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Archive for October, 2011

How Steve Jobs is greening the planet from the grave

Since his passing, everyone has focused on what Steve Jobs seemingly single-handedly achieved at Apple. Sure he was a brilliant heavy-handed tech entrepreneur. But what hasn’t been talked about much are all of the people he educated, motivated and inspired within Apple who are now innovating in their next lives outside of Apple.

Matt Rogers, Founder & VP of Engineering for Nest, the creators of the learning thermostat, is one example. He has created a thermostat that learns from you, when you come and go, and how hot or cold you like the place. Plus, it’s beautiful; an ipod-like puck that is as much of a fashion statement on your wall as your Apple mobile device is in your hand.

Finally, someone in the energy world is thinking different about how to make controlling your environment and energy costs much more user friendly, a very Apple-esque concept.

reserved mine.

Power to the people: Park&Co adds Blink electric vehicle charging stations

I wheeled my old fashioned 2004 Acura 3.2TL combustion engined ride up to the unit. The Blink electric vehicle (EV) charging station, which hangs on the wall outside my office, seemingly winks at me every time I pull in as if to say, “When are you going electric, bud?”

I’m proud that Park&Co is one of the early adopters in The EV Project, the largest deployment of electric vehicles and charging infrastructure in history. We just lit up two EV charging stations as part of the Blink Network from Ecotality. Now I need something to plug into it, only most manufacturers of EV’s aren’t shipping until sometime in 2012. I feel like a pioneer who’s raced too far ahead of the chuckwagon. But it’s still exciting.

What I’ve learned in the six months it’s taken, from inquiry to installation, is that the entire electric vehicle industry is still sorting itself out.

It goes something like this:

Ecotality is the manufacturer of the Blink charging station, and as part of The EV Project they were awarded a $99.8 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to install approximately 14,000 chargers in six states and the District of Columbia: California, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Texas and Tennessee. Chevrolet and Nissan North America are partners in The EV Project, and they have provided some matching funds raising around $230 million for the initiative.

I’m impressed with what I’ve seen of the Blink Network. When you buy an electric car, you can get a black Blink card that you swipe at the charging station. It bills your account that you set-up on their website. The site is extremely user friendly and it includes a map of the EV stations in your city.

Blink also has an app that alerts you to EV chargers as you travel and keeps an eye on your EV’s battery level. So if you’re tooling around 44th street and Indian School Rd. in Phoenix in your Volt, Leaf, Tesla, Karma or whatever EV you’re rocking, swing into Park&Co and fill’er up.

The Fisker Karma

Now I’m in the market for a new electric vehicle. But what do I get? I love the looks of the Tesla Model S. I’m intrigued by the electronics of the Ford Focus Electric. The Fisker Karma seems almost other-worldy. I’m wondering if having a gas tank to charge the Chevy Volt’s batteries is somehow cheating, or does it just make sense to get over range anxiety? And I recently checked out the more sensible curves of the Coda at the Green Fleet Conference in Dallas. The variety of styling and features of these cars reflects an industry trying to find its way.

Please share any thoughts and recommendations on what EV I should consider in the comments below. Thanks!

How we made Goodwill the Official Sponsor of Halloween

Halloween is the one night when normal rules don’t apply. When the kid in all of us gets that rare chance to be anything he or she wants. It’s also one of the biggest sales opportunities of the year for Goodwill. In the thrift industry, October is one of the largest months for sales. It’s the equivalent to Christmas for general retailers.

This year, Park&Co puts Goodwill at the epicenter of fall fun and creativity with the “Official Sponsor of Halloween”campaign. The fun and anticipation of dressing up comes not from what we can purchase off the rack, but from what we can invent with our imagination. Goodwill is much more than a place to simply buy a costume; it’s a place to discover a hundred possibilities for creating one. The elements of this campaign consist of TV, radio, print, outdoor and online executions, all depicting one simple message: most ready-made, ill-fitting, store-bought costumes are so lame, it’s almost frightening—and not in a Halloween sort of way.

The concept of the Goodwill Halloween campaign allowed us to take advantage of the creative surroundings here at Park&Co, lovingly called our “Creative Campus.” We transformed our offices into a studio for the all-day TV shoot. Our staff willingly served as extras, dressing in everything from chicken costumes to rodeo chaps. We built a “dressing room” for our main talent in the Creative Garage and held a photo shoot in our very own Combustible Kitchen. While this may seem unconventional, it made the campaign that much better as it was truly an all-agency effort.

And now that Goodwill has a whole new look for Halloween, what about you? What are you going out as this year? Better head to the Official Sponsor of Halloween pronto before someone snatches that green mohair suit before you do.

5 steps to positive behavior change every chief sustainability officer and green marketer should know

Successful marketers focus on amplifying consumer behavior. Come in today. 30% off, this weekend only. Buy one get one free.

Green marketers, on the other hand, are typically about changing consumer behavior. Consume less. Recycle more. Go green. But is that the correct approach?

Changing behavior is tough. Especially if the behavior has been engrained in us since childhood. I just read Dan and Chip Heath’s relatively new book, Switch, How to change things when change is hard. We are currently working on two education movements in Arizona: Expect More Arizona, and Mesa Counts on College, and Nicole Magnuson of EMA gave us the book as a primer to our work with their campaign. After all, what can use more positive change than our educational system?

The Heath brothers drew on a wealth of behavioral material to write Switch, which comes down to these five simple steps:

  1. Shrink the challenge so it’s not daunting, but doable
  2. Point to a meaningful outcome
  3. Give your consumer clear, easy steps to take to get there
  4. Focus and build on the bright spots of their actions throughout their journey
  5. Rally the community around them

Switch describes behavior change as motivating a rider (The intellectual left brain prone to analysis paralysis) and his elephant (The stronger, more unwieldy emotional right brain) to take the correct path to the proper destination. This metaphor is borrowed from Jonathan Haidt, and his book, The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom.

So after reading several behavior change books like Switch, and listening to the big companies at the Sustainable Brands Conference earlier this year, one thing has become clear to me: Promoting sustainability is about amplifying the positive behaviors consumers are already taking in their consumption habits as opposed to trying to change them. Change will come from how susceptible your consumer is to community influence (They call this, “Rallying the herd”), which is a hard individual behavioral aspect to anticipate and manipulate. Let the herd do that.

Accentuate the Positive

Rather than fanning “the world is on fire” hysteria hoping to scare change out of consumers, green marketers should point to the positive sustainable behaviors that are working. For example:

  • When you donate to Goodwill, you and your community keep millions of tons of useful items out of landfills, in addition to helping put people back to work
  • Turning off the water while you brush your teeth and other basic water conservation habits can save you hundreds, even thousands of dollars per year (Use to your monthly water bill to prove it)
  • And studying with your child just 20 minutes every day will have a measurable impact and improve their success in school (Just watch that report card).

If you’re a chief sustainability officer, green marketer, educator, parent or someone charged with amplifying lasting behavior change in your organization or movement, I highly recommend Switch, as well as the dozens of other books they used as resources for this fun and educating text.

What book, TED presentation, or speaker have you been exposed to recently that will amplify my research in behavior change?