Title: George D' Utley, III President
1George D. Utley, IIIPresident
2An Eco-Friendly Weekend
- As I was developing my thoughts regarding this
presentation and the subject matter at hand, I
thought it might be of interest to see how my
personal life is being affected in this
environmentally conscious business climate. -
- The following is an outline of my last weekends
adventures.
3SATURDAY To start our day, we went out in our
Prius to get a cup of organic coffee - in our own
reusable mugs, of course!
4Green Spa
Feeling a little run down from a hard week at
work, we went to a spa for eco-friendly
exfoliation, a blueberry pedicure and a blueberry
body-wrap.
5Sustainable Furniture
Feeling rejuvenated, my wife decided she wanted
to re-decorate the family room, so we went
shopping for bio-degradable furniture. We looked
for a couch with wooden frames made from trees
harvested in sustainably managed forests,
uncoated nails, organic fabrics stuffing,
nontoxic dyes and biodegradability.
6Art
In our continuous attempt to educate our 3
daughters, we went on a family outing to the
sustainable art exhibit. There we saw trash
sculptures made from recycled paper, plastic and
metal.
7Publications
Coming home tired, I retrieved the mail and
browsed through magazines, reading about green
cars and about how industry is going green.
8Green House
Sunday started early. We visited our friends who
live a green building, constructed with 100
natural floor tiles, energy saving appliances,
painted with zero VOC paint, lighted with energy
saving LEDs and a green roof to keep the
building cool.
9Fashion
While in town, my daughter insisted that we see
the Future Fashion Show featuring Stella
McCartney Donna Karans new fashion lines made
with nature-friendly or second hand fabrics.
10Lush
We then made a mad dash to Lush cosmetics for
some fresh organic hand made cosmetics, and
finally made our way back home.
11Expo
As I settled in for the night, I made my plans to
go to the green manufacturing expo.
12Re-usable
- 100 recycled paper
- 80 post consumer
Made use of some green toilet paper, of course.
13Bedding
- Organic and
- Chemical free
And finally, we got into our bed with organic
cotton sheets and a hypoallergenic comforter.
14Final Analysis of the Weekend
15About Utleys Inc.
- Before we move on I thought it might be helpful
for you to know what Utleys Inc. does. For those
of you unfamiliar with us, we have been in
business for over 50 years as a prototype model
shop catering to the liquor, consumer goods,
industrial design and cosmetic industries, with a
heavy emphasis on luxury goods packaging. We
have worked with all major luxury good companies
and have seen their evolution over the last
half-century. In fact, many of the images you see
in luxury goods ads as well as in the following
six images, are, in fact, our models and not the
real product.
16Liquor Bottles
17Consumer Goods
18Industrial Models
19Cosmetics Models
20Luxury goods
21Green Washed?
- When Marc asked me to speak at this panel, I
gave the concept of less is more a lot of
thought and research. The more I looked into the
issue, I found that I kept coming up with
questions, but very few answers. Green is the
buzzword of today, as my weekend adventures
showed it is impacting EVERY aspect of our
lives. We are expected to reduce use and waste
in all arenas of our lives, but are we being
green washed? - I wonder if the message has more to do with
marketing, and cost savings than about true
green business practices.
22As a hunter and outdoor enthusiast, saving the
environment is very important to me.
23 But is this attempt to be green real? And
how does it relate to our industry?
24What Can Be Done?
- In the context of excess and less is more I
will try and outline not the technical specifics
of how we reduce or change physical packaging,
but how we change our industries M.O. to achieve
less is more. -
25Self indulgence?
26Are Luxury and Conservation inherently at odds?
-
- One of the first questions I posed to myself
was, do luxury consumers truly care about less
being more? -
- What is the motivation of the luxury consumer to
buy luxury products? Isnt it true that the
luxury and excess goods that consumers are
purchasing are goods that bring
self-gratification and a heightened sense of
self-indulgence? -
- Its only a lipstick, compact or fragrance
bottle, right? How bad can it be for the
environment?
27A Few Bites Can Break a Diet
-
- But dont all production processes add to
pollution energy use? - But like breaking a diet, how bad can one
indulgence be? Just one compact, one lipstick or
one fragrance bottle wont blow the environmental
balance, or will itif you eat enough chocolate
cake, youll blow your diet - I hope you can see where I am going with this
analogy.
28Ads
29Searching for Substance
- As I attempted to further identify the problems
in our industry as they relate to Excess, I
found that the current crop of magazines are
filled with ads articles all related to the
issue. - However, I feel what needs to take place is a
discussion about what is happening and why. - There is no Green housekeeping seal of
approval for our products. How do we know when we
have reached our goal of less is more? -
30Impact?
31More questions keep coming up, and real answers
remained obscure.
- What are purchasing/sourcing departments doing
about excess and why? - What are marketers doing about excess and why?
- What are designers doing and why?
- What are producers/manufacturers doing and why?
- What is the consumer doing and why?
32Green Smoke
33Bottle Redesign
Are bottles thinner walled for green purposes or
for cost savings? And are retail prices lowered
if there are savings or raised as the product is
sold as green?
34Cost of Utleys Solar Installation
Will production costs drive green manufacturing
up or down? If green is more expensive, what is
the motivation to use it?
35Spin
Will a company (producer or end seller) sacrifice
profit for an altruistic green corporate mantra,
or only as a marketing tool?
36Second Opinion
Will corporations sacrifice the bottom line for
green, and will the investors tolerate it?
37Design Strategies
Is there time to be green as the luxury industry
races from one new product to another? There is
no relative longevity to our products versus
cars, phones, computers, etc. Does this reduce
the motivation for our industry, compared to
others, as these images and articles suggest?
38Sustainability Leader
A company can have or advertise having a very low
carbon footprint but still make or use very toxic
products in the production process
39Pollute somewhere else
many times at some remote, out of sight -- out
of mind location.
40DK Gold
It is readily apparent that everyone is trying to
go green, but what is driving them?
Is it government driven by laws, taxes, and
fines being imposed? For example, Roger
Caracappa, who was unable to attend today,
informed me that the DK gold bottle was
redesigned for sale in Europe so that it could be
disassembled to meet recycling laws there.
41Returnable
- Supplied
- Prepaid envelope
It is designer driven? Do the designers in our
luxury industry really take this to heart? In a
discussion with Kevin Marshall I found that he
had the novel idea of including a return envelope
with each Luxury item sold so that it could be
returned for recycling, similar to printer
cartridge recycling. Will our consumers buy into
this?
42Classics
43Designing for Longevity
- Is it ironic that the classics Chanel, Dior
havent changed and are designed for longevity.
How do we design for longevity in our industry,
for something that can be honored, celebrated and
appreciated? - Personally I have seen little if any attempt by
the majority of our industry to develop less
packaging for environmental purposes. There is a
constant start/stop/change, hurry up and get it
done mentality. - And what reduction there is, is usually cost
driven. Remove 5 stones from the Britney Curious
bottle to save 5 cents not because it will save
the environment. Does the consumer see these
changes and do they care?
44Hot Products
Are the changes in luxury goods consumer driven?
If people buy green products it is inevitable
that companies will adapt to meet the demand.
45Green Waste
But on the down side, if we make products
healthier but make more of them, are we making a
difference?
46Walmart
Are the changes corporate driven? Out of concern
for the environment, cost savings costs, or for
marketing purposes? As this article shows,
Walmart plans on reducing packaging 5 by 2013.
47Mass versus Luxury
But, can the Luxury industry sell Walmart style?
48Monadnock Mill
Is the change production driven? Companies going
solar to take advantage of Government incentives
as well as reduced production costs. Is this a
solution, or a marketing tool for our industry?
49Answers?
Everyone has their own view of his/her personal
environmental contributions, and I wish that I
were able to pose some solutions instead of only
questions.
50More with Less, or More for Less?
- On a corporate level, we have done our best in
trying to do more with less, but from a
development perspective and working closely with
designers and marketers, I have seen little or no
attempt, in our segment of the industry, toward
the goal of less is more. In fact, we have seen
the industry norm develop into a more for less
philosophy with little or no concern for timing,
or for the effect that decisions have on people
or on the design/manufacturing process. - Our company has become a 7 day a week operation.
Quite regularly we are asked to make changes to
models and deliver them on Saturday or Sunday. I
have had a designer call the office at 3 pm
requesting a pick up at their building and asking
us to revise and return the model in two hours
the client was incredulous as to why we could not
get it done.
51New Direction
- From what I have seen in the industry, and truly
believe will lead us down the path of less is
more are the following changes - Education
- Marketing and Design working together for
sustainability - Technology
52Education
53Education
- The training of the creative forces in our
industry are light years apart from an ID
education. Look at the differences in the
curriculum for the degrees obtained at the more
popular art colleges versus more technical
colleges. There must be some middle ground
between these schools in educating our industrys
future creative forces to work smarter, cleaner
and greener. - Although, I do think the trend is moving in the
right direction in this regard to education. A
lot of designers have the passion and the
intention to do better, but not the know how.
Ironic for a group of people running around
calling themselves problem solvers
54Collaborating for Sustainability
- Also, there often seems to be a clash between
the goals of marketing and creative / packaging.
We must get these people on the same page! How
can our industries marketers participate in an
open conversation about these issues when they
are supposed to have all the answers? And how
can they celebrate making changes that arent
always sexy and cool?
55The Designers Accord
Do the marketers and designers of our industry
attempt to solve these problems together? In
most cases, I think they fail to do so. Look at
the designers accord, or as it has been called
the Kyoto treaty of design.
56Sustainable guide
Will our industry buy into being educated, and
make the hard choice of using resources available
like the Okala, a hands on guide to sustainable
design?
57Life cycle
Will they buy into taking the time to think about
the life cycle of a product using life cycle
thinking and apply it to the process?
58Digital Information
Technology in and of itself adds another
dimension to our problems. In most cases, design
and marketing cannot review or open files sent by
Utleys, their own packaging departments or
manufacturers. This leads to lost time as well
as, on occasion, the wrong parts being
prototyped, and possibly produced!
59Constant Contact
The Internet and devices such as Blackberries now
make it possible for people to maintain constant
contact with each other, allowing no time to
think, plan, or lay out strategies. Designers
are pushed to create in hours instead days, and
to make revisions even faster. Vendors feel the
impact of this as well, with the added rounds of
revisions contributing to the more for less
agenda I mentioned earlier.
60Luxury Goods
61Challenges Ahead
- Even if we, as an industry, are able to address
and correct these issues there are still major
problems working against us. - Luxury is a dream, something to strive for, the
best of the best. What does the luxury industry
have to sell if there is no excess? Look at
these images. In some bizarre way it defies
logic to expect our consumer to believe less is
more and for our industry to embrace it. I refer
back to my initial point about buying luxury
being an indulgence, like just having one more
donut.
62Conclusion
- In Conclusion, if there is truly hope to achieve
a less is more agenda for our industry it will
have to involve - A true improvement in the working environment. To
achieve this goal will require design,
production, packaging and marketing to be all on
the same page working together for a common
good.
63Conclusion
- In Conclusion, if there is truly hope to achieve
a less is more agenda for our industry it will
have to involve - As always, if the consumer makes the choice,
companies somewhere, somehow will meet the need.
If our clients arent demanding it and design and
marketing arent pushing it, it wont happen in
our or any industry.
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65Conclusion
- In Conclusion, if there is truly hope to achieve
a less is more agenda for our industry it will
have to involve - And finally, to project outside of this issue,
isnt population control a major concern? Luxury
packaging is a small segment of the global market
place. As China, India and other developing
countries grow isnt the real threat the masses
and not luxury goods? It wont matter what your
carbon footprint is if we do not control the
world population.
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