Avoiding greenwash and the Triple Bottom Line

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Avoiding greenwash and the Triple Bottom Line Mark Stuart Head of Research The Chartered Institute of Marketing

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Mark Stuart Head of Research at the Chartered Institute of Marketinh

Transcript of Avoiding greenwash and the Triple Bottom Line

Page 1: Avoiding greenwash and the Triple Bottom Line

Avoiding greenwash and

the Triple Bottom Line

Mark Stuart

Head of Research

The Chartered Institute of Marketing

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Source: ASA, March 2009

2006 117 complaints about 83 adverts

2007 561 complaints about 410 adverts

2008 369 complaints about 264 adverts

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Green motives?

• Only 17% of consumers trust businesses to do the right

thing when it comes to climate change

• 72% feel they should take the issue of climate change

more seriously

• 55% would like more independent assurances on what

companies are doing on the issue of climate change

Source: Climate Change and Brands/Future Foundation

Base: 1600 Adults 16+

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Defra’s new revisions on green claims

Likely to include new areas such as:

• Misleading by silence

• Claims need to be within a wider context of reliable or

credible corporate approach (how far can that be

addressed?)

• Encouraging customers towards better behaviours

• Plain language

• Difference between on-product labelling, and advertising

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CAP Code updates

• Absolute claims must be supported by a high level of

substantiation

• Comparative claims such as ‘greener’ or ‘friendlier’ can be

justified if the basis for comparison is clear

• Marketers must not suggest their claims are universally

accepted if a significant division of informed or scientific

opinion exists

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Source: The good, the

bad and the indifferent,

The Chartered Institute

of Marketing

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Implementing the Triple Bottom Line in a company

Source: The good,

the bad and the

indifferent, The

Chartered Institute

of Marketing

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Internal opportunities

• Introduce flexible working patterns

• Switch to local suppliers

• Consider how products are packaged

• Have a sustainable sourcing policy

• Adopt a ‘reduce, re-use and recycle’

principle across your business

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Benefits of the Triple Bottom Line

� Simultaneously drive better

economy and better world

� More motivated employees

� People, planet and profits

work together in virtuous circle

� Long-term financial planning

� Feeds back into Research and Development and innovation

� Doing the right thing because it is the right thing

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The role for marketers

Source: The good,

the bad and the

indifferent: The

Chartered Institute

of Marketing

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Green claims

• Be transparent

• Err on the side of caution

• Make labelling more explanatory

• Avoid phrases like ‘environmentally friendly’

• Be aware of implying a claim in imagery

• Reuse, reduce, recycle

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Further information

• BRASS: http://www.brass.cf.ac.uk

• Futerra: www.futerra.co.uk

• Mobius: www.mobiusgreenprint.com

• Smart: Know-Net: www.cfsd.org.uk/smart-know-

net/links/full.htm

• The Chartered Institute of Marketing: www.cim.co.uk

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Thank you

[email protected]

www.cim.co.uk

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The green iceberg

• 86% of customers say that when price and quality are

equal, linking with a cause would make a difference to

their purchasing choice

Source: The Marketer

• 93% of customers think businesses must be responsible

about their impact on the environment

Source: The Marketer

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Four kinds of customer…

• Committed: knows what to do and does it

• Conflicted: knows what to do, but doesn't always bother

• Confused: doesn't know what to do, or how to make a

difference

• Cynical: doesn't know and doesn't care

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Ten ideas for sustainable communication

1 big picture 6 optimism

2 technically correct 7 glory button

3 be cool 8 change is for all

4 belong 9 we need more heroes

5 only stories work 10 personal circle

Source: Futerra

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Design the product or service well

Save the customer money

Communicate the benefits

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Summary – 1

• Focus on the opportunities, not the risks

• Find win-win solutions

• Make different choices

• Change behaviours positively

• Make sure any claims are

provable, factual, accurate,

responsible and credible

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Summary – 2

• Don’t sell it because it’s green – sell it because it’s good,

and also green

• You can use sustainability as a differentiator, if it

genuinely is sustainable.

• Not consuming more –

consuming differently

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Green marketing in action

Ensure a sustainable ethic runs throughout the

company, to avoid customers being cynical about you

– Doesn’t have to be expensive

– Choose suppliers that share same values

– Make sustainable ethics part of the brand

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Green marketing in action

Communications

– Work with a sustainable-minded agency

– Electronic communications not paper

– Use organic inks and recycled paper where you do use print

communications

– Use waterless printers

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Green marketing in action

Getting customers to buy…

– Customers will only buy a green product when they are aware of

its social and environmental benefits

– And when they can see these benefits positively, compared with

your competitors

– The quality has to be equal to, or better than, competitors’ if it is to

have green differentiation

– Focus on local sourcing or fair trade

– The interest is there for any industry or product sector… It’s our

job to demonstrate the benefits to customers

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“The real agent of change

for sustainable business

practices over the next

decade or so will be

communication.”

Source: The good, the bad

and the indifferent:

The Chartered Institute

of Marketing 2007

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The Business Case for sustainability

• Reputation: reduce the risk of public disillusion, negative

press, brand damage

• Innovation: new solutions in Research and Development

• Competitive advantage: customers want to buy from, or

invest in, ethically-minded companies

• Cost savings: local sourcing saves transportation costs;

reducing usage and wastage lowers costs

• Companies that reduce their energy bill by 20% could add

the same amount to their profits as a 5% rise in sales

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• Global sales of fair trade products

• 2005: £758 million 2007: £1.6 billion in 2007

• UK sales

• 2005: £195 million 2007: £493 milllion

• Marks & Spencer experiencing significant growth from its

eco-product categories in first half 2007

• Sources: BBC, Computing.co.uk

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