Beyond Green: Winning Over Consumers by Putting Primary Benefits First

Greener products are now available within every industry and are a part of our everyday lives. But they didn’t get to be so ubiquitous just because they are better for the planet. Whether they were promoted as such or not, sales of green products grew because they were appreciated by a growing chorus of consumers for the value they provide—expressed as safety, comfort, good taste, or simply convenience.

Despite some lingering misperceptions that “green products don’t work as well” (leftover from the days when the natural laundry detergents left the clothes dingy), many of today’s green products actually work better than the alternatives they are designed to replace. Indeed, thanks to advances in technology and design, green is now becoming synonymous with quality, and can often command premiums because of it. Consider that a compact fluorescent light bulbs not only save money, they are more convenient since the bulbs don’t have to be replaced as often. “Organic” is the new gourmet.  Drivers line up to buy a Prius with its quieter ride and fewer fill-ups.

Sensing the opportunity, many green products are now promoted with messages that lead “beyond green” and underscore such primary benefits as health, superior performance, good taste, cost effectiveness or convenience. Tide Cold Water for instance, underscores how much money consumers can save on energy bills. Similarly, the Energy Star label grew to be the most recognized eco-label because consumers made the connection between energy efficiency and saving money. AFM claims their Safecoat brand is ‘The only paint that is doctor recommended.’ The Toyota Prius was launched on the premise of a quieter ride, and later when gas prices spiked, stressed superior gas mileage.

This central message of primary benefits is critical to winning over the mainstream consumer, and it is associated with the potential to drive growth as well.  Consider the success of Clorox GreenWorks, a line of natural cleaning products. The name “Green Works” supported by the well-established Clorox brand name assures consumers that the product does its job, while the natural ingredients provide proof of safety. Testament to its success, Clorox GreenWorks has helped to expand the market for all greener cleaning products, even the deep green ones.

Further evidence of the success of green products has been their resilience in the current recession. Everyone is pulling a little tighter on their money belts, yet sales and purchase intent of green products have remained strong because of the perceived value of many greener brands that lead with the messages of primary benefits. Moreover, many brands are not only competitively priced but saving consumers money, either in the short or long term.

Despite these successes, many deep green as well as mainstream marketers do not stress primary benefits, likely for two reasons. In the past, many of the products offered by deep green companies didn’t work as well as their “brown” counterparts, so messages to the consumer tended to be a simple: “our product does everything your current brand does but in a greener way”.   Over time, mainstream companies entering the market espoused what I call the “planets, babies and daisies” approach (despite doing otherwise on established brands) mostly likely believing such imagery represented a price of entry into a market they didn’t understand and were not quite comfortable playing in.  Now such brands as GreenWorks or Tide Coldwater are realizing that the name of the game is doing what they do naturally—leading with messages of primary benefits, while bringing in environmental messages as secondary.

This emphasis on primary benefits is sure to continue. This trend will bring more sophisticated attempts to integrate primary benefits with the environmental ones. An example of this is a current Lexus print advertisement: On the left side we see a stylish new car with the headline, “Indulge your senses,” and on the right side we see a leaf with the headline, “Respect the Planet.” The key takeaway delivered in a simple yet sophisticated way: we can have our cake and eat it, too.

Looking ahead, one day green will likely be so integrated into design and culture that we won’t have to trip over it when crafting marketing messages that resonate with consumers. For now, our challenge as green marketers is to articulate a distinctive expression of a consumer promise that can capitalize upon the inherent consumer benefits of a product’s environmental attributes to reinforce a brand’s overall positioning.

 

Jacquie Ottman is president of  J. Ottman Consulting, Inc., a NYC-based green marketing and eco-innovation firm whose clients include several Fortune 500 companies. She is the author of Green Marketing: Oppotunities for Innovation.

This article, which was first published on the Triple Pundit website, is excerpted from Jacquie’s soon-to-be-published book, due out in 2010. Learn more and sign up to be notified of its release by clicking here. JC Darne contributed to this article.

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Top 10 Reasons to Green Your Supply Chain

Supply Chain Management (SCM) over the past few decades has proven there to be opportunity to reduce cost and add value in the supply chain.  However, traditional Supply Chain SCM has focused primarily on cost, with professional consulting targeting costs (including transport, inventory, and administration) of 7% to 9% of revenue.

The recent emergence of Green SCM provides the opportunity to review processes, materials, and operational concepts from a different perspective.  It incorporates the role of the environment in supply chain value creation. 

Leading companies are finding unique value opportunity in Green SCM: Pepsi-Cola Saved $44 million by switching from corrugated to reusable plastic shipping containers for one liter and 20-ounce bottles, conserving 196million pounds of corrugated material.

Below are the top 10 reasons why most companies are incorporating eco awareness into the supply chains.

  1. Increase Profitability – Proactively incorporating sustainability concepts into your supply chain will decrease cost and add the value to operations.
  2. Asset Utilization – Incorporating greater eco awareness into transportation and inventory practices will increase utilization of key assets.
  3. Risk Mitigation – Promoting greater understanding of sustainability with in the company’s supply chain will mitigate environmental, social, and market risks.
  4. Innovation – Incorporating sustainability concepts into the supply chain will be a catalyst for supplier innovation.
  5. Alignment – Negotiating business sustainability policies with suppliers and customers will promote alignment across the supply chain.
  6. Continuous Improvement – A common understanding of sustainability concepts, goals and objectives provides a platform for continuous improvements.
  7. Customer Service – Implementing sustainable best practices within the supply chain will standardize operations and allow for improve customer service.
  8. Regulatory Compliance – Green supply chain management will help ensure regulatory compliance.
  9. Product Differentiation – Creating uniquely different green supply chain practices will differentiate the company and its products in the market place.
  10. Enhance Reputation – Demonstrating green business practices will promote business sustainability and enhance company reputation.

Adding general eco awareness or simply incorporating a few sustainability concepts into and existing supply chain process can have immediate affects.  Taiga Company provides professional consulting and small business resources to companies seeking to make significant changes in their operations.

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Green Jewelry Site Offers Luxury and Sustainability

(3BLMedia/theCSRfeed) Oakland, CA -  April 16, 2010 – Since launching just a couple of months ago, Sulusso (which means “On Luxury” in Italian) has emerged as the best place online to shop sustainable designer jewelry.

“Sulusso demonstrates that “sustainable” and “luxury” are not mutually exclusive,” said Sulusso founder Meghan Connolly Haupt. “We wanted to make it really easy for conscious consumers to learn about and support those designers commited to social and environmental responsibility.”

Sulusso currently features 11 designers and more than 200 different products. The site has recently been improved whereby you can now shop by jewelry category (rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces), by designer or by price. Not only is product information easy to find, but Sulusso also makes it easy to learn about the designers and how they qualify for the curated site.

“Our vision for Sulusso goes beyond just being an e-commerce site. We are working to add a user interaction component and a product rating system so that the site becomes more of a forum for information about green, eco, and fair trade jewelry,” said Haupt.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

E=MC²: Stuff is Energy!

I had a funny idea for April Fool’s that we didn’t have space for. It was to run a video backwards of a polluting coal plant spewing waste CO2 into the air, as a solution for pollution. Just run the tape backwards. But in real life we actually do have the opportunity to run our waste stream backward. It’s called recapture, recovery, reuse, recycling. As Einstein so famously showed us- matter is energy and vice versa. When we give waste a new life as a resource, we save the energy it would take to make it form new, and gain the energy that is already embedded in the manufacture and engineering of that product or package. It is a recycled plastic bottle that becomes a bottle, or a car part, a carpet, or a house to put them all in. It’s yard waste that is recaptured as energy or soil as it composts. It’s an aluminum can that becomes a strong lightweight airplane part. Recycled plastic for example, is found in many unexpected places—including carpeting, the fuzz on tennis balls, scouring pads, paintbrushes, clothes, industrial strapping, shower stalls, drainpipes, flowerpots, and lumber. It also contains oils that could be recycled and reused as fossil fuels.

We recently passed a milestone: 2 million products recaptured at our Greenopolis tracking Stations. That’s 2 million bottles, cans, and other packaging that can be reused, recycled or converted into energy. And it really adds up to some real and potential energy savings:

Aluminum factoids:

  • More than 50% of a new aluminum can is made from recycled aluminum. But the new portion requires nearly 20 times more energy to produce.

  • Recycling one aluminum can saves 96% of the energy used to make that can from virgin ore, produces 95% less air pollution and 97% less water pollution according to the California Integrated Waste Management Board.

  • According to the EPA, recycling one aluminum can saves enough energy to run a 100-watt bulb for 20 hours, a computer for 3 hours, or a TV for 2 hours.

  • Energy saved from recycling one ton of aluminum is equal to the amount of electricity the average home uses over 10 years, according to Keep America Beautiful!

  • You can make 20 recycled aluminum cans with the energy it takes to make just one new aluminum can from ore.

  • There are 33 aluminum cans per pound and 66,000 per ton, and…

  • An estimated 55.0 billion aluminum cans were not recycled in 2005. That energy wasted would meet the needs of 1.5 million households for a year!

  • Recycling one ton of aluminum cans brings in $3300 in 5 cent redemption value, $6600 in 10 cent states

  • 55 billion aluminum cans landfilled have a scrap value of more than $900 million. (Someday we’ll be mining our landfills for the resources we’ve buried.)

  • The energy saved from recycling one ton of aluminum is equivalent in energy to 2,350 gallons of gasoline that could fuel a car rated at 35 miles per gallon for 82,250 miles, according to Novelis.

  • A recycled six-pack of aluminum cans could save enough energy to drive a car five miles.

  • When you toss out one aluminum can, you waste as much energy as if you’d filled the same can half-full of gasoline and poured it onto the ground.

  • Americans throw away enough aluminum every month to rebuild our entire commercial air fleet.

PET Factoids:

  • Over 36 billion PET water bottles sold in the US each year.

  • 2,076,000 tons of PET bottles were wasted in 2006.

  • 17.5 billion plastic soda bottles were wasted in 2001.

  • It is estimated that 43.6 billion total PET bottles were not recycled in 2005. That energy wasted to produce new bottles would power 300,000 homes for a year!

  • That’s more than 119 million PET bottles wasted per day, nearly 5 million per hour, nearly 83,000 per minute. That represents nearly 30,000 kilowatt hours of electricity that could be saved every minute- enough to power 2-3 homes for a year.

  • The energy saved by recycling a single plastic bottle is enough to power a 60-watt bulb for six hours

  • A ton of PET plastic containers made with recycled plastic conserves about 7,200 kilowatt hours.

  • One ton of recycled PET saves 16.3 barrels of oil, 98 million Btu’s of energy, and 30 cubic yards of landfill space.

  • According to the EPA, recycling one ton of plastic saves 7.4 cubic yards of landfill space, and recycling a single pound of PET plastic bottles (used for soda and water bottles) saves about 12,000 BTU’s of energy.

  • Every ton of plastic bottles recycled saves about 3.8 barrels of oil.

  • There’s a great counter at the Container Recycling Institute site- showing the number of beverage cans and bottles that have been littered, landfilled or incinerated this year in the US. Nearly 35 BILLION so far this year, or about 250,000 per minute by my measure.

You don’t need to be a physicist to realize there’s gold and energy in them there hills of aluminum and PET plastic! So get out there and scrounge up every aluminum can and plastic bottle you can lay your green little hands on. Bring ‘em to a GreenOps Tracking Station or your local recycler. We need the materials, we need the energy it represents, and most of all, we need the human physics- the change in awareness and attitude that will keep us thriving here on Planet Earth. Your E=MC² too, Einstein!

To comment on this story, visit the original post.

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis Tracking Stations and with curbside recycling programs.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

The Perils of “Green Watching”

Earth Day is coming, and with it, hours and hours of “green” television programming and print media coverage. People who hardly give the environment a thought all year will be “Green Watching” programs – and advertisements – about how to be more environmentally responsible. In the past, I always thought of this heightened awareness as a good thing. The added programming draws broader attention to serious environmental problems like the climate crisis, and I firmly believe an educated public is critical to generating strong climate action throughout society.

However this Earth Day I think it’s important to ask: At what point does “Green Watching” become a form of greenwashing? Should media companies lead by example on corporate climate and environmental action or because of their importance in educating the public is talk enough?
 
Click here to continue reading.

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

2010: An [Eco]space Odyssey

2010: An [Eco]space Odyssey

It’s a space. That’s customizable and compact. And sustainable. These are avant-garde, extensible living quarters called Ecospace studios by Ecospace ™. The company started about 10 years ago when a group of young, eco-conscious, financially grounded, artistically-inclined folks got together to form an architectural design firm. As put elegantly on its site, “Our philosophy was to provide a flexible modular building that could be simply tailored, reconfigured or extended and applied to a diverse range of uses and building types. We tested the first prototype in 2002, and since then many Ecospace projects have been completed. We focus on creating architectural solutions that not only respond sensitively to the site and the environment, but also to our client’s requirements.” 

I think these places/spaces are awesome. While sustainability is a key issue to consider when purchasing accessories in life, let’s be honest, many of us still care about the way things look visually. And Ecospaces defy beauty with their sleek and modern ambience. The London-based firm pops these buildings out in about 12 weeks from start to finish and uses Modern Methods of Construction (MMC). 

A list of green goodness:

- Up on the Roof: Even the roofs are green–literally. Roof options include 1) a garden roof to help insulate and add longevity to the roof itself 2) the eco-friendly German Bauder Thermoplan or 3) the contemporary timber clad roof.

-All Walled in: Multi-layered and made of cedar, these sustainable wall structures have natural oils to keep them looking fabulous for years. According to Ecospace, the lifespan of cedar is about 90 years, but “to be doubly sure, [they] add a breather membrane and ventilation between the core and the outer skin of the wall to prevent decay completely.” Need your own recording studio? No problem. Ecospace offers a finish on the walls that can be selected to maximize acoustics.

- The View: Using Scandinavian high performance pine windows provides extra extra insulation and great strength.

- Inside & Out: To form a holistic and flowing look between the walls, windows, ceilings and doors, the company uses premium birch wood interiors. And the floors? Well they use Freedenberg floorings, which are “wear-resistant rubber , naturally sourced minerals; eco-compatible colour pigments and come in a range of modern colour options. And, as they fit so seamlessly against the internal birch walls, you could say they’re flawless.” [To see a view of the inside of these houses, click here.]

- Ice Ice Baby: Apparently, not much heating is needed because the insulation on the windows and roof is just that good, but Ecospace can also provide an under-floor heating system with a digital timer. Other optional forms of heating include air-sourced heat pumps, bio-mass stoves and mini wind turbines.

In a nutshell: Ecospaces are made from sustainable and renewable sources. They are energy efficient. Conserve space and resources. And are aesthetically very pleasing. The crew itself is young, spirited, eco at heart and seem like they’d be willing to customize the majority of a client’s desires (e.g., you want renewable energy alternatives like photovoltaic solar panels…done). And I am obsessed with the tone of their site–which is enough reason in itself to become a customer :) . Perhaps one day I will actually have land space to build one of these encapsulated beauties.

Images and quotes from ecospacestudios.com

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis Tracking Stations and with curbside recycling programs.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

How Clean are your personal care products?

The pursuit of a more sustainable lifestyle can begin at home with your bath, kitchen, and laundry.  The products you use on a daily basis may contain things that you may not want, but the good news is that there are options.

As a sustainability consultant, I advise clients to read labels, be aware of the latest product research, and take action on what comes into the house.  Increasing eco awareness can help consumers make more informed decisions and choose products that best fit their specific needs.

Ongoing work by the Organic Consumers Association (OCA) and its allies is bringing eco awareness to the consumer and encouraging some of the best selling personal care products on the market to reformulate their products to be safer for human health and the environment. 

In a follow-up to a 2008 study, the OCA found greatly reduced carcinogens in some personal care products.  However, a number of other more conventional products continue to have alarmingly high levels of the carcinogen. 

The study differentiated personal care products and revealed that products bearing the USDA Organic seal were totally free of 1,4-dioxane.  These included:

•    Dr. Bronner’s
•    Intelligent Nutrients
•    Terressentials

The Organic Consumers Association advises consumers to avoid products containing the following ingredients:

•    Cocoamidopropyl Betaine
•    Oelfin Sulfonate
•    Sodium Lauroyl Sarcosinate
•    Potassium Cocoyl Glutamate
•    Parabens
•    Phenoxyethenol

 Personal care product preferences are often very heavily brand-driven.   As a personal consultant to individuals seeking a more sustainable lifestyle, I encourage clients to evaluate alternatives to traditional brands.  Building a personal sustainability plan includes choosing products that are good for the environment as well as your personal health.  There are some great products available today. 

Have fun choosing new products that are right for you.

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Empower your people to make this world a better place

(3BLMedia/theCSRfeed) Dublin, Ireland – April 16, 2010 – CSR is a way to help others and build a lasting relationship with your employees at the same time. Done right, it can improve morale among employees and help companies build trust in a brand from within. But doing it right usually means doing lots of things that aren’t part of your daily business. Tedious, complicated things. 

To this end, www.ammado.com offers unique payroll giving services that are set up in minutes, completely hassle-free and free of paperwork. Payroll giving from ammado enables you to translate your social commitment into action and helps you to empower your people, spreading a strong spirit of doing good together.
 
ammado is the first ever global payroll giving system. Accepting donations in more than 30 currencies and supporting over 5,000 different non-profit organisations, we give you a highly flexible payroll giving system that focuses upon your desires and makes changing recipients, amounts or even the frequency of your donations as easy as the click of a mouse.

 
ammado offers more than most payroll giving solutions provide today: it is secure, global, highly flexible, uses cutting-edge technology and asks for a minimal amount of administration. Contact us today and let us discuss how you can improve your investment in your most valued resource: your employees. On www.ammado.com or write to kalbrecht@ammado.com

 
About ammado:
We are dedicated to creating heroes by empowering people to make a difference. ammado connects nonprofits, socially responsible companies and engaged individuals in a unique environment of shared interests and supplies the tools necessary to support online campaigning, fundraising, engagement and communication.

Follow us on Twitter
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Download the ammado widget here
 
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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Plastic is Forever: Why That’s Good!

I want to talk about something that deeply divides us in the green community: plastic. Be warned, I’m going to make some arguments that a lot of people aren’t going to like. But first let me explain where I’m coming from. I play a behind-the-scenes role at Greenopolis most of the time, but today I’m driven by the need to correct what I believe are significant misconceptions of what’s environmentally friendly and what isn’t when it comes to packaging. I can speak with some authority on these issues. I spent a good part of my career working in the practical aspects of environmental issues.

Here’s my point: We should be “celebrating plastic” and valuing it properly. Plastic is not the enemy, it’s how we use and abuse it. You heard me – this is no typo. “Closed-loop”, cradle-to-cradle systems that recover and reuse plastic are a much better option than food-based packaging. If we could recover and reuse all the plastic we have right now, the very things that we hate about it would become its strengths. Imagine building a house with a material that will last for a thousand years and can be reused at the end of its life. Imagine instead of storing oil in reserves, that our houses and products could themselves become storage mechanisms for oil. Plastic can be reconverted back into oil, and being lightweight, plastic saves nearly half of the energy it takes to transport glass. Plastic can have multiple lives, ranging from food containers to building materials.

Imagine if we took the time and energy to understand what a valuable, precious, useful material plastic is and recovered it like we recover gold. We would save billions of barrels of oil, eliminate billions of pounds of carbon, clean up our oceans — and be storing and saving fossil fuel energy for future generations. Capturing, recycling, reprocessing and reusing plastic is the answer. Instead of bashing the plastic water bottle, let’s make sure it’s plastic that has been recovered and re-used.

There, I said it. Plastic is good. I’m no diplomat, but I want us to take a deeper look at these issues, rather than fall into knee-jerk reactions and “conventional wisdom”. I’ll be saying more about this in future blogs. But in the meantime, let’s debate this subject. We can all learn more, and I welcome the challenge . . .

Greenopolis.com is dedicated to our users. We focus our attention on changing the world through recycling, waste-to-energy and conservation. We reward our users for their sustainable behaviors on our website, through our Greenopolis Tracking Stations and with curbside recycling programs.

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Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Communications4Good Blog: Good Works!

Boom Boom! Revolution is a Santa Cruz, CA social change company co-founded by CEO Mary Beth Campbell and chief designer Helene Scott.

What’s the focus of Boom Boom Revolution?
]“We are on an audacious mission to transform the world, one intentional act of kindness at a time. To do that we’re creating fun, engaging products that build community, improve humanity, as well as champion the belief that doing good is not only cool, it’s the thing to do.”

Can you provide an overview of your vision for Boom Boom! Revolution?
“We want to build a socially responsible consumer goods company that focuses on creating products that improve the world and make it nicer…ones that give people the opportunity to contribute to the world in a positive way.”

What inspired the creation of this concept?
“I used to be a very skeptical and cynical person…then I got a job teaching high school. Now I call myself a reformed cynic. I was expecting high school kids to be difficult, challenging and downright crummy. I couldn’t believe how genuinely kind they were, how much they wanted to help make changes in our world and how, if given the chance, they almost always did the nicest, right thing. This got me thinking, could we build an entire company around the concept of being nice? Could we create products that both allowed people the opportunity to discover who their best self was and then act on it?  For me, the answer was a resounding yes!”

Does the name have special meaning?  
“Like a boomerang, we believe that whatever actions and/or words you put out into the world will eventually find their way back to you, but not before covering a lot of ground a long the way. What’s the quickest and simplest way to communicate this karmic notion? By saying, “Boom Boom”. You put it out…it comes back. So, we just started saying, “Boom Boom”. And it just stuck. It’s sort of catchy.
Ultimately, Boom Boom became more than an expression. It has become an attitude. A way of life. This led us to wonder: could there be a whole culture of Boom Boom? Could we incite a global revolution of kindness powered by Boom Boom? What if the world had just a little bit more Boom Boom? What would happen? So, we thought we’d see what we could do about it.”

What’s your definition of success?
“For me success is simple: it’s knowing who you authentically are and making every decision in your life based on that knowledge. I truly believe if you do that, you will end up with a life in which you get to do what you want, the way you want to do it, with the people you want to do it with.
For Boom Boom! Revolution, success would be creating a viable company that inspires people to not only consider finding their best self, but to look for ways in which to demonstrate who that person is on a daily basis. If someone bought or got one of our products and it caused them think about their contribution to creating a better world, that would feel like a huge success to me.”

What has this journey taught you?
“Know yourself. Trust yourself.  If you do that, you can’t go wrong.”

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

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