变得更美好 地方所以

我被问到的最常见的问题我

现在要回答,所以今晚我不必

在喝酒时

做这件事是怎么发生的

这直接受到一个原因的影响,

然后他们继续创建一个活动,除此之外

,一个基金会几乎在每种情况下

都支持这一点 r Movember

以一种非常传统的澳大利亚方式开始,

在一个周日下午,

我的兄弟和一个伙伴喝了几杯啤酒

,我看着世界过去

又喝了几杯啤酒,然后我把话题

转向了 70 年代的时尚

以及一切如何管理 要

恢复风格,再喝几杯啤酒,所以

必须有一些没有回来的东西

然后再喝一杯啤酒是

胡须发生了什么,为什么没有

卷土重来所以有更多的啤酒,

然后是一天 以将胡须带回来的挑战结束,

所以在澳大利亚

mo 是胡须的俚语,

所以我们将月份重新命名为 11 月

Movember,并创建了一些非常基本的

规则,这些规则至今仍然有效

在 11 月的 30 天里去你的小胡子

,然后我们同意我们

将在月底聚在一起

举办一个小胡子主题派对,并

为最好的胡须颁奖,当然还有

最差的胡须现在 t 当你

在 2003 年留胡子时生锈了,

那时我们有 30 个人,这

是在讽刺时髦的胡子运动之前,

它引起了很多争议,所以我的

老板不让我去见

我女朋友的客户

不再是我女朋友的那段时间,

父母会把孩子从我们身边带走,

但我们在月底聚在一起

庆祝我们的旅程,这是一次

真正的旅程,我们玩得很开心,

在 2004 年我对这些家伙说 这

太有趣了,

我们需要将其合法化,这样我们才能

年复一年地摆脱它,所以我们开始

思考,我们受到

了周围女性的启发,以及她们

为乳腺癌所做的一切,我们认为你

知道什么是无用的 男性

健康为什么就是为什么我们不能

结合成长,

为男性健康做点什么,我

开始研究这个话题,发现

前列腺癌在男性数量上相当于

乳腺癌 即从中诊断

出它,但没有任何

原因,

所以我们结婚了,因为

前列腺癌留着胡子,然后我们创建了我们的

标语,它正在改变男性健康的面貌,

并雄辩地

描述了改变你

30 岁外表的挑战 天,以及

我们努力实现的结果,

让男性参与到他们的健康中,

让他们更好地

了解他们面临的健康风险,所以

我用那个模型冷冷地打电话

给前列腺癌基金会的首席执行官,我

说 他我有一个最了不起的

想法,它将改变你的

组织,我不想

通过电话与他分享这个想法,所以我

说服他

在 2004 年在墨尔本与我见面喝咖啡,我们坐下来

分享 他我的愿景是让

澳大利亚各地的男人留胡子,以

提高人们对这项事业的认识并

为他的组织

提供资金我需要一个合作伙伴来合法地

做到这一点,我说我们会来的

最后我们将一起举办一个以

胡子为主题的派对 我们可以请 DJ

我们要庆祝生活 我们

要改变男性健康的面貌

你只是笑着看着我

他说亚当 一个非常新颖的

想法,但我们是一个极端保守的

组织,

我们与你没有任何关系,所以

那天我付了咖啡钱,他

在我们握手时发表了临别评论,

如果你碰巧从中筹集到任何

资金,请听我们说 我很乐意接受,所以那一年我的

教训是坚持不懈,我们

坚持了下来,我们有

450 个人留着胡子,

我们一起筹集了 5.4 万

美元,我们把每一分钱都捐给

了澳大利亚的前列腺癌基金会

,这代表着 他们

收到的最大一笔捐款从那天起,

我的生活变成了每天早上的胡子

我醒来并离开

我的生活本质上不是胡子

我是一个胡子农民和我的

赛季是 11 月,

所以在 2005 年,该活动

在澳大利亚和新西兰取得了更大的成功

,然后

在 2006 年,我们达到了一个关键点

,我们在周末下班后花费了很多时间

,我们认为我们

要么需要关闭 或者

想办法为 Movember 提供资金,这样我就可以

辞掉工作,花更多时间

在组织中,并将其提升到

一个新的水平

小胡子让我告诉你

,没有太多人有

兴趣投资那个,甚至没有

在那个阶段筹集了大约 120 万美元的前列腺癌基金会,

所以我们再次坚持,

福斯特的酿造来到了派对,

给了我们我们的第一个 赞助,

这足以让我辞掉我的工作,通过提供

咨询并进入

2006 年 2006 年的 Movember,我们

将花光福斯特的所有资金。

我有钱,基本上我们

没有钱了,我们说服了

我们所有的供应商创意机构网络

开发机构托管公司

什么的推迟他们的

账单直到 12 月所以我们在这个阶段积累了

大约 600,000 美元的债务,如果

2006 年 11 月 没有发生这四个

创始人我们会破产

我们会无家可归地

坐在街上留着小胡子

所以我们想你知道如果那是

我认为发生的人那么我们

将有很多乐趣做 它

教会了我们冒险的重要性

和真正明智的风险然后在

2007 年初发生了一件非常有趣的事情,

我们有来自加拿大、

美国和英国的 Mo Bros 给我们发电子邮件并

打电话给我们说嘿

,前列腺癌没有什么带来 这个

活动针对这些国家,所以我们

想为什么不让我们这样做,所以我

打电话给加拿大前列腺癌的首席执行官

,我对他说我有一个最

了不起的概念,它将改变

你的组织我现在不想告诉

你但是

如果我一路飞到多伦多你会和我见面吗所以我

飞到这里在前街东见面

我们坐在会议室我说是的

他是我的愿景 让男人

在加拿大各地留胡子

,为您的组织提高认识和资金

,他看着我

笑着说亚当听起来是一个

非常新奇的想法,但我们都是真正的

保守组织

我在知道我知道它是怎么回事之前就听说过这个 去了,

但他说我们会与你合作,但

我们不会投资它,你需要

想办法把这个活动

带到这里并让它发挥作用,所以我们

所做的就是拿走了

我们筹集的一些钱 澳大利亚将这项

运动带到

美国和英国这个国家,我们这样做是因为我们

知道如果这成功了,我们可以

在全球筹集

到比在澳大利亚更多的资金,而且

资金会推动研究,而研究

将使我们能够 一个疯子 e 我们不是要

寻找澳大利亚或加拿大的

治愈方法 我们是要找到治愈方法 所以在

2007 年我们在这里买下了这场运动

正是它为这场运动奠定了基础

它并没有我们

想象的那么成功 会不会是我们

在澳大利亚

和新西兰那个阶段取得了成功,所以你

真的教会了我们

耐心和真正了解

当地市场的重要性,然后你变得如此大胆

以至于设定了崇高的目标但是什么 我

真的很高兴地说,在 2010 年,

Movember 成为了一个真正的全球性运动

,就去年世界

上排名第一的筹款活动而言,

我们在全球范围内有 450,000 个

莫布雷

,我们总共筹集了 7700 万美元

这使得 Movember 现在成为世界

上前列腺癌研究和

支持计划的最大资助者

on 是一条

毛茸茸的丝带 我们的大使是

Mowbray 和最姐妹,我

认为这是我们

成功的基础 我们将我们的品牌现在

宣传给那些我们让他们

接受它并以自己的方式解释它的人

所以现在我住在 洛杉矶因为

美国的前列腺癌

基金会 总部设在那里,我总是

被那里的媒体问到,因为

这太受名人的驱使了

参加 Movember 的每一位兄弟和姐妹都是我们的

名人大使,这

对我们的成功是如此重要和至关重要,

现在我想与您分享的

是我最感人的时刻之一,

它去年发生在多伦多

在竞选结束时,我和团队一起出去

了,那是 Movember 的结束,我们

进行了一场伟大的竞选,并且 - 那天晚上我们喝了

相当多的啤酒,但我说

你知道我认为我们有什么 我们还

剩下一个酒吧,所以我们挤进了一辆出租车

,这是我们的出租车司机,我

坐在后座,他

转身说你要去哪里

我说那是一个惊人的小胡子

,他说我在做 它适用于 Movember

和 我说我也是,我说告诉我

你的 Movember 故事,他去听我

知道这关乎男性健康

斯里兰卡的癌症,因为我们无法

为她提供适当的治疗,他说

这个小胡子是我对我妈妈的敬意

,我们都

在出租车后座窒息而我没有告诉他我

是谁,因为我 他是不是很合适

,我只是和他握手我说非常感谢

你的妈妈会很自豪

,从那一刻起我意识到

Movember 不仅仅是一个

小胡子开玩笑,而是关于每个人

来到这个平台 以

自己的方式拥抱它,并在

我们自己的生活中发挥重要作用现在在 Movember,我们

真正专注于三个计划领域,并

教育

幸存者支持计划和研究中具有真正的影响意识

现在我们总是自然地

关注我们 aise 因为这是一个非常切实的

成果,但对我来说,提高认识和

教育更重要,

因为我知道今天正在

改变和拯救生命,这

可能

是我在德克萨斯州奥斯汀的 South by Southwest 遇到的一个年轻人最好的例子

今年年初他

来找我说谢谢你

开始了 Movember 我说谢谢你

做了 Movember 我看着他

我很确定你不能长

胡子

,我说看 Movember 的故事,他

说我同意最糟糕的错过 - 但是我

回家吃感恩节晚餐,

很快桌子周围的谈话

就转向到底发生了什么

,我们谈到了我和他们

谈论 Movember,然后我

爸爸来找我 在 26 岁时,

我第一次

与父亲一对一地

谈论男性健康问题 我

与父亲谈论前列腺癌

我得知祖父患有前列腺

癌,我能够分享 我和我

父亲说,他患这种疾病的可能性是他的两倍

,但他不知道,而且

他没有接受过筛查,

所以现在那个人正在接受

前列腺癌筛查,所以这些谈话

让男人参与其中 无论

年龄多么重要,在我

看来,比

我们现在筹集的资金对我们筹集

和研究的资金以及我们如何重新定义

研究我们资助前列腺癌

基金会现在在 13 个国家

资助数百甚至数千

世界各地的机构和研究人员,当我们最近看到这一点时,

我们意识到

即使与

仅在全国范围内

更不用说在全球范围内的机构也确实缺乏合作,这并不是前列腺癌独有的,

这是一项癌症

研究 世界各地,所以我们说

对了,我们重新定义了慈善事业,我们需要

重新定义这些人的运作方式

我们如何做到这一点,

所以我们所做的就是创建了我们的全球

行动计划 n 我们现在将

每个国家筹集的资金的 10%

投入到一个全球基金中,

我们拥有世界上最优秀的前列腺癌

科学家

来管理该基金,他们每年都会聚集在一起

并确定数量- 一个

优先事项,去年是

获得更好的筛选测试,所以他们

确定这是一个优先事项,然后

他们已经去招募了

来自世界各地的 300 名研究人员,他们

正在研究该主题基本上是

相同的主题,所以现在我们正在资助他们

大约 5 到 600 万

美元用于合作并将它们

聚集在一起

,这在癌症领域是独一无二的

,我们知道通过这种

合作将加速

成果,这就是我们重新

定义研究世界的方式,所以我对

我的 Movember 的旅程是,一个

真正有创意的想法,充满激情,

坚持不懈,

对胡须的伴侣有很大的耐心,可以激发一

屋子的人,而那一屋子的

人可以 继续激励一个城市,

那个城市就是墨尔本,我的家,那个

城市可以继续激励一个州,

那个州可以继续激励一个

国家,除此之外,你可以发起一场

改变

男性健康面貌的全球运动 我的名字是亚当

呻吟,这就是我的故事谢谢