A recent headline caught my attention: "Research Shows Consumers Willing to Pay More for Environmentally Friendly Products."
It stopped me in my tracks, because I wondered, why should consumers pay more?
What has gotten us to this willingness?
The answer was clear: We’re at a point as a society where we know we can do
better — we can build community, value time together, create a more equitable
and peaceful future, and strengthen an economy that works for all.
The collective “we” is looking to brands that are leaders in offering ethical
and clean products that are accessible and do no harm. Given the rise in product
transparency initiatives, product labels, consumer advocates, changing consumer
expectations across generations and more, the brands that are able to produce
such straightforward, honest products and services will be the most successful.
Until the day comes that consumers are confident in choosing products from all
shelves that do no harm, we — as consumers — must do our best to be our own
advocates.
Circularity by Design: How to Influence Sustainable Consumer Behaviors
Join us Thursday, December 5, at 1pm ET for a free webinar on making circular behaviors the easy choice! Nudge & behavioral design expert Sille Krukow will explore the power of Consumer Behavior Design to drive circular decision-making and encourage behaviors including recycling and using take-back services. She will share key insights on consumer psychology, behavior design related to in-store and on-pack experiences, and how small changes in the environment can help make it easy for consumers to choose circularity.
Growing up, I took on this advocate role without even knowing it. I tinkered
with DIY remedies, from pulling chamomile from the garden to make tea, to
creating homemade lemon juice and sugar scrubs with my mom and sister. It felt
good to know exactly what I was consuming and using.
Flash-forward 20 years, and now I am living in the age of wellness podcasts,
product transparency documentation, the climate crisis and PR risks lingering on
a social media post. The endeavor to understand the products that surround us in
our environment has become more mainstream, but ever more complex.
There is an influx of information available to consumers about what is in the
products they use and environmental impacts of product manufacturing. Yet, as
someone who has been living and working in the sustainability sector for a
number of years, it can still be challenging to decipher labels; to understand
the impact of chemicals in products; and to feel certain that a higher-priced,
sustainable product is legitimate in the face of false or exaggerated claims. It
takes practice and commitment to be and stay in the know.
The reality is that for many people, product
health
and product
sustainability
are not top priorities — not because they don’t care; they simply don’t have the
time to educate themselves on the matter, or the money to spend on more
expensive products. In this sense, sustainability is still seen as a privilege.
That is why it is time for brands to empower consumers by offering them accessible choices that are better for them on an individual level — as well for the planet, and for generations to come.
Five steps brands can take today to better empower their customers
1. Know your business inside and out
This is not a just within-your-walls type of knowledge; it’s knowing your
business at a systemic and holistic level. You must understand the inputs and
outputs that go into your business — including your supply chain’s upstream and
downstream impacts; and consider and integrate externalities into your business
practices and costs, all while benchmarking and setting goals that challenge
your brand to be better.
A great place to begin to better understand your impacts and opportunities for
improvement is with a materiality
assessment.
This can help your team understand what areas of the business have the greatest
potential for decreasing negative impacts (greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions, water
pollution, pay inequality, waste generation) and generating positive or
regenerative impacts (GHG
drawdown,
closed-loop water systems, circular economy
models).
And a materiality assessment will help you systematically move through your
business; figuring out top priority, high-impact areas of action.
2. Be honestly transparent with consumers
It is 2019, which means customers are increasingly savvy. I will always remember
Patagonia’s Footprint
Chronicles, in which it pledged to
share ‘the good, the bad and what it’s doing to make it better’ throughout its
supply chain. This is a mantra I share with businesses as they work through the
complex and sometimes uncomfortable realization that everything they do isn’t
great, and their impacts — once realized — can feel like a pit in their stomach.
But that's okay — you have to begin somewhere.
Realize, celebrate and then enhance the good you are able to provide through
your business. Acknowledge, plan to mitigate, and please do not hide the
negative impacts. Best of all, share your moonshot goals of how you’re going to
remedy the negative impacts for the benefit of all stakeholders. Share this
information, and make it readily available for your customers, stakeholders and other businesses to utilize. It can be scary to put out information that doesn’t look great, but through this exercise you’ll build stakeholder trust and brand recognition, and — if you’re making improvements — earn admiration from peers and customers alike.
3. Actively inform — empower consumers with information to make a good decision
Making information available on your website is one thing. Actively informing —
or taking the initiative to ensure your customers are completely informed at
point of consideration and purchase — is another. Help consumers make better
purchasing decisions and reward the companies (hopefully yours at this point)
that have institutionally integrated sustainability into their business.
A key industry that comes to mind is cosmetics and personal care. You can’t
scroll for 30 seconds on Instagram without coming across someone who has a
“clean” line of personal care items. With the rise in knowledge of the impact of
chemicals in products such as detergents, shampoo, conditioner, lotions,
deodorants and more; there’s been a surge of products eager to fill demand for
high-quality, clean
products.
To do this, such businesses are elevating their engagement with their
prospective customers. They illustrate the negative health and environmental
impacts of conventional products and make the case for why consumers should put
their money behind cleaner and more responsible ones.
As consumer behavior continues to evolve and is further influenced by the values
of millennials and Gen Z, brands that actively empower their customer base with
information that contributes to a healthier environment, healthier communities
and equitable prosperity will reap benefits starting today.
4. Know what you’re advocating for
We’ve come to a point in business where the line is blurred between isolated
business operations and advocacy outside your walls. If you look inward, it is
likely your business advocates for some cause already. While many actions can
make a brand seem like an advocate, being a true change-maker and business
influencer involves strategic and authentic planning.
Patagonia, with its environmental and social
activism,
again comes to mind. However, there are thousands of businesses across the world
that take on some level of advocacy every day. For example, I think of all of
the companies that have signed onto the We Are
Still In campaign, the We Mean
Business campaign and those that are
part of 1% for the Planet; and even those that are
transforming the world of business altogether as B
Corps.
The future of our planet — and our lives — is on the line, which means business
is on the line, too. By practicing advocacy, businesses can be part of the
solution. It’s time to flip the historic narrative of big businesses lobbying for loopholes, to a narrative where those
businesses support
causes
that will enhance life and the bottom line.
5. Act — and aim for the moon!
I love the term
“moonshot,”
because it implies a goal that is so far-fetched it is difficult to imagine
coming to fruition. But given what we know in 2019, just about anything is
possible. From the 1969 moon landing to Interface reaching its Mission Zero
goal
ahead of schedule, we have seen what’s possible when we have the power to drive
innovation and the will to be responsible business leaders.
It’s no secret that sustainability
challenges
have already begun to impact businesses around the world. So, now is the time to
set those ambitious goals that push you to improve. Integrating sustainability
into your business will save you money, help you avoid costs, break into
untapped market segments, and integrate efficiencies and opportunities you
otherwise would have missed.
Viewing your business through a sustainability lens will help you attract,
engage and
retain
great employees, help you better innovate new products or services and build
resilience and foresight into your strategies. Without setting that moonshot
goal, you won’t be able to create a sustainable future for all stakeholders,
including your business. Once that goal is in place, create action steps to
reach it and keep an open mind for any challenges you might face — that means
it's time to reevaluate, and run through the materiality assessment again.
From growing up, sourcing my own garden ingredients for tinctures and teas; to
now working as a sustainability professional, the world as we know it has and
will continue to change. Generations now increasingly realize the severity of
the climate
crisis
and the impact products have on our health, and increasingly understand the
world in a systematic manner. There is an undeniable, under-the-surface bubbling
to do better — to create a healthy, equitable and accessible marketplace of
products that not only do no harm, but also do good.
We could all freeze in
the headlights from apathy at the thought of this challenge to change and
protect the planet and ourselves — or brands and consumers could develop a
partnership of trust, to create the values we collectively want to see in our
products and impacts.
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Program Manager, UW Extended Campus
Amanda Goetsch is the Program Manager for UW System's Undergraduate and Graduate Degree Programs in Sustainable Management.
Published Dec 20, 2019 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET