Do it for them
<p>What sustainability marketing efforts at a corporate level that will give folks a reason to buy at the product level?</p>
Your corporate sustainability efforts ARE a reason for consumers to buy your products. We’ve borne it out repeatedly in our research, and we’ve just seen proof of it again in our soon-to-be-published Eco Pulse study.
The question is: What efforts most resonate with consumers? In other words, what can you do at a corporate level that will give folks a reason to buy at the product level? We’ve mentioned this before, but first and foremost, you can make your products in the USA and you can recycle. Made in the USA = a-safer-product in a consumer’s mind and recycling = green. Sixty-four percent of the American population claims they always recycle (we know that’s not true, but that’s their perception), and they hold companies to the same standards — as in, “I think I’m doing the right thing when I recycle, therefore, when companies recycle, they’re doing the right thing, too.”
From a corporate social responsibility standpoint, keeping your efforts local is a big win…and so is, essentially, doing most of the work for consumers. Buy-one-give-one programs test really well and that’s not really surprising — they’re Brownie Points programs that consumers doesn’t really have to earn. They just buy a product they were going to buy anyway and, poof, someone in need gets the same product. Everybody wins and little effort (on the part of the consumer) was expended.
Following that logic, the makers of the Two Degrees bars photographed below should do quite well. These were on offer at Sustainable Brands and I was struck by them — both because of the buy-one-give-one approach but also because of the amount of real estate the company gave to the claim on their packaging. As my colleague Karen Barnes recently wrote, we hear a LOT from major brands that they can’t make their sustainability claims bigger or more explanatory on their packages — there’s not enough room, there are too many things we have to say, etc. If these guys can devote nearly half of the packaging of a snack bar to it, I think anybody can do it.
So that’s the takeaway — do it for them. And make it really visible on your packaging. Consumers will reward you for it.