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The 12 faces of social media for sustainable green marketing

image004Here are just a dozen ways I use social media to create a brighter shade of green marketing.

  1. Fly-on-the-Wall: By searching appropriate keywords on Twitter, (“green advertising”, sustainability, “environmental marketing”) and then following the conversations, I can better understand the thinking and trends in the industry. I also capture quick links to relevant websites and articles, and learn what like-minded eco-conscious Tweeple are looking for. This way I know how and, more importantly, IF I can help. Plus, it helps me define the green community I want to engage.
  2. Cheerleader: Blogging gives me the forum to applaud the best green marketing practices, (Like the Kohler toilet promotion) at least as I see them, and share those insights. GreenRaising.com is another good example.
  3. Encourager: Social media gives me the voice to invite great companies to do better with their green initiatives, like Telluride Ski Resort’s modest participation in SkiGreen.
  4. Boo-Hisser: I can also call out those greenwashers of the world: The “Clean Burning Coal” industry comes to mind, or StopNestleWater.org.
  5. Advocate: Social media allows us to also become advocates for those in bureaucracies. Large government organizations often have important conversations they need to have with their constituents but can’t use social media due to policy. Water conservation is a good example, where towns and cities partnering in the Water – Use It Wisely campaign can’t always engage in social media. So the campaign’s website, that we manage, does it for them.
  6. Utility Infielder: SM isn’t only about commentary. Being a resource for identifying and sharing cool websites like Coke’s LivePositively.com, linking to great causes like Brighter Planet and featuring their badge on my blog (look to the right), or offering useful downloads like the Earth Hour to Earth Day calendar for the easy things you can do in five minutes or less to save the planet.
  7. Pollster: Where else can you administer a FREE poll and get solid, relevant information from around the world? (Take a second and vote on your favorite green website.)
  8. Organizer: With free programs like TinyChat.com, you can easily gather your world and host a conversation on the green and sustainable topic of your choosing, inviting in experts, followers, clients and interested parties.
  9. Connector: Sean Daily of GreenLivingIdeas.com uses social media to connect eco-conscious writers and help them promote their work through podcasts and social networks. Sam Davidson of CoolPeopleCare.org connects with their followers daily with simple things you can do in five minutes or less to save the world. I use it to connect folks like these with you.
  10. green-foot1Educator: Webinars are your digital pulpit to help educate and train participants about your work in sustainability. Once produced, your presentation can be re-purposed through a blog, as a free eBook, and with slideshare, to name a few. I have recently posted my webinar, “How to Reduce your Carbon & Hype Footprints” which was part of the iGreen Virtual Conference.
  11. Enabler: Barack Obama’s campaign demonstrated that social media is one of the greatest enabling tools of all time. Take a page from his playbook and build community around your environmental mission, green cause, eco-conscious rants, or global warming march. You don’t even need a worldclass strategist and/or web designer.  You can start on Ning.
  12. Individual: Is mass media dead? Probably not. But more now than ever the individual consumer is in control. As David Ogilvy once said, “Word-of-mouth marketing is THE most powerful form of advertising.” As a marketer of sustainable, green, and eco-conscious people, products and/or programs, consider yourself blessed to have such a powerful, far-reaching and empowering medium at your finger trips…for free.  There’s something or someone bigger than us all out there, and he/she may have endowed us all with social media as THE tool that saves this planet.

What’s your 13?

 

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11 Comments On This Topic
  1. Bernice Paul posted
    April 15, 2009 at 11:44 am

    Hi… Park?
    Thanks for this post! I found it somehow on Twitter and now I don’t even recall who it came from. Anyway, you’ve pretty much summed up everything I’ve been feeling about Twitter and how it’s blown my daily research wide open. But you’ve also broken it down into a real thought process, so thanks for that.
    I don’t have a particular #13 to add… but I’d say it has helped me with my networking skills tremendously. I recently completed my MBA and now working in the green space. I’ve reached out to so many people (near + far, that’s the beauty) and starting to make face-to-face connections that, oh, a month ago, would never have happened.
    I will happily RT this and recommend to my MBA marketing prof.

    Best,

  2. Park posted
    April 15, 2009 at 1:54 pm

    Bernice, thank you for your terrific comment. You’re right, social media is about being both online and off. I’m glad you found some insight in my ramblings.

  3. David Kinnicutt posted
    April 22, 2009 at 9:39 am

    Green Marketers and Sellers of Sustainability should stop using the word “consumer”! Saying something like “Consumer-Friendly” reminds me of “Clean-Coal”.

  4. Park posted
    April 22, 2009 at 9:41 am

    That’s an interesting perspective I hadn’t thought of about “consumer-friendly” and “clean-coal.” Definitely worth more consideration. Thanks for commenting.

  5. Top 10 Green, Sustainable MBA Programs from Beyond Grey Pinstripes for Environmental and Social Stewardship | ParkHowell.com posted
    June 25, 2009 at 12:57 pm

    [...] 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 [...]

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  10. twitter services posted
    November 4, 2009 at 11:34 am

    Some of these tools are new to me, maybe you could add them to my site for review.

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