My company has been firmly planted in the green space since our birth in 2003. We were not first, but we were pretty early. A lot has changed.
We have made our way through the rapid change by studying the culture. We produce content that is relevant to the various sustainability movements (there are multiple) taking shape around us. Here are some examples of the type of content we produce to understand it all:
- Biennial Green Language Survey of 100 Print Ads
- Pop-Culture Lens studies exploring the meaning of sustainability in our culture
- Our soaplabs design, test and prove innovative strategies with very trusting clients
- An upcoming report that breaks emerging marketing trends into 6 narratives
Our latest green language study will be available (for free) later this month (if you’d like an advance copy, let us know here). As a sneak peak, here is one of the findings:
Green is no longer a driving element in print ads.
As we write the report, I’m reminded of a talk I gave at the LOHAS Forum in 2007. The talk was called A Beautiful Ambiguity: Language, LOHAS and the Mainstream (If you’d like to download the nostalgic pdf, go here). I remember saying to the crowd, "once green is mainstream our competitive advantage is gone." My point was that we were all hyper focused on green as THE thing. And at the time it was THE thing. But at some point the rest of the market was going to catch up with us, and we would need to evolve. That time has come.
I used pop-culture to illustrate the point and show how trends evolve. For example, when bubblegum pop music starts using hardcore street language (or gang signs), the street must change how it represents itself – it’s no longer dangerous. It pushes it further. When the skinny suburban kid steals your language, urban kids don’t want it back. Or, more contemporarily, when your mom comes home in skinny jeans, things must change. This is the way culture evolves – change happens in the margins, mainstream absorbs and the margin pushes it further.
Fringe – Margin – New Fringe – New Margin – New New Fringe – New New Margin…and so on.
And throughout this continuous cycle of cultural evolution, the entire system becomes more and more complex. It’s not unlike energy efficiency. The first 40% of efficiency (perhaps sustainability in general) was the easiest. But by now we have changed the light bulbs and weatherized the house. The next 40% will get progressively more complex and challenging. It will require new technologies, processes, innovations and ways to measure impact.
Similarly, sustainability marketing programs need to engage consumers in new ways. They need to be measured in new ways. They must push the dialog further. The programs that companies design to embody LOHAS are growing in complexity out of necessity. I think this is a good thing. It is part of cultural evolution. One of the projects that graduated our soaplabs was More Than Promote - a strategy that measures marketing by its corporate, civic and cultural impact.
If we’re not innovative in how we fundamentally approach marketing, we end up looking like a modern version of Vanilla Ice sampling Vanilla Ice sampling Queen.
By John "Ice Ice Baby" Rooks
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