June 9th, 2008
Sustainability is one of those words that you hear repeated over and over again, but strangely enough most companies cannot decide what it really means. According to The Economist, only 29% of executives surveyed have a coherent sustainability strategy. Of those that do have a strategy, few communicate it effectively.
A recent commercial for a wind energy company took a predictable and ineffective approach by featuring lofty images, stirring music and a garbled message. The commercial failed to take into account one of the Ten Commandments of Green Marketing, which is to appeal to the head as well as the heart. Green consumers are more inquisitive, less trusting, and better informed than the average consumer.
What really struck me about the commercial was its emphasis on local action, which was delivered by an announcer with an Australian accent. It shows once again how big companies make big mistakes trying to appeal to green consumers.
Effective green marketing respects the consumer’s intelligence and delivers the message with authenticity and credibility.
Tags: green consumers, Green marketing, sustainability, sustainability strategy, The Economist
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April 7th, 2008
Some might think it is. I think it’s more a question of accepting reality as it really is. Our modern world consumes. That’s a fact of life. The question is can we accomplish something good for the planet as a whole if we understand and work with that?
Gary Hirschberg of Stonyfield Yogurt faced just such a dilemma when their company was sold to Groupe Danone. But he decided he could do more good for everyone concerned when he found a way to bring his product more mainstream and achieve greater distribution.
Visionary and author, Paul Hawken states, “Business is the only mechanism on the planet today powerful enough to produce the changes necessary to reverse global environmental and social degradation.” Some of that business might include manufacturing green products.
In the perfect world, none of us would consume but that is not a possibility for planet Earth in the 21st century. Our job and our quickest way to advance the green movement is to convert consumers from products that don’t promote planet health to green products that do. The more believable and salient the green message, the faster and more effectively we can help accomplish that.
Imagine if all of us switched to hybrids, non-polluting detergents, non-toxic cleaning supplies, reduced the chemical loads on our lawns and gardens, increased the amount of organics we ate, pressured officials to increase the amount of available alternative energy, went solar, reused, recycled and reduced.
Wouldn’t that move all of us to a greener, more sustainable future? Green commerce is not THE answer but is an answer to migrating as many consumers as we can to a better, greener and healthier way.
That way we all win.
Irv Weinberg
Tags: Gary Hirschberg, green commerce, green consumers, Green marketing, green movement, Paul Hawken, Stonyfield Yogurt, sustainability
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