Here at Sustainable Brands™ — our self-described ‘home for courageous optimists’
— our global community of innovators is always abuzz with activity, but a few
initiatives this year have generated their own special momentum and have us
particularly excited to follow them in the year to come.
Plastics: From pronouncements to progress
An exhibit on plastic waste at MAAT in Lisbon, Portugal | Image credit: Martijn Baudoin/Unsplash
2019 continued the tidal wave of commitments from household-name brands and
their parent companies pledging to rid their products,
processes
and
packaging
of unnecessary plastic — and working to get consumers to do the
same
— while joining
forces
and scaling new
technologies
to get a handle on the glut of material already out in the world. Public
pronouncements are all well and good, but there’s typically very little
visibility into progress on those pronouncements — but WWF is now working to
change that with its ReSource: Plastic
platform. In its 2019 report, No Plastic in Nature: A Practical Guide for
Business
Engagement,
WWF outlines four proven strategies that nearly any company can deploy when
approaching this issue. Then, through ReSource, it goes on to help companies
solve for the what, how and why by identifying what specific actions they should
be taking, and how they’re working once in progress.
As WWF’s Erin Simon told us earlier this
year,
“The unique value proposition of ReSource is the rigor that [holds] companies to
the very high standards for commitment and self-improvement.”
The ReSource Footprint Tracker will be the centerpiece of the activation hub
— telling companies where to start, how to identify intervention points for
action and how to optimize these actions in order to meet their commitment
objectives. Because all member companies will be using the tracker, it will also
allow WWF to see the aggregate progress being made toward its goal of preventing
10 million metric tons of plastic waste.
Currently in development by WWF’s R&D team, the footprint tracker is being
piloted by its Principal Members, so it’s tried and tested by the time ReSource
begins Member recruitment in January 2020. Our hope is that the added elements
of accountability and transparency will drive a true shift toward proper plastic
management at scale.
A company’s compass on the long and winding road to sustainability
Image credit: Ivana Cajina/Unsplash
After talking to hundreds of business leaders within the global SB community to
investigate why they aren’t making faster progress on sustainability, we found
they tend to fall into three categories: Whether the problem is not knowing how
to find the right path; thinking you’ve gone far enough; or seeing the path but
lacking the right tools to push forward — it’s become clear to us that
sustainability executives and their C-Suite colleagues need more assistance with
understanding and connecting the dots.
That is why the Content Council of the SB Advisory
Board — which
features execs from Iron Mountain, Danone, Procter &
Gamble, Campbell Soup Company, World Resources
Institute, Oxfam, Valutus and Natural Logic, among others — pulled
together its collective wisdom, as well as research insights from a number of
other thought leaders, to create a comprehensive orientation and navigation
tool: The SB Brand Transformation
Roadmap℠.
Think of it as a friendly guide that lays out the entire sustainability journey
and allows any company to assess the maturity of its efforts in five critical
practice areas — Purpose, Brand Influence, Operations & Supply
Chain, Products & Services and Governance. With its accessible
vocabulary, it can serve both as an on-ramp to early-stage practitioners, and as
a North Star to intermediate and advanced practitioners.
Since its
launch
to the SB Corporate Member group in 2018, more and more companies have embraced
the Roadmap — which is helping to inform next steps and overall strategies for
sustainability journeys; helping different departments compare notes on what the
journey means in each of their domains (governance, supply chain, marketing,
etc) and reimagine how to work better together to make progress.
As more and more companies better understand the journey to sustainability and
their place within it, it can only increase the speed and likelihood of lasting
positive change.
Showing consumers the way to the Good Life
Image credit: Brands for Good
Speaking of being stymied, despite a consistent rise in conscious consumerism in
recent years, there remains a persistent intention-action gap with regard to
uptake of more conscientious consumer lifestyles and habits. And in late 2017,
SB’s Corporate Member group collectively agreed on the need for a comprehensive
approach that any brand could use to create that elusive “pull factor” toward
more conscious consumer habits and purchasing behaviors. So, in December 2017, SB partnered with BBMG and visionary brands such as Procter & Gamble, The Estee Lauder Companies, Happy Family Organics, Keurig Dr Pepper and National Geographic, Heineken USA, Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc, Target and Veocel to create the Pull Factor Project which centered on designing an actionable toolkit for creating communications that can shape culture towards desiring sustainable lifestyles. You can find the results of this project on this Pull Factor Report.
Brands for Good (BfG) officially launched in June 2018 building on the previous project and includes P&G, National Geographic, Nestle Waters, Target, PepsiCo, SC Johnson, SAP SuccessFactors, Dentsu Aegis Network, VISA, Global Citizen, Porter Novelli, Futerra, The Guardian, WeSpire, EY France, and ANA. All these brands came together to further work together to unleash the power of brands to make sustainable living the good life of tomorrow.
All Brands for Good partners have taken a three-point pledge:
-
to embed environmental and social purpose in the heart of their products;
-
to use their marketing, communications and brand influence to make
sustainable living accessible, aspirational and rewarding; and
-
to work together to transform the field of marketing to shift behaviors and
close the intention-action gap with respect to sustainable
purchasing/lifestyle behaviors.
Brands for Good has identified nine sustainable
behaviors as the
basis for an Innovation Framework in four core areas: lifestyle, marketing
and advertising, media and socio-economic. Now, not only is BfG
working to change consumer behavior for the more sustainable, the collaboratory
is also creating success metrics for sustainable marketing and resultant changes
in consumer behavior; along with another roadmap — a Lifestyle Transformation
Roadmap, which will include a self-assessment component to inspire and empower
consumers and employees; socio-economic trend-trackers that track measures on
the baseline population defined by brand and industry segments; marketing and
advertising effectiveness and evaluation metrics for work that successfully
engages consumers. Watch this space for updates
on the initiative, and to get involved.
The momentum we’re already seeing on these initiatives revitalizes us in our
mission to inspire, engage and equip our community of changemakers to continue
leading the charge toward creating a flourishing future. Here’s to 2020!
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Published Dec 26, 2019 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET