Title: From Greenwashing to Believeable Green Branding
1From Greenwashing to Believeable Green Branding
2January 2007
3Top 10 Green Brands, WPP
Landor Associates Most Green
Whole Foods Wild Oats Trader Joes Toyota Honda Su
b Zero Ikea Body Shop GE Aveda
Automotive Toyota Lexus Ford General
Motors BMW Petroleum and Energy BP Exxon
Mobil Chevron Royal Dutch Shell Chevron
Texaco
4Public Eye Global Bridgestone Corporation Ikea
Group Trafigura Beheer B.V.
Public Eye Positive Coop Eosta Marks Spencer
Public Eye Swiss Novartis Ruag Holding Xstrata
5GREEN MARKETING OF 1980S AND 90S PHASE I
- Type of advocacy advertising
- Raised profile of environmental issues
6BACKLASH TO GREEN MARKETING
- Media loved attacking firms showing off their
green image - UKs Green Con of the Year Award
- Basic philosophy - selling
- 65 of consumers agree business only use to sell
- Volume of messages only creating more doubt and
confusion
7Greenwashing
- 1. the dissemination of misleading information by
an organization to conceal its abuse of the
environment in order to present a positive public
image - 2. the information so disseminated
-
8Greenpeaces Greenwashing detection kit
- The "greenwash" tag applies to any corporations
that use the media to make environmental claims
about one or more of their cleaner products,
while continuing "business as usual" practices
which rely, for example, on large amounts of
natural capital, are energy intensive or
inefficient, or which involve production and
release of toxic chemicals.
9- The term is now used to refer to a wider range of
corporate activities, including, but not limited
to, certain instances of environmental reporting,
event sponsorship, the distribution of
educational materials, and the creation of "front
groups." (Business Ethics)
10- BA's concern about climate change "nothing but
greenwash and spin".
11Green Advertising and Green Public Relations
(Nakajima 2001)
- Are pervasive and misleading
- Sometimes outright lies
- Provide society with a distorted view of
corporate environmentalism - Block access to more full and objective
information - 500 million to 1 billion spent on green PR in
US annually - Most filtered through PR firms
12How Business Misleads Us to Create a Greener
Image (Nakajima 2001)
- Third-party endorsement
- Research for hire
- Funding anti-environment organizations and
right-wing think tanks - Targeting children and education system
- Industry coalitions promoting inaction (Global
Climate Coalition created by Burson-Marsteller)
13How We are Misled contd
- Forwarding the idea that helping the environment
will result in lost jobs and economic turmoil - Shifting the blame
- Focusing on positive sides of industry (Monsanto
claims RoundUp saves endangered species) - Attacking environmentalists
- Partnerships with NGOs such as environmental
groups (sitting on boards, fund raising, funding
conferences, funding joint publications)
Is Big Business Buying Out The Environmental
Movement?by Philip Mattera, Good Jobs FirstJune
5th, 2007
14US Green group attacks oil giant on climate
research by Alison Benjamin, Guardian
UnlimitedSeptember 26th, 2007
- "ExxonMobil invests millions of Euros funding
thinktanks and lobbyists committed to blocking
internationally agreed policies to combat climate
change whilst at the same time spending major
sums on advertising designed to present itself as
an environmentally responsible company." - In the ads, Exxon claims to be reducing its
greenhouse gas emissions. But FoE Europe said
data from the company's corporate citizenship
report showed Exxon's CO2 emissions increased by
8.7m metric tons from 2003 and 2006.
15Beyond Propagandaby John Kenney, The New York
TimesAugust 24th, 2006
A former advertising executive realizes he
created one of the greatest greenwashing
campaigns of all time.
- Advertising is a funny business. You get to help
shape the personalities of huge companies. Most
often it's for cellphone service or credit cards
or fast food or paper towels. Rarely are you
faced with whether you ''believe'' in a product
or service. This was different. This was serious.
I believed wholeheartedly in BP's message, that
we could go -- or at least work toward going --
beyond petroleum.
16 - The least credibile source for environmental
information is an ad by a major company (Iyer and
Banerjee 1993) - 58 of environmental ads contained at least one
misleading or deceptive claim (Kangun et al.
1991) - . . . If advertisers continue to misuse their
power in promoting false ecological claims, then
its power to mitigate the imminent crisis will be
diminished (Fisk 1974)
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19Green Minority Green Concern Green
Evolution Green Bandwagon Green Con Sophisticated
Green Ethical Consumer PANIC
Early 1980s
1985
1989
1990
Early 1990s
2007
20GREEN MARKETING - PHASE II
- Whole company must be behind effort
- Credible green products
- From genuinely green companies
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22What does being a green brand really mean?
- Is it saying you are so?
- Is it donating money to organizations that are
green friendly? - Is it creating internal communication campaigns
urging your employees to use paper and other
materials properly and wisely? - Is it using your brand as a platform to educate
and teach your consumers on what this issue is
about?
23Consumer Extremes (Kilbourne 1995)
- Anthropocentric reformist
- Green advertising seen as ecologically useful
providing benefits to the consumer and ecology - Ecocentric radical
- Green advertising is an oxymoron, advocating
green consumption is advocating more consumption
the only Green product is the one not produced
24Landor Associates ImagePower Green Brands Survey
- Consumers don't understand "Green" when it comes
to companies brands. - Consumer may be interested in Green, but can't
identify it. Sixty-six percent of the American
population can not identify the steps a company
can take to make itself more Green. - Does the packaging make the brand Green? Only
fourteen percent of "Green Motivated" say
producing environmentally safe products is what
best describes a Green brand. - The study also found brands with green logos
and/or natural packaging (i.e. Origins, The Body
Shop and Kiehl's) rose to the top in the green
rankings. - Green Consumers will buy brands they do not
consider Green. - In the Fast Food category, the perception of not
being Green does not prevent even the "Green
Motivated" individuals from purchasing the
products. - Consumers will also buy in Automotive Petroleum
/ Energy industries regardless of brands'
"Non-Green" image.
25Sustainable Communication
- . . . Working towards a world where humankind
can preserve rather than dominate nature
(McDonagh 1998) - Ecological sustainability as a focal point
- Moving society from hyper-consumption to
sustainable consumption - Demands restructuring of business, government and
economy - Without considering these things the viability of
green branding and sustainable communication
becomes a problem (Kilbourne 2004)
26- Environmental Activity in Marketing Strategies,
Structures and Functions - Level of greeness
- Not environmentally active
- Slightly environmentally active
- Environmentally active
- Communication Strategy
- Objective
- Executional framework
- Message elements
- Consumer benefits
- Driving forces
27Agencies Doing Their Part
28ISO 26000 Proposed Draft Section on Stakeholder
Identification, Engagement and Communication
- Communication is a means of providing
transparency to stakeholders and is therefore a
key part of all social responsibility activities.
Communication also takes the form of reporting.
Image and reputation issues are a part of this
communication process. - There is a need for transparency, accountability
and preferably standardization in reporting and
other communication with internal and external
stakeholders.
29Contd.
- Standardization in terminology applied by
corporate communication can be very helpful,
although specific organizations or countries
might require communication tailored to their
particular needs. - The commitment of (senior) management should be
visible. - IABC is partnering with ISO to work on
project.
30Needed
- More rigid ethical and environmental standards
- Must encompass production, consumption and
disposition - Transforming the consumption process the most
difficult challenge - Focus on where humans fit in nature and political
reform - Near at home and dear to heart
31Nye regler for markedsføring- Disse miljøordene
er nå forbudt
- Bruk av utsagn/opplysninger, symboler og/eller
merkeordninger i markedsføringen, som gir
inntrykk av at virksomheten tar særlige
miljømessige hensyn, eller at produktet har slike
særlige egenskaper Den nærmere avgrensningen av
hva som er en miljøpåstand beror på en
skjønnsmessig helhetsvurdering av selve
markedsføringen, hvor blant annet ordlyd, layout
på påstandene og bildebruk vil kunne få
betydning. Bruk av skjønnsmessige uttrykk som
f.eks. miljøvennlig, grønn og ren vil etter
ombudets oppfatning alltid utløse kravene for hva
som er en miljøpåstand.
32Exaggerated Claims
- Toyota Prius Verdens mest miljøvennlige bil
- Opel Miljøvennlige motorer
- Peugeot den kraftfulle og miljøvennlige Hdi
turbodieselmotoren - Suzuki Salgs- og miljøvinneren
- Smart Prøv verdens mest miljøvennlige og
morsomme bybil - Toyota Verdens reneste dieselmotorer
- Saab miljøvennlig turbodiesel
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34Three Vs of Environmental Marketing
- Visibility - amount of information
- Virtue - actual behavior of organization
- Verifiability - allowing access to information
35Corporate Communication and the Environment
- Is perceived as reliable if (David Bernstein)
- Claims are based on past and present performance
and are easily proved - The firm undertakes independent assessed audits
and releases results - Improvements are measured against objectives
- Commitment to environmental performance is at the
board level - Environmental policy includes educating workforce
- Style avoids extravagant language
36- 1. ASK What are we making (product or service?
Green or not?) How are we making it? Who are we
working with? - 2. ASK how can we makeour passion and vision
relevant and engaging? our consumers into
advocates? How can we empower consumers to make a
difference by providing them with education,
infrastructure, events and experiences? - ASK How to ensure that our approach is viewed as
authentic? Transparent? Are all stakeholders
aware of our intentions and progress? Is our
vision embedded into the fabric of our company? - 4. ASK How can we inspire consumers? What
technology and partners do we need to gain access
to? - 5. ASK What would it take to achieve zero
environmental impact and still meet our
consumers needs? Can we make consumers more
responsible? Achieving zero environmental
impact will only come about if changes in
consumer behavior can be made engaging websites
that engage consumers in more responsible forms
of behavior
37Conclusion
- Accusations of greenwashing are stronger than
ever and should be taken seriously. - The environment is an extremely difficult
subject. - There seems to be a general atmosphere of panic.
- Consumers need guidance and help.
- Firms must show evidence of honest and credible
behavior. - Green branding/corporate communication is
necessary and useful in promoting
environmentally-oriented consumption behavior.
38THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION