By Park Howell
It used to be cool to smoke. It was a personal statement, a brand differentiator.
People didn’t think twice about polluting their bodies by puffing on tumor-causing cigarettes. Even today, the smoker lifestyle exists, permeating smokers’ clothes, cars and homes, with brown fingernails, cracked lips, ashen skin, lungs that heave from the slightest exertion.
A filthy habit that once separated the elite from the middle class has now become stigmatized in our society, primarily due to massive education about its harmful effects, and through famous credos popularized by anti-smoking campaigns such as The Truth: “Tobacco companies’ products kill nearly 37,000 people every month. That’s more lives thrown away than there are public garbage cans in New York City.”
Like nonsmokers, more companies are making themselves and their communities healthier with the benefits of education, hindsight and self-preservation through green practices. They’ve realized that it’s not sustainable to keep polluting our waterways, ravaging natural resources and producing products harmful to the world.
A perfect storm of external forces, including the global recession, an upswing in corporate social responsibility initiatives, supply chain process improvement and a crescendo of voices in environmental education have helped satiate toxic business practices and promote more sustainable organizational behaviors. In fact, they have become key to survival.
You can’t fake authenticity
Companies are now trumpeting their newfound green exploits like jittery chain smokers that are resolutely kicking the habit. The whole world seems to be in one big Kumbaya for green. That’s a good thing. However, it’s simply no longer a differentiator.
One of the first crazes marketing departments jumped on involved logos bearing sprouting leaves. Logo design is about capturing the iconic brand essence of a person, product, company or cause. This may be the first time in the history of advertising that marketers are singularly focused on a simple act of being responsible as a brand, and not the company’s collective character. “Green this” and “eco that” have become the calling cards of corporations so numerous that they all sound the same.
Just explore any blog about green logos or how to create them, and ask yourself if green isn’t a new color for vanilla.
Communication professionals are missing the big picture. Being “green” is just only one element of being sustainable. And your customers know that. In the “State of Green Business 2010” report, Joel Makower of GreenBiz.com, states:
“Consumers want products that aren’t just greener, but better — that offer some kind of personal benefit, whether they’re cheaper to buy or own, have enhanced features or higher performance, are more convenient, less wasteful, healthier for their families, or simply cool.”
Approachable, believable, doable
A great measure of your approach to sustainability and how it is reflected in your green marketing is asking yourself if your mission and message are approachable, believable and doable. One of the world’s largest snack-food manufacturers, Frito-Lay, has done a remarkable job of marrying its SunChips brand to sustainability that address this three-legged stool to green marketing.
SunChips is a whole-grain snack that was launched in 1991, and has experienced phenomenal growth (about 20% per year). Earlier this decade Frito-Lay recognized the growing intersection among its consumers’ concerns for their health and the health of the planet.
SunChips marketers know that consumers want a tangible, functional benefit (the healthy food snack) with a green benefit. So sustainability became core to their business strategy. Their efforts started in 2007 and they knew they couldn’t do it overnight. They managed expectations and curbed any whiff of greenwashing by branding the initiative “One small step at a time.” Their efforts include:
• Purchasing renewable energy credits to offset its energy needs.
• Using solar power at its Modesto plant.
• Reducing the environmental impact of its packaging by introducing a fully biodegradable chip bag in 2010.
• Supporting sustainability initiatives, such as helping to rebuild Greenburg, Kansas into the greenest town in America following a devastating tornado.
As an expression of their brand, their website encourages their customers to join SunChips in making a difference one small step at a time.
“Can one person make the planet greener, better ... happier? We think so. Because big change starts with small ideas ... We think everyone has the power to change the world. One small act at a time. Let’s do this together.”
SunChips, with National Geographic, then invited customers to come up with the best Earth-saving idea. These ideas were collected on the site The Green Effect, and each of the five winners received $20,000 to put their idea into action.
SunChips is a remarkable example of all three legs of our green marketing stool. The “tangible” healthy qualities of its product are very approachable, and therefore make the larger brand approachable. Powering their plants with solar energy and creating biodegradable packaging make Frito-Lay’s green efforts with SunChips all the more believable with no fear of greenwashing. Engaging its customers in their “One small step at a time” initiative makes it all very “doable.”
There are many examples of organizations that have made their brand positioning much more sustainable by turning their green marketing into holistic movements for the greater good. If you’re touting green, imagine yourself as a smoker who has recently quit. How are you enhancing your health? Have you become a jogger, an avid 10k competitor, marathoner, ironman?
Just being a nonsmoker — or being green — for practical health reasons is admirable, but not that cool of a differentiator.
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Park Howell is president of Park&Co, a Phoenix-based sustainable marketing firm. |