
BOSTON, Mass. -- Energy efficiency giant Johnson Controls is reaching out to the public with interactive online programs that can be used in homes, schools and businesses as teaching tools.

OAKLAND, Calif. -- A group of California businesses and trade associations on Thursday threw their support behind the state's climate change regulations, arguing the efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions amount to an enormous economic opportunity.

OAKLAND, Calif. -- The Guide to Successful Corporate-NGO Partnerships shows the business, environmental and social benefits of partnerships between companies and non-governmental organizations.
In Jacquelyn A. Ottman's April 2006 column, "The Real News About Green Marketing : Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow," the green marketing guru offered a disturbing statistic for any environmentally focused business. In her article, Ottman cites Roper's Green Gauge poll: around 42% of consumers still feel that environmental products don't work as well as conventional ones.
"Eco-inclined" consumers are savvy. And yes, maybe even a little cynical. And that's exactly why I believe the show-and-tell style of experiential marketing works so well to reach them.
Known also as event marketing, experiential marketing (XM) inserts eco-friendly brands into a consumer's life in a way that is unique. Consumers are able to touch, feel, taste, hear, use, and play, fostering a positive brand experience. Post-consumer recycled-package samples of a cool organic energy drink might be handed out at a celebrity-attended skate-boarding event, for example.
Statistics reflect the explosion in XM. In fact, in 2005, companies claimed to have earmarked 25% of their marketing budget for XM, up from 10.7% in 2004, according to Promo magazine.
Unlike traditional advertising where you pay for a finite number of impressions, XM by-passes that technique to initiate product trial immediately. With XM, the first impression is the trial. And trial, as any smart marketer knows, changes behavior.
A successful XM strategy will implement these tenets:
With experiential marketing, green marketers can cut through the clutter. Every day, consumers are exposed to between 3,500 and 5,000 branded impressions. In addition to this advertising overload, consumers are less engaged than ever thanks to marketing avoidance tools like Tivo, pop-up blockers, and more. Traditional marketing vehicles no longer achieve the same results that they used to.
But don't take my word for it: Marketing executives nationwide continue to invest in XM: 45% believe they get the best return on investment from event marketing versus 15% direct mail, 12% print advertising, 8% internet, and 7% broadcast advertising. And total spending for XM in 2004 was $166 billion (up 9% from 2003), according to Promo.
Jacquelyn Ottman ends her article with another, more positive Roper poll stat -- 56% of Americans would do more for the environment if they only knew how. XM empowers you to do exactly that by hand-delivering valuable information to eco-inclined consumers who crave it. With experiential marketing, you'll finally be able to give your green product or service the face time -- and the star power -- it truly deserves.
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Robbie Thain is president and founder of Makai in Manhattan Beach, Calif. Experiential Marketing (XM) activists for more than ten years, Makai creates and implements full-service marketing strategies through its XM, Entertainment Marketing, Makai Dos Manos, and Makai Europe Divisions. Clients have included Nestle, Intel, T-Mobile, Honda, and Chick-fil-A, among others.
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