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Wind Energy: Don’t Blow It

April 2nd, 2010 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets

Green Marketing Blog

Attention Wind Energy companies. It’s not enough to talk kilowatts, wind speed and show me hunky shots of turbines. Make me fall in love. They say all love affairs begin in the mind first, and they are right.

Carolyn and our Art Director, Nicole, attended the Renewable Energy World Show in Austin recently. They noticed over and over again companies, big and small, basically spoke to the head but not to the heart of the issue. They need to remember that I have to say yes to the concept of wind energy first. I have to be willing to change my lifelong energy consumption patterns before I can say yes to turbines as my source of energy.

Tell me how old the use of wind as energy is. Think the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. Tell me how practical it is now. Tell me that wind generation is easy to live with. That it is free energy. Tell me how tax credits and government programs are making it so easily affordable. How it will increase farm profits and decrease commercial and residential energy bills. Help make choosing wind a breeze for your customers. Then tell me why your version is better.

Wind Energy companies, do something that will make news. Challenge a school district to an energy audit. Show them how much they could be saving. But do it now and get your message out. The government is reported to be creating programs promoting green and alternative energy. That will begin to spike consumer interest. Make sure you have a message that will capture that interest. 

The time is now. Don’t blow it.

It’s the message, the message, the message.

March 10th, 2010 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets

green message

We’ve just come back from the CORE Sustainability Summit in Denver. It was a great show and like every other good trade show we have even attended or exhibited at, we learned a lot. Listening to the many great presenters and speaking to the hundreds of conference goers we heard one thing over and over again. The world of sustainability is suffering from a serious lack of messaging.

This was the theme of the show for us. And well it should be because that is what we have been blogging about since our blog began. Making your green message relevant, accessible and compelling to the mainstream.

It was great for us to be exhibiting there and have our booth proclaim in big, easily readable type “Effective messaging for the maturing green market.” We could see by the interest everyone showed that we had hit a note that resonated broadly among the audience. It showed that across the board the lack of coherent messaging was high up on everyone’s list of what needed to be improved in the world of green communication.

At MOM, it all comes down to a few important points.

Make your message relevant not only to the needs of the planet but to the needs of all those living on it.

Make your message compelling by thinking of what your audience needs and answer those needs.

Make your message educational, informative and entertaining.

Tell your target what’s in it for them.

That’s why we love trade shows so much. In the world of virtual communication, you get to meet your customer face to face and hear them tell you exactly what you need to do.

What do you need to do?

Our Green Marketing Lab in Denver is around the corner

March 8th, 2010 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets

Imagine being in a room filled with other green-minded business owners and execs and tapping into their smarts for 3 hours on behalf of your business? That’s what our Green Marketing Labs are all about.  Our first one in Denver is happening in a few weeks. Think of it, you can saturate on Saturday in our lab and ski on Sunday on the slopes. 

Here’s what happening in our first lab. 

Green Marketing Lab 1: Developing Your Marketing GPS (Green Positioning Strategy) on March 27.

With over 1,500+ new products enter the market each year, how will you break through the clutter and position your product or service so it’s not another “me too”? In this green marketing lab, you will:

Obtain a clear understanding of the current green market – its obstacles and opportunities

Identify how meaningfully different you are from your competition

Uncover the advantages that result from using your product or service

Identify your key target audience(s) and the rational and emotional reasons they buy your product or service

Develop a strategy statement to effectively communicate your message to your target audience(s)

These interactive, real-life marketing laboratories will give you the insights and tangible solutions you need to make your marketing meaningful in the maturing green market. So bring your questions. Bring your challenges. Roll your sleeves up and have some fun.

PRICING: $40 per lab or $130 for all 4 labs (discounts available for CORE members).

Saturday March 27, 2010, 9:00am – 12 noon

Location: All 4 labs will be held in the CORE offices at 1801 California Street, Suite 4900, Denver, CO 80202.

Register for all 4 labs or any of them individually at: www.corecolorado.org or call (303) 894 6333

Presenters: Irv Weinberg and Carolyn Parrs of Mind Over Markets, a dedicated green marketing communications company in Santa Fe, NM. To learn more about our work, go to www.mindovermarkets.com.

Hope to see you there! Can you help us spread the word and Retweet this or share this with your community?

Many thanks!

Take the Green Marketing Challenge: Organic Bug

March 6th, 2010 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets

Organic Bug

Next up for our “TAKE THE GREEN MARKETING CHALLENGE” is Organic Bug. Thanks for stepping up, Peggy. You’re doing some great things but you need a little help.

Organic and healthy product websites are no longer unique. There are many of them —  including those endorsed by well known green organizations like the Sierra Club. There’s competition so you need to be competitive. Not in a negative way, but in a “having a unique position” way. Something you do, accomplish or offer – or even the way you do it, that will communicate to your customer why they should choose you. When we Googled “sustainable products”, there were over 14,000,000 hits. You have got to be unique. Don’t worry, we can help. 

BRANDING LINE

Let’s begin with your tag line, “Sustainable Products Promoting a Healthy Lifestyle”. Yes, it describes what you offer but that’s where it ends. Tag lines are not mission statements. They’re compelling statements that position your company, give it personality and a reason to be. It’s saying why you and not someone else.

Irv: Think about what your end benefit is. Are you bringing the green world down to earth for your customer? Are you making it more affordable, more accessible?  Have you sourced through all the green products and found those that offer ecology, efficacy and economy? What is your niche within this niche?  The answers to those questions will lead you to a tag line that says your unique position in a clever, compelling way. 

Let us give you an example. For a client of ours that manufactures zero VOC, non-toxic paints, we created the tag line “Beauty Without the Beast”.  That line acknowledged that people paint their homes first to to beautify them. So we had to tell them we were going to give them the beauty they wanted, without the toxins they didn’t want. See what we mean?

COMPANY NAME AND LOGO

You have a homespun name and logo so why not capitalize on it? But it does have a downside. There are a lot of green lawncare and pest control companies out there now. Organic Bug could be confused with one of them. All the more reason to make your name stand for something. Maybe it’s playing with the “bug” a little and being the site for people who are bugged by green products that cost too much, work too little, etc.?

Carolyn: Maybe there’s a cute “bug” visual that can become the personality of your company? Is the bug smart? Funny? Clever? A wisecracker? You can deliver your message through its “voice” and personality. Now you are starting to create a reason to be.     

WEBSITE

Your web copy is a very important part of your communications. You have to make sure its working as hard as it can. Web visitors move fast. You only have a few seconds to grab their interest. Your products display nicely but they don’t reach out to us. Feature some and tell me their story. Some of your suppliers might want to be part of this.  Remember the web is an experience. Check out what Patagonia is doing with their Footprint Chronicles.  In short, in their mini interactive website, they investigate the footprint of several of their garmets. They put right out there what they are doing right and wrong — and how they are working to make it better. They put their mission where their mouth is by telling on themselves. This builds trust and a deep brand message that people know and love. What is yours?     

Nicole: Regarding the visual look of your homepage, the fonts are clean and legitable. Your white background opens up the space. But your menu drop downs are too long and overwhelming. Create sub menus. There is little  visual hierarchy on your homepage. Other than the big green box that jumps out, where do you want my eyes to go? Back to Patagonia, check out their homepage heirarchy and you’ll see what I mean.   

Bringing the green world to everyone is a great thing to do. The better you do it, the better it gets done.

Thanks Peggy!

If  this blog post was helpful to you, would you retweet it and share it with your friends?

Take the Green Marketing Challenge: Terra Source Gourmet Chocolate

February 23rd, 2010 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets

www.terrasourcechocolates.comA couple of weeks ago we challenged you right here on the Green Marketing Blog to TAKE THE GREEN MARKETING CHALLENGE. We’re happy to say we’ve had quite a few takers. Most of them green businesses that are part of the Green America Business Network. A brave bunch. Here’s what we asked:

Send us your green brand message (logo, brand line, graphic, copy), and we’ll evaluate it. That means our Green Team at Mind Over Markets will assess your brand and post the results here on our Green Marketing Blog.  Then we will open it up to you, our readers, to join in and make comments, suggestions, or add your brilliant ideas to the conversation.  Now let’s get going…     

BRANDING LINE

We’re happy to say that Terra Source Chocolates started the challenge off on a happy note. We like your branding line, “Responsibly Decadent” because it says it all and honors the real reason people love chocolate. Because it’s so decadently good. That’s a good start. A good balance of the green message and the chocolate message. So many green brands go to saving the earth as their total message. We’re happy you didn’t. Now hurry up and get your branding line integrated with your graphic and on your website because it is sorely missing there.

COMPANY NAME

Next, your name, Terra Source, does not have the same impact.

Irv (our copywriter and King): Personally, I don’t like generic names. I much prefer a name that is your claim. Terra Source could be anything, and in fact, variations of that are everywhere in the green product world. You name should be as unique as your product.

WEBSITE

Now to your website. Remember it’s going to be your #1 marketing vehicle, so use it well. Make it decadent too. Make healthy, responsible decadence part of your brand personality. Have fun with it. Be wickedly funny and charming in what you show and what you say. Define what decadence is for your customer and involve them in the process. Social media is perfect for this, just like we’re doing here.

Carolyn (social media maniac, project manager and sometimes copywriter): For instance, ask your customers and potential customers “What does decadent mean to you?” Post it right on your site, your blog, your packaging, etc. Have them join in the conversation. Create a decadent Facebook Fan page and give away some chocolate to your new fans who answer that question. Decadent is such a delicious word, you’ll get all sorts of yummy responses.

Back to your website. Right now, your web copy is as generic as your company name. There is so much good stuff to say about chocolate (its health benefits for one), that you are missing a big selling opportunity by not giving your customer permission to indulge. Tell me more about what makes your chocolate responsible. Then I can feel three times as good.  The taste, the benefits, the sustainability of it all. That’s a good story to be telling. Make sure you’re not saying what everyone else is saying.

Entice me. Visually, we all think you are missing it. Show me people eating your chocolate with a twinkle in their eye. Above all make your product photography luscious. Your current photography is a disservice to your product. Simply put, it’s not delicious enough. 

LOGO 

Your logo is another generic element. There are way too many planets in the green business logo universe today. And yours doesn’t even feature the countries that are the source of your chocolate.  If your logo is invisible, why bother? 

Nicole (our graphic artist extraordinaire): Name recognition is key in your branding efforts. Rethink your choice of fonts and typeface. Yours feel dated and hard to read. Why not use fonts that reflect your brand image – back to decadent again. Regarding your color choices on your site, one idea is to use ones that are actually ingredients in your chocolate: raspberry, blueberry, etc. This makes your color palate relevant and it enhances your brand line, “Responsibly Decadent”.

PACKAGING

Your packaging is inconsistent. Again, it needs to reflect your brand. (Are we sounding like a broken record yet?). It might be via color coding, illustration, photography, etc. Whatever you choose, let it be a marriage of elements that work together to strengthen your brand.

Irv: Mary Wells, one of the greats of advertising, once told me that good advertising is a substitute for a free sample. She was right. I want all your branding and your website to give me a taste of what you do and make me order it express shipping because I can’t wait for my first bite.

Ok, what do you think? Join in on the conversation by posting your thoughts below in our comment box.

And thank you Josie for TAKING THE GREEN MARKETING CHALLENGE.  We think you are on your way to fabulous and effective branding.

Saving the Planet Won’t Save Your Marketing

May 4th, 2009 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets
image001-1.jpg

A lot has happened in the green world in the last five years. Green went from a movement to a market and with it came tens of thousands of products and services with the marketing message of saving the planet.  A recent Google search for the phrase, “Saving the planet one (whatever) at a time” revealed more than 17,000,000 responses — with everything from “saving the planet one flush at time”  to “one hanger at a time” to “one  bag, one shower, one burger, one carpet, one idea…”  You get the idea.

If you want to break through the green clutter, that won’t cut it anymore.  With the recent economic downturn, the species most people want to save is their selves. There was nothing like the cost of gas skyrocketing to over $4.00 a gallon to drive the sales of hybrids through the roof.

It’s no longer viable to just be green, your product or service has to be great.  It has to marry ecology with economy. How much green does your green product save me?  It has to work. Will that green cleaning product actually clean my counter top?

We call this the 3 e’s of green:

•         Ecology

•         Economy

•         Efficacy

When your product or service has all three, now you have a green story that’s great. Tell it well and you are well on your way to saving your product in today’s competitive marketplace.

Green Marketing 2.0

December 14th, 2008 by Carolyn Parrs & Irv Weinberg , Mind Over Markets

Issues relating to IT and energy are often the primary focus of sustainability efforts within a corporation.  Much has been documented and continues to be every day.  But what about the impact of a company’s communications, like advertising, direct mail, websites, blasts, webinars, tradeshows and more? 

One of our prime focuses is to keep abreast of this sector and inform our clients and the business world in general through speaking engagements, blogging, interviews, article writing and in other forms of communications about the movements being made to green the media supply chain. Walk your talk, right?   

Here are a few environmental wake-up calls for corporations to consider concerning their communications:

  • Printing 10,000 bumper stickers equals 1.6 tons of CO2
  • Printing a 10,000 piece mailing equals 2.1 tons of CO2
  • Printing 10,000 yard signs equals 10.7 tons of CO2

The impact of these activities have been largely overlooked but websites such as SustainCommWorld.com are in the forefront of our industry providing research and awareness in this arena.  They found out the 10% of the companies they surveyed had not even considered reporting on the carbon footprint of the publications they advertise in.  In an effort to create meaningful change in the greening of the media supply chain, they publish articles, newsletters and produce tradeshows in order to move the needle for marketers and business owners towards true sustainability in the marketing field.

The challenges are certainly unique in the world of green marketing.  From the media carbon footprint to the lack of standards for determining what it means to be a green product to communicating a message truthfully, authentically and credibly.  This always brings us back to the Golden Rule.  Do to others as you would like them to do to you.  It can’t get any greener than that. 

(Exerpt from upcoming book, “Inside the Minds: Greening your Business” by Thompson Reuters. Green Marketing chapter written by Carolyn Parrs and Irv Weinberg)