A growing bank of evidence suggests consumers want to do the right
thing when it comes to shopping more responsibly.
Buoyed by increasingly reliable and attractive sustainable products and
services, people are happy to back brands they see as being authentically led by
purpose and acting responsibly.
Yet an even bigger bank of evidence points to the frustrating
paradox
that, despite this apparent appetite for environmentally friendly consumerism,
few consumers actually follow through with their purchases.
Much of this has to do with affordability; in the face of a cost-of-living
crisis — particularly across Europe and the US — making more responsible
purchases choices remains inaccessible to many, especially the younger
generation. There also appears to be a lack of confidence that individual
choices and personal decisions will not make the blindest bit of difference in
solving the climate crisis. Consumers commonly display emotions of
disillusionment
when asked about their ‘green’ shopping habits.
The ongoing struggle to narrow the so-called intention-action gap is worrying.
The planet needs us to make better buying
choices;
the climate impacts associated with our consumption of goods — whether it’s
food,
clothing
or
electronics
— make up a significant
proportion
of national carbon footprints.
Brands also need customers to make the jump to more sustainable options. For
example, two-thirds of the climate footprint attached to most consumer goods
brands product ranges occurs when they leave the shelves. But in meeting
corporate sustainability and net-zero targets, a lot still depends on which
products customers choose. A shift in buying
behavior
is crucial — yet, it remains a challenge.
“We need to make sustainable options meet consumers’ core
needs,
rather than expecting the majority to make tradeoffs when they choose a
sustainable option,” Lauren Taylor, Managing Director and Partner at
Boston Consulting Group (BCG), told Sustainable Brands®.
To help, BCG and the CMO Sustainability
Accelerator — a coalition
that includes Sustainable Brands, ANA and
Adweek — have developed a new, practical guide to
highlight ways in which brands can better link sustainability to broader
consumer needs. The Future Is Mainstream Green: Introducing a New Growth Strategy
aims to “bring green to the mainstream” by exploring how companies can develop
and market sustainable choices for all consumers, not just those moved by
sustainability claims.
“That group is still a small proportion of the population. So, this action plan
focuses on driving sustainable behavior for all the rest and creating
sustainable outcomes — even if not for the sake of sustainability alone,” Taylor
said.
The guide also helps to define the role of the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) in
driving growth through sustainability, something that “until today, has been
unclear,” Taylor pointed out. “In some cases, CMOs and customers have not been
in the sustainability conversation at all; and it has been more focused on
decarbonizing the supply chain. In other cases, CMOs have been focused on the
small subset of
consumers
motivated by sustainability as one of their top drivers of choice.”
The coalition suggests that, with an intimate understanding of customer needs,
brands can cement their differentiated purpose and value proposition. This will
help to bring customer demand for sustainable goods, services, and lifestyles
“from the fringes to the mainstream” — with CMOs able to make complex topics
digestible and unfamiliar products desirable.
A three-step strategy for CMOs
The document outlines a three-step strategy for marketers to make sustainability
a driver for growth:
-
Understand drivers of choice: By linking sustainability to broader
related needs, such as health, CMOs can unlock two to four times the number
of
customers
for whom sustainability is a concern but not a primary driver of choice.
-
Create a sustainable offering: Focus on value, efficacy, taste — and
innovate to make sustainability an ‘and,’ not an ‘or.’
-
Promote sustainable choices: Leverage the full customer-engagement
toolkit — such as removing friction to purchase, strengthening customer
connections and amplifying advocates authentically — to overcome perceived
barriers and drive demand for sustainable choices.
“To reach the mainstream, sustainable choices need to be seen as at least as
attractive or appealing in terms of meeting consumers’ core needs — like
convenience or value — as the top options in each category and market,” says
Taylor, who hopes the guidance will support CMOs who can bring a critical lens
to removing real and perceived barriers. In a statement, ANA CEO Bob Liodice said he hopes the guidelines and recommendations will help CMOs that need
guidance on “how to fulfill the promise of true sustainability while growing
their business.”
While many CMOs are well placed to lead the charge for sustainable growth,
representing the voice of the consumer, companies will need their entire C-suite
and senior leadership to be aligned.
“Organizations cannot achieve the environmental sustainability goals that
they’ve pledged without inspiring consumers across the board to change their
habits,” Taylor says. “But many opportunities will require new products and
innovation, new marketing, messaging and pricing.”
Download The Future Is Mainstream Green
now.
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Content creator extraordinaire.
Tom is founder of storytelling strategy firm Narrative Matters — which helps organizations develop content that truly engages audiences around issues of global social, environmental and economic importance. He also provides strategic editorial insight and support to help organisations – from large corporates, to NGOs – build content strategies that focus on editorial that is accessible, shareable, intelligent and conversation-driving.
Published Nov 29, 2022 1pm EST / 10am PST / 6pm GMT / 7pm CET