Luxe et Veritas

conserv

There’s a mystery I’m trying to solve. It started with a swarm of people in a room, all abuzz about sustainability and its many guises. I overheard somebody talking about a particularly profound example of conspicuous conservation that seemed almost unbelievable to me, and I made a mental note to research it when I was next united with my laptop. My google skills are usually creepily good, but I was unable to track down anything definitive about this particular claim, so I remain in a state of skeptical curiosity, and am therefore reaching out into the no-doubt-vast network of sustainability-savvy folks who read this blog, in hopes that somebody somewhere will be able to provide an answer.

The mystery at hand: Are there people in Japan who put fake solar panels on their houses, just for the ecochicness of it all? Or is this just an urban legend, perhaps created by a clever Chindogu and a telephone gamey misunderstanding?

On the face of it, it just seems wrong that such a thing would exist. Yes, solar panels are so expensive that they’ve come to be seen as a luxury item in Japan, and yes, we know that people want to appear so green these days that 9 out of 10 people in the UK admit to telling little green lies to appear greener than they really are, but I simply cannot fathom the depravity of somebody who would actually go to the trouble of purchasing and installing fake solar panels. It would be like driving around in a fake Prius.

So you can see why I’m determined to find out whether these panels are real or not. If so, it would mean that conspicuous conservation has veered into new and disturbing territory. Our own research at egg has delved into the gap between green beliefs and green actions, but this data point, if true, would introduce a new category: the eco-fraud. It’s one thing for companies to greenwash, but quite another for individuals to go so far out of their way to blatantly misrepresent their energy sources. (Yes, I suppose one could make the tortured argument that fake panels will ultimately promote sales of real ones, but I’m not going there right now.)

So here’s what I found so far: a googlesearch for “fake solar panels” japan yields a paltry 28 hits. But no definitive answers. A handful of blog posts reference a now-defunct link to a TV show that apparently mentioned the fake panels. One guy thinks they’d make a great biz idea, but seems to think he came up with it. I uncovered no primary sources, no news articles, no images. So I expanded my search a bit, and learned that Japan makes 50% of the real solar panels in the world, that they’ve got big plans for solar (30% of homes by 2030), and that 80% of solar panel sales in Japan are made door-to-door. This last article was most revealing — it discussed how the panels are indeed considered a luxury item, but it had a captioned photograph of a standard-looking roof, saying Japanese prefer unobtrusive solar panals like these roof tiles. So at this point, I’m thoroughly confused.

I know that there are plenty of deeper mysteries out there, but I’m still rather curious about this one. So have at it: ask around, trawl the wayback machine, hop a carbon-offset flight to Tokyo. If you’re the first person who solves this little mystery, I’ll send you a special gift.

The Path to Sustainability

ecofootweb.jpgThis will be perhaps the longest post yet of the egglog. But don’t worry, we aren’t going to start getting verbose here. It’s just that this particular post requires some storytelling.

In order to better understand consumers and their orientation towards sustainbiltiy, we frequently use the notion of a metaphorical pathway to describe the journey that people take in moving toward a more sustainable view on life, and the actions that go along with that way of thinking. Each step usually leads the traveler further down the path to the next milestone. Note: this is a conceptual framework with a hypothetical set of circumstances and milestones. Every person will have their very own unique version of the path to sustainability, with some lingering for quite a while at a certain point, and others leaping ahead in bounds.

The Path to Sustainability

Healthy
Local
Social responsibility
Environmental responsibility
Simple living
Control

First, keep these things in mind. They’re all part of sustainability.

Then, imagine a path that starts with a glimmer, a flicker, a desire for some sort of change, some sort of control over a chaotic situation. Maybe you’re trying to eat healthier, or starting to recycle, or starting to drive less, or maybe you’re just sick of the work buy consume die cycle and feeling the need for something higher, something more connected.

It often starts out with concern about me me me — my health, my kids’ health, my pocketbook, and then once you’re on the path for a bit, the systems thinking begins to kick in, and you start thinking about the deeper impact of the things you do, the impact not only on yourself and your family, but on other people in distant communities (like sweatshop workers), and the impact on nature, on animals, on the environment.

At the beginning of the path, maybe you start eating healthier, feeding your kid organic babyfood because you heard about the toxic effects of all the pesticides on human development. And maybe you read about the toxics in plastic babybottles, so you move to glass, and maybe you get rid of your old waterbottles and get some ones made of stainless steel. Maybe you start recycling because you have to, but then you start thinking about composting too, as you become aware of what you’re doing with your food waste, and the great effect of compost on your garden. Maybe you also read about the toxic effects of chemicals on your lawn and decide to let it go natural so it’s safe for your kids and pets to play on.

And continuing down the path, you realize that gas prices are insane, so you start to drive less, carpool, take the bus. You start thinking of the impact of fossil fuel consumption on the planet because you’re hearing more and more about global warming these days, and they say that by 2100 the coasts will be completely flooded and certain areas will be completely uninhabitable, so you try to minimize your fuel consumption more than ever, and you really want to buy a Prius when you get your next car.

You eat organic food all the time now, as low on the food chain as possible because you read about how badly animals are treated in factory farms, and how meat production is bad for the environment. You’d love to get solar panels for your house, maybe even a wind turbine. You use a water filter because you read about chlorine and fluoride being bad for you. You buy clothing from thrift shops sometimes, and you’re starting to shop less….

And maybe you start to collect rainwater from your roof and use if for your garden (which is by now completely chemical-free.) You won’t shop at Wal-Mart anymore, and all the coffee and chocolate you buy is fair trade. You read the labels on everything, and have stopped using toxic cleaning products in your home and toxic personal care products on your body. You shop at Whole Foods all the time, and try to get to farmers markets whenever possible. You’ve turned down the thermostat in your house, and everybody in your family has to wear more layers inside during the winter. You’ve eliminated most plastics now, and you’ve started making your own babyfood, and you’d love to get one of those cool urban chicken coops that you read about in Treehugger — fresh organic free-range eggs every morning!

In fact, you’re becoming more and more connected to things that feel more “authentic.” You’re getting into home remedies — using vinegar to clean, and taking echinacea for the flu. You’d love to learn how to can all that extra fruit you find at the farmers market. You’ve started volunteering with a local environmental group — you take the whole family out to do trash pickups every few weeks, and you’ve signed a few petitions about endangered species too. You’re really upset about the polar bears dying out because of global warming. You’d love to move out of the city and into a place that’s more connected with nature.

You start doing yoga more and more often, and you still haven’t gotten that Prius yet, but you take the bus and walk a lot, so it doesn’t really matter. You’ve done a home renovation to capture some passive solar rays, and you used all recycled materials and low VOC paint. You’ve turned most of your yard into a garden, and you use one of those old-fashioned push mowers. In fact, you seem to be doing a lot that might be considered “old-fashioned” these days. You’re unplugging as much as possible, spending more time with friends and family, simplifying your life in all sorts of ways. You consider the origins and impact of everything you put in your body now, and you also think carefully about how you spend your time and what you produce and consume. Every time you read about global warming getting worse and worse, you feel emotional and frustrated about the dire state of things and about all the progress that’s yet to be made.

You’ve finally done it. You’ve moved off the grid. You’re totally solar-powered now, you have a goat and chickens and you finally feel like you have control over your environment. You had an air purifier and a water filter when you lived in the city, but it just couldn’t compare to the feeling of purity you have now. Each of the steps you’ve been taking has given you such a sense of satisfaction, of greater connectedness to the whole, and you become more and more aware with each passing day at how far you’ve come from the mainstream. You cannot even enter a mainstream drugstore or grocery store without being acutely aware of how unsustainable most of the world still is — so many toxic products being sold, so much treating the symptoms and not the source of an illness, so much gratuitous commercialism and marketing that plays on people’s insecurities, such a glut of irrelevant parity products flooding the market. Yeah, once you’ve come this far down the path, it’s impossible to go backwards. But you really wouldn’t want to, anyhow, despite the challenges of living a considered life…..

Hang out the Greenwash

picture-1.pngThis handy chart from Futerra, a nifty communications shop in England. It identifies how to spot, prevent and avoid greenwash for consumers, companies and agencies. Futerra’s new Greenwash Guide analyses the current state of greenwash and what’s being done about it. You can also find guidelines for companies and agencies on how to prevent greenwash, and a ‘spotters guide’ for consumers to help avoid it.

So the question we ask ourselves is how much of what we are seeing out there is bad marketing, how much is lazy marketing, and how much is deceptive marketing? Most likely, there is a fair share of marketers who have jumped on the green bandwagon and who are spinning green pitches unduly and even unjustifiably, but what about those who have something to say and rely on an agency that just doesn’t get it? They rely on the hackneyed images, colors, and ideas that are the low hanging fruit of green communications strategies and executions. For example, I recall a Toyota ad where they used #3 here with the daisy flourishing from the tailpipe for Prius. And yet, Prius has a great story to tell–technologically speaking with direct benefits to the consumer. Sometimes, it isn’t even laziness, but simply a lack of understanding of the challenges in how to reach the consumer regarding these issues. I recall seeing GE’s first Ecomagination print ads that used Audubon prints in a very clever way, but in the end, the execution served the agency’s portfolio better than it did the initiative, and so they changed to a smarter, more informationally driven look and feel that explained the environmentally friendly technologies GE has been working on.

The challenge facing communications professionals will be to tell the stories that carry information and help educate the consumer on what makes something green and why it matters to them. But it most likely will not be colored green. And it will not involve a tree.

Don’t Think of a Leaf!

img_32492.jpgThe quintessential, perfectly shaped, ribbed leaf. Almost any tree. Polar bears, glaciers, treefrogs, and bamboo. Illustrations of leafy vines, branches, stalks and roots. The classic dandelion image with seedlings a-blowin’. Of course, the omnipresent windmill as icon, regardless of the fact that the sponsoring brand has nothing to do with wind. And we cannot leave out the classic that started the category and continues to live strong to this day: a pair of tender hands cupping a baby earth globe.

And these days, globes of all shapes and sizes are selling like hotcakes at Getty Images and other stock photo sites. When I got my Green Festival brochure in the mail recently, I wondered what the meaning might be behind the woman on the cover who is playfully batting the globe around as if it were a volleyball—perhaps that the powerful human race is not taking this stuff seriously enough, and that our future might be in the balance? Hmmm. But then why is she smiling?

These are the images of green. We have all seen them now, and they are multiplying like the green tendrils of the invasive English ivy that have taken over my backyard. The big question for those of us in the business of communications around brands that are talking about sustainbility, is what works and what doesn’t? And what is best for the cause? It’s big business obviously, or Getty wouldn’t be selling their secret sauce for 400 quid.

Of course, for colors, just about every shade of Pantone green has been used to sell green. When egg started in 2003, we even created a Conscious Consumer swatchbook with seven shades of green—from darkest Off The Power Grid Green, to lightest Red State Green—to playfully denote the various segments of the green consumer landscape based on a US Green Consumer survey that we conducted. Somehow, at the time, it seemed warranted in this manner and for our specific purpose.

Obviously, the more we see the same images and colors used over and over again to communicate issues around sustainability, the less meaning and differentiation there is across the board. And who really wants a brand that looks like all the others? Within the Green Festival program itself, there are fewer than 5% of all ads that chose NOT to use the color green in their layout. Good for them. Bad for the movement, and bad for the communicators out there. We can do better than this.

As the green “movement” moves ahead, for it to become a success, we need to move away from these clichéd communications solutions. Such expected images and colors have become suspect in the selling of green. Consumers are having a hard enough time on their own without us marketing types muddying the waters. While they are desiring green solutions, they have a hard time understanding it, finding it, and embracing it. Because of the rampant nature of this cavalier and listless approach used to communicate green, consumers have come to question all things green, and we are now in the cynical, distrustful phase of the game. Greenwashing has become the standard.

But people are actually smarter than we think. They want to know what this all means and they are willing to listen, so long as we try a little harder. And brands that understand this stand to gain green ground.

The story of green is so much richer, and more colorful than “green”. Green is about innovation, technology, intelligence, and exciting solutions which conjure up all kinds of great images. As has always been the case in our business, the unexpected is far more interesting than the expected. And as John Grant thankfully proclaims in his good new book, the Green Marketing Manifesto, “Green marketing is about making breakthrough green stuff seem normal—and not making normal stuff seem green.”

We can do better. We need to do better.

Feelin’ Bloovy

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Cultural trends tend to follow a certain pattern. A meme or a look or a movement will percolate through the culture, at first gradually, then infectiously fast, and then it will saturate the public consciousness so thoroughly that it will no longer satisfy those on the bleeding edge, who will initiate a radical shift and begin the cycle anew. And the interesting thing about trends, as opposed to fads, is that they reflect larger underlying cultural forces and tend to affect multiple domains. Thus, we witness transition times like the 1980s, when the US began to emerge from recession, and earth tones, bellbottoms, and back-to-the-landers gave way to neon, massive shoulderpads, McMansions, and big hair.

Right now, we’re going through another cultural shift, heralded in by the faltering climate, the faltering economy, and the profound reassessment of values that began in 2001 after the towers fell and the dotcom bubble burst. And as 2001-2007 saw the revival of green, from a fringe concern to a mainstream trend, 2008 appears to be witnessing the beginnings of an interesting shift around the color wheel — to blue. Which makes all of us at egg very happy, because ‘green’ was never a broad enough term to describe what we’re about, but we found ourselves using it anyhow, often when talking to people who have no idea what sustainability means (which is most people).

Whence blue? Two words: climate change. If green was about hugging trees and not paving paradise, blue is about the fact that the entire planetary balance is shifting, fast. When climate change finally begins to scare mainstream people in a Y2K problem or duck and cover kind of way, we can expect to see a lot more blue everywhere we look. We’re only witnessing the first glimmerings of the blue shift right now, but I predict that it will eventually come to subsume green in describing the cultural shift that’s been happening since the early naughties. Green was a step in the right direction, but it always had too much baggage. Blue is neutral, it’s soothing, it’s the color of clean water and air (ever-scarcer resources), and it also happens to be the color that people worldwide choose most frequently when asked to name a color. I think it’s got good staying power, as far as these things go. And don’t worry — the sensibilities underlying green won’t go away. They’ll just expand

Ready to jump on the blue bandwagon? Pantone has beaten you to it — they’ve declared Blue Iris the color of 2008, because it “satisfies the need for reassurance in a complex world, while adding a hint of mystery and excitement.” A complex world indeed. A google search reveals 9680 hits for “blue is the new green,” and I expect that this number will be growing exponentially. Gradually but gradually, all the common leitmotifs of “green” ads — leaves, seedlings, and of course, the ubiquitous color itself, will give way to a newer bluer look. And this blue period isn’t just about imagery; we’re already seeing it percolate into names and concepts: Mercedes has dubbed its newest eco-technology Bluetec, France has been using the Pavillon Blue as an eco-label to indicate eco-towns and ports, our client Gerdling/Edlen has named their latest eco-building Cyan, there’s a UK sustainability consulting firm named Level Blue, and the list goes on and on. Yeah, blue may have corporate associations, but a fresh new shade, especially complemented by some vibrant gold or orange hues, will be in no danger of looking workaday.

The thing that makes me happiest about this shift is that I won’t have to keep reading articles about what green is not. It seems that every article I read nowadays assures me that green is not about Birkenstocks or granola or Ralph Nader or frumpy hemp clothing or tree-huggers or patchouli or dubious hygeine practices. In short, people are still terrified of hippies and hardcore environmentalists, especially those people who are still stuck in the 80s conspicuous-consumption mentality. And yeah, the back-to-the-land movement is on its way back, and the hardcore hippie look will eventually undergo a full-on revival, as the current porn-plastic-botox-airbrushed-metrosexual aesthetic reaches a zenith and the utterly natural begins to look dramatically different and fresh. But at this moment, green still has plenty of limitations. And I welcome the influx of blue. It won’t happen overnight (hell, there are still plenty of people who covet McMansions), but it’ll happen.

As for me, I’ve already moved on.

National Champions: The Duke Green Devils

duke-goes-green.jpgThe Duke Blue Devils Basketball team extended their record to 19-1 this Saturday, beating the Miami Hurricanes by a 15 point margin. And in the process, they burnished their brand just a bit more.

What might you ask, does this news event have to do with egg, our blog, the egglog, or anything at all related to sustainability? Well, besides the fact that Duke is the alma mater of each of egg’s 2 co-founders, Marty McDonald (a somewhat avid Blue Devil basketball fan himself) and Mindee Nodvin, the Devils put on quite the green show at Cameron this past Saturday, while handedly thrashing their ACC opponent. In the name of Focus The Nation Day, a national teach in on global warming solutions, and to symbolize Duke’s ongoing commitment to sustainable environmental practices, recycling and water conservation, the Cameron Crazies -– Duke’s enthusiastic student fans — donned green shirts, emblazoned with the slogan: BLEED BLUE, LIVE GREEN. The more enthusiastic fans skipped the shirts and just went for green paint. (VOC free, non-toxic, hopefully.)

Duke will purchase carbon offsets equivalent to the electricity, steam and transportation consumed by the game, working in partnership with the renewable-energy company NativeEnergy.

“Grassroots movements have a way of starting with the students,” said Jennie Dean, 24, a first-year graduate student in environmental management and one of the coordinators of Focus the Nation at Duke. “Global change is something we’re very concerned about, and it’s our future, so we’re doing something about it. We hope Focus the Nation starts a national dialogue.” We do, too. And if it means getting national exposure for the cause by suiting up for TV camera exposure during the popular Duke basketball games, more green power to them.

In many college communities, including Durham, the university represents the largest consumer of power and water. With thousands of residential units, fleets of vehicles and dozens, if not hundreds, of buildings, an American campus is like a city unto itself. But unlike most cities, a university can take sweeping steps to improve its environmental behavior.

And the issue has hit home recently as North Carolina is in the midst of a very serious water crisis. Duke’s sustainability coordinator, Tavey Capps, says, “We’ve been working quietly for several years now to improve the campus’ sustainability in water and energy use and to build more sustainable new buildings because it’s the right thing to do.”

You can find out more about what Duke is doing around sustianability by visiting their site. And of course, to find out more about how the Devils are doing on the hardwood, you can go here.

Go Duke. And Go Green.

Earth Day in January

mlk_phones_hi.jpgThis post goes out purposefully one day after Martin Luther King, Jr. Day to honor the necessity for this man’s message to remain vital and ever present. We cannot contain the vast scope and importance of his work and its higher calling in a one day tribute, but rather should consider it a part of who we are each and every day.

The social aspects of sustainability are often overlooked, misunderstand, or misinterpreted. Recently at Compostmodern in San Francisco, some of the best and brightest designer minds were gathered to address the issues of sustainability as it relates to the design of our systems and society, but mostly the focus, feature, and understanding revolved around the environmental impact and considerations. And while respect for a clean and healthy living environment is critical in the big picture, even more important is our respect for others in the grand scheme of things. If in our pursuit of all things pro environment, we discover that we have lost our humanism, the trees have obscured our view of the forest, and we are in deep trouble. Understanding the quintessential nature of how our social systems interact with and complement our environmental ones is the key to understanding the true meaning of sustainability.

For today’s post we show a viral campaign we created about ten years ago in honor of the day and the mission of the man. Also included is the photograph that inspired the vision for the idea, which was to post these signs around Seattle above pairs of urinals, water fountains at airports, telephone booths and seats on buses.

The message below the words simply reads, “Thanks to Martin Luther King, Jr., signs like this don’t exist anymore. Remember him on January 18th.”

Perhaps it would have been better to say, January 18th, and beyond.

Comblogpostmodern

page_1.jpgAfter a very energizing weekend with the folks at LinkTV in San Francisco, we stopped by Compostmodern 08 on the way to the airport to get wound up even a little more. It was a great line up for this event’s 4th year, where “brilliant ideas, practical solutions, drama, inspiration, eye candy and some tough questions” all converge in consideration of a transition to a sustainable society.

Our green guy emcee and man of many green properties Joel Makower kicked off the gathering with a framing of the green business timeline, and then handed the mike over to the always entertaining Alex Steffen from World Changing, whose powerful, pointed Powerpoint usually gets the crowd thoroughly roused. The day was filled with leading designers presenting case studies on their work in design toward a less unsustainable world. There was Mark Galbraith of cool green clothing company NAU, Jeff Walker of VSA Partners, who made a solid enough pitch of (his) work with GE on Ecomagination, Valerie Casey of IDEO, Jane Savage from Nike who we shared a panel with at Discover Brilliant in Seattle last year, and Scott Stowell of Open Studios whose work on Good magazine is better than good. Adam Werbach of Walmart “Personal Sustainability Project” fame keynoted out the affair to end on an upbeat we-can-do-it-one-small-step-at-a-time note (which ironically was quite the opposite message coming from Alex at the outset, who made it clear what he felt about individuals’ small efforts to address the planet’s problems).

Here’s to AIGA in the Bay Area for a very good event. Keep up the good work Phil, Gaby, Marc, and Jeff. And bring it to Seattle, please.