Sensible advice from VW Canada.
19 04 2011Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: cause marketing, corporate social responsibility, CSR, green marketing, marketing, marketing and communications, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands, VW
Categories : corporate social responsibility, green marketing, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Props To Starbucks: Free Coffee In Your Travel Mug On Earth Day.
18 04 2011To celebrate Earth Day, Starbucks is offering free coffee to everyone who chooses to get their coffee in a travel mug vs. the paper cup. A great example of smart sustainable branding.
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Tags: cause marketing, corporate social responsibility, Earth Day, marketing, marketing and communications, reputation management, Starbucks, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, green marketing, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
New Research: 71% of American Workers Value Employers’ Sustainability Commitments
7 04 2011We’ve long known the employee satisfaction is a key driver of customer satisfaction. Now a company’s efforts to improve sustainability is proving to be another driver of employee engagement, pride, productivity and retention.

A public opinion survey conducted by Harris Interactive National Quorum on behalf of Interface, Inc. reveals that 63% of full-time workers believe a company’s impact on the environment is vital when evaluating a new workplace, and 61% say the same about the company’s profit margin. Meanwhile, an even greater majority—71%—value a commitment to sustainability, defined in this study as “environmental protection,” as an important or very important criteria.
“There is broad recognition that companies that focus on sustainability, or protecting and preserving the environment, are appealing to American workers,” said Dan Hendrix, president and CEO of Interface. “Profits are obviously the lifeblood of any company, but what we see here is that employees want their organizations to have more purpose. These results speak to a lasting trend about the kind of long-term-focused organizations that employees want to belong to.”
This telephone study was conducted between February 23 and 27, 2011 among 504 U.S. adults employed full-time to learn and share opinion for ideals about workplace preferences. The study also revealed gender disparities in how employees evaluate potential employers. For instance, 78% of female employees felt a company’s impact on the environment was particularly important, while 52% of male workers believed the same. These findings could point to an opportunity for organizations focused on reducing their impacts on the environment to attract and retain women in leadership positions.
Other results showed the extent to which employees feel engaged with their current companies. National findings carried an overall optimistic tone despite the still-challenging economic climate, with:
- 81% of full-time workers saying they are familiar with their company’s mission statement.
- 84% of full-time workers agreeing that the company they work for shares their views on what is important in life.
- 64% of full-time employees claiming involvement in company initiatives outside the scope of their everyday responsibilities.
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Tags: cause marketing, corporate social responsibility, green marketing, marketing, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
What Would You Add or Delete? The social forum for the future of marketing, advertising and global good.
20 01 2011Kudos to ADDorDELETE, the brainchild of the tribe at Haberman. It’s a fresh yet startling conversation centered around the power of marketing and advertising to ADD to society and address social problems and challenges.
By challenging the global marketing industry to re-direct 5% of the $500 billion global ad spend to causes, social problems and people that need help, we can unleash $25 billion for global good.
Learn more at the Add or Delete website
Join the conversation on facebook
Let’s call out all those ads that we’d prefer to delete. Those messages that attempt to entertain at the expense of others. The ads that just create noise and empty moments. ADDorDELETE challenges everyone to take stock – what legacy do you want to leave? Are you ADDING? Here’s to less self-promotion and more social improvement.
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Tags: add or delete, corporate social responsibility, green marketing, marketing, marketing and communications, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, green marketing, responsible brands, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
“Activate CSR through Brands”: Coca-Cola Enterprises
13 12 2010Congratulations to the wise mind of Joe Franses of Coca-Cola Enterprises who calls on markets to harness the power of brands to engage consumers in the sustainable brands movement.
We’ve long called on a new take for CSR – corporate social responsibility. The problem with CSR as it is currently defined and often practiced is that it lives at the “corporate” level. The issue with this approach is that most consumers don’t want to have relationships with corporations. What they do have is relationships with BRANDS. Activating social responsibility at the brand level is key to get consumers to take notice of efforts and get engaged in the movement. By selecting socially responsible efforts that are authentic to a brand’s values, consumers are much more likely to get engaged.
Note this report from Sustainable Life Media:
While speaking at the conference, Mr. Franses also stressed that innovation will be a major driver of business sustainability moving forward – and success will depend on how well brands can engage consumers in the process. The first step in this process, he said, will be for companies like Nestle, Coca-Cola Enterprises and Unilever to work at aligning their top-down management initiatives with brand agendas around sustainability more effectively.
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Tags: corporate social responsibility, CSR, green marketing, marketing, marketing and communications, responsible brands, sustainable branding
Categories : corporate social responsibility, green marketing, responsible brands, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Brands: Lost Meaning.
28 10 2010Disturbing new research shows that the vast majority of consumers WOULD NOT CARE if two thirds of brands disappeared in the future.
Congratulations to Havas Media for their new Brand Sustainable Futures global research report on consumers’ rising expectations of business and brands. The report issued this week shows that:
- Only 33% of brands are considered to be meaningful to consumers worldwide.
- Only 29% of brands are perceived to be working hard to resolve sustainability issues.
- 80% of consumers expect businesses to act responsibly.
The data is continued support to the need for businesses to accept the criteria and realities of how they are perceived and their expected role in society.
Havas Director of Global Business Innovation Sara de Dios Lopez commented on the research by saying:
“There’s a real opportunity for companies who shift from relying only on ‘what they do’, through their corporate facts and transparency initiatives, and start building relevant brand roles and engaging initiatives that capture ‘collective will’ and spur people into action.”
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Tags: corporate social responsibility, CSR, marketing, responsible brands, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : reputation management, responsible brands, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Hilarious: Cheers to Yeo Valley
15 10 2010WE LOVE THIS NEW VIDEO FROM YEO VALLEY – AN ORGANIC DAIRY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM.
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Tags: green marketing, green retailing, marketing, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable brands
Categories : responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
83% of people want to see more cause marketing. New report from Cone Research.
20 09 2010Released last week, the 2010 Cone Cause Evolution Study reports significant new evidence supporting the rise in importance of cause related marketing. Despite overall low consumer confidence and prolonged unemployment due to the recession, the one thing consumers are confident in is their belief in brands that support worthy causes.
Higlights of the report show that:
- 88% of people say it is acceptable for comapnies to involve a cause or issue in their marketing.
- 85% have a more positive image of a product or company that supports a cause they care about.
- 80% are likely to switch brands, similar in price and quality, to one that supports a cause.
The report also highlighted the powerful role of linking moms and causes in brand purchasing behavior.
Of mom’s surveyed, 95% say cause marketing is acceptable and 92% say they want to buy a product supporting a cause.
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Tags: corporate social responsibility, CSR, customer research, green marketing, marketing, marketing and communications, reputation management, responsible brands, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Congrats to Nissan and TBWA/Chiat Day: Nissan Leaf
10 09 2010Nice new spot launching the Leaf – the all-electric car from Nissan.
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Tags: Climate Change, corporate social responsibility, energy efficiency, global warming, green marketing, marketing, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : Climate Change, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
If You’ve Got It = Spend It!
6 09 2010In an edited excerpt of his new book Aftershock: Reshaping the World Economy After The Crises, Phillpee Legrain writes about the need to embrace new approaches capitalism and consumerism. His point is that without consumption, there is no production, no income and no jobs. And in plenty of markets around the world, there are millions and millions of people with unmet needs. Responsible brands understand that they need to be serving those markets not only with sustainable products but with efforts that aid the public good. The balance is essential for the retention and recruitment of new audiences of prosperous consumers.
“The aftermath of the crisis opens up huge opportunities to reshape the world economy for the better. A fairer, richer, greener and more stable global economy is possible. But to achieve it, we need to rediscover the virtues of open markets, open societies and open minds that go hand in hand with progress: great opportunities for everyone to chase their dreams and fulfill their potentials.”
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Tags: accountability, corporate social responsibility, marketing, post-recesssion, responsible brands, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Visit Fearless Cottage: Our friend Alex’s journey to enlightenment.
29 08 2010
Congrats to Creative Insurgent Alex Bogusky who has walked away from a 20 year career in advertising where he accomplished just about everything. Countless awards, new business wins, huge company growth, industry recognition. But now he has chucked it all to pursue a new mission of using the creativity that made him famous to promote all aspects of social responsibility.
In his profile of Alex in Fast Company, Robert Safian captures the vision; “Bogusky has made the FearLess Cottage something of a hub for people he deems, as he has inscribed on the cottage’s keys, “capable of pushing aside fear in pursuit of doing the right thing,” which is to “help define a new era of social responsibility.”
Read the profile of Alex in Fast Company
Visit Alex’s Fearless Cottage Here.
Kudo’s to Alex for the courage to do the right thing. Recognizing the art of fearless thinking and creativity can make a difference. He makes us proud and sets the new standard for 21st century challenges: for successful businesspeople to turn their energies to things that really matter.
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Tags: accountability, Alex Bogusky, corporate social responsibility, Creativity, marketing, sustainable branding
Categories : reputation management, sustainable branding
Seeking an audience for The Age of Stupid
7 10 2009“The first successful dramatisation of climate change to hit the big screen.”
– The Guardian
Last month saw the world premiere of The Age of Stupid on the eve of the United Nations conference on climate change. The Age of Stupid’ is the new cinema documentary from the Director of ‘McLibel’ and the Producer of the Oscar-winning ‘One Day in September’. Filmed in seven countries over four years, this enormously ambitious drama-documentary-animation hybrid stars Oscar-nominated Pete Postlethwaite as an old man living in the devastated world of 2055, watching ‘archive’ footage from 2008 and asking: why didn’t we stop climate change while we had the chance?
Visit the world of The Age of Stupid
Watch a United Kingdom televised report on The Age of Stupid and other eco-documentaries soon to be released.
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan at the world premiere event in New York on the eve of the United Nationals General Session on Climate Change.

The exterior of The Archive in which Pete Postlethwaite’s character, the archivist, lives. This animation was produced by animator Greg McKnealley.

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Tags: Climate Change, corporate social responsibility, CSR, global warming, green marketing, lack of trust, marketing, The Age of Stupid
Categories : Climate Change, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
A responsibility revolution?
21 09 2009
A new survey by Time magazine was highlighted in a recent article written by Richard Stengel: “For American Consumers, A Responsibility Revolution.” Could this new halo many are happy to be wearing represent some of the most compelling signs of “the new normal”?
The research indicated:
- 82% of people consciously supported local or neighborhood businesses
- 40% of people said they purchased a product in 2009 because they liked the political or social values of the company that produced it.
- 60% of Americans have bought organic products since January
- 78% of those polled said they would be willing to pay $2,000 more for a car that gets 35 m.p.g. than for a similar one that gets only 25 m.p.g
As the article says, “That’s evidence of a changing mind-set, a new kind of social contract among consumers, business and government. We are seeing the rise of the citizen consumer — and the beginnings of a responsibility revolution.”
Once again, the Time survey adds to the rapidly growing amount of data that indicate we have reached the tipping point where values based marketing and sustainable branding are beginning to rise in importance with customers from all walks of life. Companies who recognize this and infuse sustainable branding into their total customer experience will inevitably be among the winners in the age of accountability.
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Tags: corporate social responsibility, CSR, green marketing, marketing, post-recesssion, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, reputation management, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
What if my customers say they don’t care?
21 07 2009“Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.”
– Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
“What if my customers say they don’t care?”
This may be the number one question many companies are wrestling with regarding social responsibility and sustainability strategies. And is central to the debate of whether it is possible to achive brand differentiation by infusing sustainable practices into messages directed to customers.
It is easy to appreciate how many companies over the past couple of decades have made significant investments to “stay close” to their customers. Brand attribute ratings. Research departments rebranded as “consumer insights” groups. Tracking studies. Endless focus groups and telephone and on-line surveys. Trend analysis and more. Information is good and many sound business strategy decisions have been based on input on the wants and needs of the customer. But too much information can also lead to an unhealthy paralysis.
So when the research points to data saying that customers don’t care about sustainability—corporate leaders have decisions to make. This is especially true when we are still buffeted by an uncertain economic climate when many people are struggling financially and not in the position to make the sophie’s choice between being able to afford something they need vs. an alternative that may offer a higher degree of sustainability. We acknowledge the cold reality that the economy may be holding back customers’ demanding sustainable behaviors, but beware the “sling shot effect” of how quickly this could change when the economic pressures ease.
This is the inflection point that is the very essence of what it means to be socially responsible. Our way of thinking is that if you can achieve more responsible and sustainable practices (and we acknowledge the practices are not sustainable unless they are profit neutral), you have a moral obligation to do it whether or not your customer says they care. And we further believe it is a social responsiblity to communicate what you are doing in an effort to educate and inspire your customers to not only appreciate what you are doing, but show them how they should alter their own behaviors for everyone’s benefit.
The next level of consumer insights then is to get deeper into the potential of the responsible and healthy relationship between a company and its customers. True innovation, creativity and positive social change rarely relies on permission. It insists on the courage to do what is right and transformative and then to communicate the benefits of the innovation to the audience.
I draw the analogy to our society’s history of struggling with the knowledge that smoking tobacco has devasting health consequences. After the Surgeon General first informed the public of the health hazards of smoking in 1964, it took decades to achieve the broad based awareness, acceptance and change of behaviors (in part because of the addictive nature of the habit). But “responsible steps” were taken: public service campaigns, packaging warning labels, bans of advertising, bans of sale to minors, bans in public venues, legal action and consequently—millions of smokers quit and millions of non-smokers never started. Today, some people still make the choice to smoke and to ignore the health consequences, but they are certainly aware of them. And there is a social stigma that deeply influences healthy behavior for individuals as well as society at large. None of this would have happened without leaders who were willing to stand up and embrace change as the right thing to do.
Fast forward to today. Even if your customers say they don’t care about sustainability, it is your responsibility to drive to achieve necessary sustainable behaviors into your organization because of your knowledge that it is the right thing to do whether or not your customer will applaud you for it. The health and social consequences of NOT doing this is no less dramatic than pretending smoking is good for you. And because it is the right thing to do, it is also imporant to inform your customer of what you are doing and why. Public education is also a social responsibility.
Imagine if all the tools of today’s instantaneous communication – the internet, digital media, global connectivity, social networks – were available in 1964 when the public first learned about the dangers of smoking tobacco. How much more quickly would have behavior change been accelerated? How many millions of lives might have been improved? How much suffering might have been avoided?
We call on all companies to use all the tools and innovation at their disposal to drive sustainable change and communicate the efforts to their customers. Persuade your customers to care, persuade them to take care of themselves and their community. This is how we will achieve necessary change when the clock is ticking.
There are many examples: we are inspired by companies like Wal-mart, Tesco and Kingfisher who are driving meaningful sustainable behaviors into their organizations and then boldly yet honestly communicating what they are doing to their customers and how they should get involved. Don’t wait for permission.
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Tags: corporate social responsibility, customer research, marketing, marketing and communications, sustainable branding, sustainable brands
Categories : corporate social responsibility, lack of trust, sustainability, sustainable branding, sustainable brands






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