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Archive for June, 2009

How Sustainable is Your Sustainability Message?

Is your green brand, message or platform relevant? Can it stand the test of time? Does anyone care? We’ve always put these questions to the famous three-legged green bar stool test: Is your green marketing “Approachable,” “Believable,” and “Doable”?

© Park&Co 2009

© Park&Co 2009

This post covers the first leg: Is your green brand approachable? We believe that changing the average shopper to an eco-conscious consumer is not prompted by the radical fringes. Most people can’t see themselves plying the north Atlantic in a Zodiac saving whales, or huddled in a make-shift tree fort hugging a Sequoia in Berkley, or chained to a five-ton Caterpillar to keep a developer from blading the desert.

If you and your brand are going to entice eco-friendly behavioral change, then you absolutely most be a welcoming, guiding inspiration in your customer’s life.

One example of this approachability is Green Depot. It is a consumer focused “Home Depot” for green building and remodeling. The Wall Street Journal said, “With its boutique feel, the store is laser-focused on the consumer – not so much builders. And while protecting the environment is part of the shill, marketing puts heavy emphasis on keeping consumers healthier and saving them money on heating, cooling and other energy needs.”

The Green Depot gets it. They are both an online and bricks and mortar boutique that makes it fun and easy for consumers to embrace sustainable green products in their lives and homes.

patagoniaPatagonia has been “getting green” since the start. Their Footprint Chronicles allows you to track the impact of a specific Patagonia product from design through delivery. This is a welcome transparency and differentiator in the consumer products industry that allows you, the consumer, to make an educated choice on how and where to buy your apparel, and what tangible impact you may have on the environment with your decision.

And to prove eco-consumption isn’t just for the well-heeled, Walmart released the somewhat surprising findings from their green consumer survey just before Earth Day. It revealed an adoption rate increase of 66 percent from last year in its sustainability Live Better Index, which has been tracking consumers’ decisions to purchase five key eco-friendly products since April 2007. This growth in the sustainability index shows that concern for the environment has a growing presence in shopping baskets of the retailer’s 200 million annual customers.

Three of the 10 Ways to Measure the “Approachability” of Your Green Brand

  1. Make it Neighborly: Does your consumer feel like they have a vested interest in the promotion and outcome of your cause by purchasing or investing in your product or service? It’s that old adage: “Think Globally, Act Locally.”
  2. Make it Friendly: Are you selling from fear tactics, or are you helping to empower your consumer? We recommend empowerment, because change happens when people feel they have a choice that can positively impact an outcome.
  3. Make it Inclusive: Social norms almost always trump individual altruism. If everyone else appears to be doing it, then so should I. There is a terrific article in The Atlantic about “Social Proof,” that illustrates this concept.

Three of the 10 Pitfalls That Make Your Green Brand “Unapproachable”

berkeley-tree-sitters-protest-photo

Berkeley Tree Sitter

  1. Far-flung Causes: Although groups like The Water Project have an important mission of bringing clean water to Africa, it is so removed from the average American’s life experience that it’s difficult to compete with consumer mind-share based on more geographically immediate causes.
  2. Over Glamourization: When Animal Planet is trying to get its viewers to live vicariously through modern day eco-pirates like they feature on Whale Wars, it sort of sinks the entire eco-genre into the silly, silly fringes.
  3. Snootiness: Prius has a tremendous following of eco-evangelists of all shades of green.  Tesla Motors does not. One costs around $35k, the other $100k. Enough said.

Is your green brand approachable, believable and doable? Know of one that is?

You can learn “How To Reduce Your Carbon and Hype Footprints” AND make your green brand approachable, believable and doable, with my SlideShare presentation:


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Go Paperless and Send Your Virtual Business Card Virtually Anywhere.

Three Ways To Send Your Paperless Business Card Through Twitter, From Your Mobile Phone, And With Scan Codes

Now you can virtually hand your business card to anyone. Take one minute and create your paperless business card at twtBizCard.com. Then add the #twtbizcard hash tag to the person you’re Tweeting with, and your card info will be sent automatically.

twtbizcard-png

dubFor a mobile phone specific app, check out DUB. It will work with nearly all brands of cell phones. DUB also connects with LinkedIn. Plus you can send your paperless card via SMS. Just text “DUBME” and your recipient’s email address or mobile number to 32075.

qr-codesThere’s a third way to go paperless that uses two dimensional bar codes called “Quick Response” or “QR” codes. The guys from AdWaveUSA.com were by our offices the other day giving us a demonstration.  It’s pretty cool. Using QR codes for paperless business cards is just one application for this scanning technology. You can include a QR code on your cell phone, in a print ad, even on a t-shirt. The recipient just needs to download a simple scanning app to their cell phone, and when they scan your QR code, it will deliver any information you want: From business cards, to print ads, to websites.

optiscaniPhone offers the Optiscan scanner and generator app for $4.99.

For eight other ways to create paperless business cards, check out Josh Caton’s post on Mashable.

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How Does a Hand-Held Solar & Wind-Powered Charger Pass the Green Skepticism Test with Consumers?

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I was quoted in the sustainability section of Friday’s Phoenix Business Journal about a new company, Kinesis, and its hand-held solar and wind-powered chargers. According to the article, this is an extremely portable charger that can hold up to 14 hours of power – enough to replenish power for five cell phones.

My quote in the story about the viability of the product in the consumer’s mind was this:

“The problem is we’re all used to seeing huge arrays of expensive solar panels and giant, creepy wind turbines paddling the sky to generate power. It’s hard to believe that a hand-held renewable energy device can actually capture and accrue enough energy to power a device for long.”

What I was referring to is the vast skepticism in the green marketplace towards new sustainable products.  Here’s the rest of my story:

“Although there is a lot of opportunity in this industry, there is also huge consumer skepticism.  So we always like to put a new green product or service to the three-legged stool test : Is it approachable, believable, and doable? The hand-held wind & solar charger certainly passes both “approachable” and “doable” tests, as it appears to be convenient and accessible to most consumers. However, it’s the “believable” test that I think might require some well thought out product demos to capture the consumer.  The problem is we’re all used to seeing huge arrays of expensive solar panels, and giant, creepy wind turbans paddling the sky to generate power. It’s hard to believe that a hand-held renewable energy device can actually capture and accrue enough energy to power a device for long.

I would imagine a social media campaign that gets the product in the hands of appropriate and influential bloggers and allow them to test and report on the capabilities of the product may be one of the best initial marketing tactics. Kinesis would have to pay close attention to the conversation built around the product online and join in the cyber chat to both monitor and engage with its potential customers. Additionally, we would consider an offline event, such as offer people a trial run at at stadium sporting event, outdoor concert, or other venue to build person-to-person word of mouth about the product. Testimonials could be captured from both of these activities to potentially launch a larger media and direct marketing campaign.”

More about our “Three-legged Stool Test” in tomorrow’s eNewsletter. You can subscribe in the top right-hand corner of this post.

In the meantime, you can also download the product sheet on the eco-friendly renewable energy charger here. Kinesis Wind & Solar Charger

What are your thoughts on the believability of the product?

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Can The Clear2Go Water Bottle Top Bottled Water?

Clear2O Carbon Filtered Water Bottle at the 12,666 Ft. Summit of Mt. Humphry's, Flagstaff, Arizona

Clear2Go Carbon Filtered Water Bottle at the 12,666 Ft. Summit of Mt. Humphrey's, Flagstaff, Az

In an effort to keep our two sons busy this summer, and as a reprieve from writing my green marketing blog, I thought I’d take them for a stroll up the 12,666 ft. Mt. Humphrey’s, yesterday.

“Breathtaking,” has more than one meaning in the San Francisco Peaks, just north of Flagstaff, AZ. Somehow it seemed a lot easier 10 years ago; the last time I climbed it.

I also took along my Clear2Go carbon filter water bottle that the fine folks from Clear2O sent me to try out. (A perk as a writer on sustainability, green marketing and the environment, I suppose).

All in all it’s a neat little water bottle.  The carbon filter, that resides just below the spout, gives you filtered water straight from the tap. But you can’t just suck the water out. You have to squeeze the bottle. The plastic bottle is Bisphenol-A free too, which is nice.

Their website asks you to join the,  “Drink Clean and Go Green” movement. Lance Armstrong is their spokesperson (nice double entendré there). You can even take a pledge to drink less disposable bottled water. You’ll save money and help save the Earth; two important causes.

Anyone know how effective these online pledges really are?

Clear2Go is even getting some celeb-cred. Their blog said they donated 500 custom Broadway Green Alliance water bottles for this year’s Tony Awards. They’ve also taken their “Drink Clean and Go Green” cause to Facebook, Twitter, and LiveStrong.com.

Obviously they’re not just relying on their carbon filtration as a differentiator. They have tough competition, including Brita, Fit N Fresh, and LifeSaver, which can purify 4,000 to 6,000 liters of water with one filter. Clear2Go cleans about 100 gallons before you need to change the filter. Clear2Go is doing a nice job of wrapping their brand in green. Their site says they’ve saved 3,547,388 plastic bottles from being tossed in the landfills, $1,631,798 dollars saved on bottled water, and more than 110,800 gallons of oil saved. All because you’re drinking water from the tap through your reusable, BPA free, Clear2Go water bottle.

Now, for the really good stuff: Our Flickr SlideShow from yesterday’s trip up Mt. Humphrey’s.

Also, in April, our family climbed to Phantom Ranch in the Grand Canyon. If you’d like to learn the “Greatest Lesson I Learned” from that trip, as well as see several more “breathtaking” photos, click here.

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MBAs With a Conscience: The Top 10 Green Business Schools

Tamseel emailed me out of the blue last week from India.  Don’t know him, but he had a question for me: “I wanted to know if any MBA schools offer green marketing courses and if so which one do you think would be the best one?”

“Wow, that’s a pretty heavy question from a total stranger,” I thought. “Where do I turn?”

So I sent a request out to Twitterland, and @mkaPR was quick with an answer.  Melissa directed me to Beyond Grey Pinstripes, which produces a biennial survey that spotlights innovative full-time MBA programs that integrate issues of social and environmental stewardship into curricula and research.  She ought to know, I figured, since Melissa is the Director of P.R. at the Wisconsin School of Business at University of Wisconsin – Madison (I participated in their MBA’s tweet-up on the environment and social media a few months back).picture-11

Pinstripes’ 2009/2010 survey is due out in the fall.  But their ‘07/’08 survey is a great resource for anyone considering a higher green education. The study measures four main areas: Student opportunity, student exposure, course content and faculty research. You can download the three-page study here. Study PDF

Top 10 Green MBA Programs in America

  1. Stanford University
  2. The University of Michigan
  3. University of California, Berkeley
  4. University of Notre Dame
  5. Columbia University
  6. Cornell University
  7. Duquesne University
  8. Yale University
  9. New York University
  10. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Click here to see the “Global 100″ schools.

Beyond Grey Pinstripes is a program directed by The Aspen Institute Center for Business Education, which encourages future business leaders to innovate at the intersection of corporate profits and social impacts.  The goals of Beyond Grey Pinstripes are:

  1. Promote and celebrate innovation in business education. The School Rankings call attention to places that do this work well.
  2. Inform Prospective students about environmental and social impact management programs.
  3. Raise the bar by challenging business schools to incorporate social and environmental impact management topics into their curricula.
  4. Inform corporate recruiters of business schools that are providing training in social and environmental skills as part of business decision making.
  5. Disseminate best practices in teaching, research, and extracurricular activities. The Search function on the website provides access to detailed information-often including syllabi-on thousands of courses, journal articles, and more.
  6. Facilitate Conversation – Real change only comes after students, faculty, administrators and business leaders begin to discuss these issues.

Tamseel greatly appreciated the fast turn around on his request, which made me look really, really smart.  Thanks Melissa! (I guess now he knows who is really the bright one.)

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