San Marino, Marlù Spa: Marta Fabbri receives the Mede@ Imprese e Industria Award
On Tuesday 22 November, in the splendid setting of Villa Laetitia in Rome, the ceremony for the third edition of the “Med Award@” against gender-based violence, in the presence of her godmother Anna Fendi.
With great emotion, Marta Fabbrimarketing director and co-founder, with her sisters Morena and Monica, of Marlù Spa in San Marino, she received from the presenter Simona Gobbi and the actor Edoardo Sylos Labini the Mede@ Award for the Business and Industry sector.
A very important acknowledgment, which rewards theethical commitment with which Marlù’s communication has been dealing with for years themes And social issues. In her speech, Marta Fabbri underlined the responsibility that she and her sisters feel very strongly every day, both in communicating – in the media, online, in stores, in organizing events – and in designing and distributing jewels that express messages, meanings, values, emotions. “A responsibility that all companies should feel” – says Marta Fabbri – “because those who do business have the privilege of addressing thousands of people every day”.
For this reason, for the younger public, Marlù has been hiring for years even a educational rolewhich led her to sign some partnerships with theUniversity from BolognaIUniversity of San Marino and numerous other non-profit organizations and associations, with which he deals with delicate social issues such as the bullyingthere peer violence is that gender.
Again for the same reason, in 20 years of company history, Marlù has never entrusted communication to celebrities, but has always thought that its best testify to it were the people who wear her jewels, young and oldbecause Marlù is aimed at a vast and transversal audience.
Marta Fabbri concluded her speech with a look to the future and the promise that Marlù will continue to be involved in social missions that focus on the value of solidarity towards those who are weaker for economic, social, cultural reasons, and towards those who suffer discrimination gender, ethnicity, age, psychophysical conditions. Even the youngest, for example, can suffer discrimination and Marta Fabbri’s last words are addressed to them: “After the years of the pandemic, in which young people were forced home and suffered isolation, Marlù’s next initiatives will once again favor the creation of live meetings, to allow the youngest to find moments of aggregation”.