Where on Earth Is Buzz? Why Honey Nut Cheerios Nixed Its Busy Bee.General Mills Canada aims to put a cause-marketing bee in your bonnet about the horrifying plight of our pollinating friends. But first, your contact information, please.

ByKim Lachance Shandrow

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

干杯to Cheerios for speaking for the bees.

The legacy cereal brand is stirring up a big buzz about the plight of our winged friends. ICYMI, the insects that the human race relies on for pollinatingone out of every three bitesof the food we need to survive are vanishing. They're eerilyabandoning their coloniesand dying off in record numbers.

To draw attention to the worsening global crisis -- and perhaps to ease the sting ofgrowing public concernsurrounding itsuseofgenetically-modified ingredientsand otherunfun exposure-- General Mills Canada has strategically yanked Buzz, its iconic mascot. The bee has officially bugged off of its Honey Nut Cheerios boxes. A blank white silhouette of the bubbly honeybee is all that's left in his absence.

Related:Food Blogger Strikes Again, Taking On Chemicals in Cereal

The Lorax would be proud. So wouldMorgan FreemanandEllen Page. Cosette, the ad agency behind the brilliant marketing maneuver, sure is.

"General Mills' decision to draw attention to the issue of declining bee populations marks the continuation of its commitment to purpose-based marketing, which means brands will go beyond traditional statements such as product benefit in order to align with what's really important to consumers," Cossette chief creative officer Peter Ignazi toldAdWeek. "By taking the bold step of removing a well-established brand symbol from its packaging, General Mills is further challenging marketing's conventional thinking to underscore its point."

Image Credit: Honey Nut Cheerios

In step with its latest "cause marketing" crusade, the legacy brand also released a heartstring-tugging video. The clip (featured above) depicts one emotional animal rescue after another, set to the sound of a chorus somberly singing Mr. Mister's 1985 hit "Broken Wings."

Related:Cause Marketing Matters to Consumers

"Helping is in our nature," declare splashes of text floating over touching imagery. "Now another friend needs our help. The bees need us." Next is the here's-where-you-come-in call to action: "Join us in planting 35 million wildflowers to help the bees."

The company launched the feel-good campaign last Monday,companion websiteand catchyhashtagincluded. "Buzz is missing because there's something serious going on with the world's bees," the thoroughly branded website reads. "With deteriorating bee colony health, bees everywhere have been disappearing by the millions and it's time we all did something about it."

Related:Dislike: If You 'Like' General Mills on Facebook, You Can't Sue the Company

Heartily agreed. We'll drink the sweet leftover cereal milk to that. If we lived in Canada, we might even be inspired to plant aVeseys'swildflower seed, too. The cereal maker is giving away free flower seed packets from its cross-promotional partner in the hopes that Canadians will plant 35 million wildflowers to sow the seeds for healthier bees. (There's a catch: To get the seeds, you must firstenter a Honey Nut Cheerios contest, which involves handing over a bunch of your direct contact information.)

Longtime beekeeper Rob McFarland, president and co-founder of Los Angeles-basedHoneyLove, a nonprofit honeybee conservation organization, says the buzzy campaign is a thoughtful first step in a much-needed larger effort.

Image Credit: Honey Nut Cheerios

"I think it's a really creative, encouraging way to get the conversation started," he told狗万官方. "We'd like to see efforts like these go a step further. We'd like to see companies like General Mills really stepping in, in a big way, to do even more things that would make a difference. For example, ensuring that the farms they're sourcing their products from are planting hedgerows and planting plants for pollinators."

Related:Why This $34 Billion Company Is Dipping a Toe Into Crowdfunding

Not everyone is as moved by Buzz moving aside. Maryam Henein, the director of消失的蜜蜂, a 2010 documentary that explores the environmental ramificationsColony Collapse Disorder, dismisses the personified bee being backburnered as little more than a clever "healthwashing"-reminiscent corporate publicity stunt.

"Sure, on the surface it's a positive attempt to create awareness," the investigative journalist andHoneyColonyeditor-in-chief told us. "Nutritionally, Honey Nut Cheerios is crap, quasi-healthy at best. Based on my research and others' extensive research prior, General Mills most likely uses "funny honey,' commercially-produced, compromised honey that's heated and dead, not raw and nourishing, so this whole do-good campaign is ironic."

"Honey" is listed as the fifth ingredient on the cereal's nutrition label, honey that General Millsgoes out of its wayto position as pure and natural. To be fair, it bears noting that the company has recentlysupported several initiativesto protect honeybees in their natural habitats.

Related:OK, You Can Sue Us: General Mills Scraps Controversial Terms of Service Updates

We reached out to the Minneapolis, Minn.-based American arm of the corporation to find out if it plans on following its Canadian cousin in temporarily benching Buzz, and to ask where both divisions source their honey and other Honey Nut Cheerios ingredients from. We have yet to receive a response.

Buzz being M.I.A. is a first for Honey Nut Cheerios, but the cute little bugger won't be gone for long. He's on official hiatus north of the border reportedly until July. At least while General Mills Canada does its part to make sure you don't mind your beeswax about the declining bee population.

Related:Should You Care About the Bees?

The honey- and almond-flavored version of the original Cheerios was first introduced in 1979. Don't worry: nowater-hogging almondsare used in the making of the whole grain oat breakfast food. General Mills stopped adding real nuts to its recipe in 2006 in favor of "natural almond flavor." The nutty tang actually comes fromthe pits of apricots and peaches. Who knew?
Wavy Line
Kim Lachance Shandrow

Former West Coast Editor

Kim Lachance Shandrow is the former West Coast editor at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was a commerce columnist atLos Angeles CityBeat,a news producer at MSNBC and KNBC in Los Angeles and a frequent contributor to theLos Angeles Times. She has also written forGovernment Technologymagazine,LA Yogamagazine, theLowell Sunnewspaper, HealthCentral.com, PsychCentral.com and the former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Coop. Follow her on Twitter at@Lashandrow. You can also follow her on Facebookhere.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business Solutions

Learn to Program an AI Chatbot for Your Business in This $30 Course

Get back-to-school savings on this AI coding course.

Business Ideas

55 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2023

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2023.

Data & Recovery

Get 1TB of Cloud Storage for Life for $119.97 With This Back-to-School Sale

这1 tb的云存储的处理ion Is Only $119.97 for Back to School

Leadership

This Common Leadership Habit Will Harm Your Credibility. Are You Guilty of It?

As leaders, we're always looking for ways to build credibility among peers and employees. But this easy-to-make mistake can ruin it in an instant.

Thought Leaders

Mark Cuban Says These are the Dumbest Things Entrepreneurs Do

Whatever you do, don't do the first thing on this list. Or the second. Definitely not the third.