green / sustainability

Opportunity Is Everywhere

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"Don't look for the next opportunity. The one you have in hand is the opportunity."
Paul Arden, It's Not How Good You Are, It's How Good You Want To Be.

Where most people see a dirty wall (or more likely, don't even notice the wall at all), Paul "Moose" Curtis sees an opportunity to make something better. He sees an opportunity to create art that takes something dingy and turns it into something delightful.

Green Works, or somebody working with them, noticed the reverse graffiti movement and saw an opportunity to bring this great idea forward, along with highlighting some people behind it, by creating the Reverse Graffiti Project.

As a planner, it is part of our job to find opportunity where others see none. For our creatives. For our clients. For our account handlers. For ourselves. For the people we're hoping to connect to our clients' brands.

Always look for opportunity. Always inspire.

David Report no. 9 - I Shop Therefore I Am

Davidreport9 David Report has posted their newest issue - "I shop therefore I am." You can read it at their site or it's also available to download for free. The very high-level description:

We are proud to announce the new David Report bulletin called "I shop therefore I am". In this issue we are looking into the world of consumer culture from different point of views; ethical, social, political, economical and humanistic.

Shopping has turned into a lifestyle. We consume as leisure and a way to pass time. But at the same time many are realizing that the power of consumption is stopping us from finding true and sincere happiness; and that shopping often works as a substitute for something that we´re missing in life. At what point does the accumulation of material goods become less fulfilling and more stressful and overwhelming?

Our consumption grows in the same pace as our economic growth. Studies shows that in hundred years we consume eight times as much per capita as today. Can our globe take such a strain? The power of consumption is being questioned and there´s a change in attitude and way of life. We don´t want to be consuming goofs, we want to be considered aware and responsible. It is all about WHAT we buy and WHAT we choose to invest in, the world we live in will be the result of those choices.

In the future consumption will be more about experiences and services than things. Perhaps giving will be more important than having. Are the companies, who survive on our consumption, prepared for this transition?

The David Report bulletin no 9 "I shop therefore I am" also offers insight on the subject from strategist Kristina Dryza and Zen-Buddhist Sante Poromaa. On top of this an interview with Mathilda Tham, guest professor at Beckmans school of Design.

There were a couple things that stood out in particular to me on this. The first was this thought:

In the future consumption will be more about experiences and services than things. Perhaps giving will be more important than having.

To me, this talks to the on-going hot topic of utility and the desire of today's consumers to use products and services that actually do things for them vs. buying brands in an effort to say things about themselves.

This statement goes beyond utility though and talks about supporting brands that make the world a better place, not just our own lives. In this regard, my mind immediately goes to TOMS Shoes, where purchasing a pair of TOMS not only gets you a pair of shoes, but also gives one to a child in need somewhere around the globe.

This is all further cementing the direction things have been moving in for quite some time. Especially with younger shoppers. People are becoming more conscious about what they buy, what went into producing it and what happens to their dollars post-purchase.

More and more people are moving away from buying things to make a statement about who they are; to buying things that give them an experience or help them do something that then shapes who they are and gives them a story to tell.

The evolution of this is going from purchasing products and services that do something only for our own good to supporting products that also do something for others in need or for the betterment of our planet.

The other piece that jumped out at me initially was a block of text in support of Herd:

A classical psychological symptom is also reflected in our shopping, humans are group animals and will do anything to stay in their group. To be excluded means death and to avoid being excluded people do what all other people are doing, in this case shop! Don’t be different, look like everyone else, do like everyone else etc. ...

In thinking about this in relation to the above point, as more and more people begin to shop with a more conscious mind about how they're spending their dollars, others will follow suit. In my mind, this says marketers need to do things with our marketing that supports and informs these changes.

The brands that start helping people feel better about their spending habits and where their money is going are going to get ahead quickly. The brands that continue to be selfish with their marketing and their dollars, or that just try to appear they're doing good? Well, let's just say they won't need their shades in the future.

How can brands do this? By creating experiences for, or sharing experiences with, people. Experiences change behavior. It is through doing and seeing others do things that we learn and change our own actions. We don't often change our behavior simply from hearing or reading words. Hearing and reading are important as reminders, but the the act of doing/experiencing is far stronger.

If you don't believe this, just think to when you hear a mother tell her child, "Don't touch that, it's hot," for the first time. Being that the child has never felt it before, they inevitably touch it to learn for themselves. Then, the next time their mother tells them the same thing, they recall the burn (action) of the first time and refrain from touching it this time.

Anyway... if you are a brand that is doing good with the money people spend on your products, don't stop at telling people you're doing it or going to do it. Show them you're doing it. Invite them to help you. Make them feel as much a part of the experience as possible. Let them decide how much they want to get involved, but give them every opportunity you can to join in.

O.K., I think I've gone on far too long on this one now. Read the report when you have a few free minutes as there are some interesting things in it to consider as you think about the future of marketing and advertising.

Google Turns Out the Lights for Earth Hour

Picture_542

Google has turned out the lights to help raise awareness for Earth Hour. I think it's a great example of brands using their marketing and advertising* to make things better. It certainly fits Google's brand and their desire to do no evil.

Judging by the the fact that I can't get Earth Hour's site to load, and thus the prior link to their Wikipedia page, I'd say it's working.

You can take part in Earth Hour by turning out your lights tonight for one hour at 8 P.M. local time.

*I say advertising in this case because many of the major "portals" sell ad space on their home pages or allow home page takeovers by brands so that brands can promote a new product/movie/etc. Think of how much money Google could make if they let brands take over the background on their "home" page. Yet they don't do it. Yup. Makes me feel better about Google.

The Next Issue

Thenextissue

Faris wrote a post recently that reminded me of something I meant to share, but neglected to back in early January. The Future Department has a new magazine out called The Next Issue. As described by The Future Department, the purpose of the magazine and what differentiates it from other magazines are:

Our aim is not to report on past events – or just talk about the future – but to play a proactive role in developing new solutions and approaches, through an ongoing conversation with the creative and business communities we serve, making intellectual and personal connections across all creative disciplines.

In every other magazine, the published article represents the end of a journey: the subject has been treated, and the author and reader move on. Here every article we publish is the starting point – developed and shared by an exclusive group of the most creative minds in the world: our readers are also our contributors.

The request that launched the first issue was something like this:

Summarise the challenges involved in bringing ideas to fruition in a rapidly changing and unpredictable environment. Please submit your thoughts on this subject in as many words as you choose.

The folks at The Future Department were kind enough to publish my response, which was:

Ideas, media and content are all becoming more and more disposable. What was popular and relevant one minute can be dead the next. If you don't do your homework on who you are trying to communicate with, you could end up looking very out of touch, and thus, irrelevant.

Another challenge is the growing amount of content on the web. What you think is an original idea, could very well be out there already or in production at the same time. Then when you release your new shiny idea, someone links the two and accuses one of ripping off the other. In reality, the creator of each may have never known about the other.

Last thought is that thanks to all of the quick communications tools we have at our disposal, clients can more easily send out for feedback on ideas to various audiences and then use this feedback to kill ideas. Odds are this "research" was not done correctly but now they're not going to move forward with the idea because of what someone said to them in an email that was out of context.

I'm extremely flattered that they included my quick thoughts (thank you, Steve & Alex) and encourage you to download a copy of it via PDF here. But not to read my simple note. There is much smarter stuff in there by the likes of Russell Davies, Stefan Sagmeister, John Maeda, John Grant and many, many more.

In addition to the PDF / printed magazine, there are also some bits of exclusive online content including Faris' article. Here are the links for those:

Burnt Fingers - Simon Andrews | In The Future - You Are The Entertainment - Faris Yakob | Ready. Fire. Aim. - Carl Johnson | The Nearest Thing to Pregnant - John Grant | Unknown Green Consumer Insights - Tamara Giltsoff | The Ultimate Pub Conversation - Adam Sefton | Publishing - Daljit Singh | Planet - Carsten Beck | Crystal Balling - Frank Palmer | Passion - Cindy Gallop | Reverse Engineering - Valerio Franco | Doing Down Under - Richard Hollingum | The Next Issue - Lewis Blackwell

I hope you find it as worthwhile of a read as I did and if anything grabs you, or you have some thoughts of your own, please share...

Flickr LP Portraits Group Inspires a Video

While looking for one of the Super Bowl spots that aired earlier, I happened across this video just now, inspired by the Flickr LP Portraits group. I like that people are inspiring each other to get creative with their LP covers and that this is spreading beyond Flickr.

This made me think... How might we inspire people to get creative with our brands' packaging? What function could it have beyond what it's used for now that would be useful to people? Or is the packaging just creating waste that isn't necessary? It's time to start rethinking things. Just because it has always been done that way doesn't mean it still should.

good business cards

Lushtreated1

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empty lipstick tube = new flowers

Cargo_3 Came across this today in an email somewhere and thought it was a very interesting idea. Here's the part I found interesting, as described by Cargo Cosmetics:

PlantLove™ Botanical Lipstick
What it is:
A lipstick tube made entirely out of corn - a renewable and abundant resource. This environmentally-friendly innovation also emits less greenhouse gases, which many scientists believe to be the major cause of global warming. The outer carton is made of flower paper embedded with real flower seeds. Simply moisten, plant, and wait for a bouquet of wild flowers to grow!

On top of the packaging, they also make the lipstick itself out of natural materials so that it is environmentally friendly and they donate two dollars from every shade sold to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

If they can do this with a lipstick tube, seems like there are a lot of other things that could be constructed this way as well. I'm sure it might cost a bit more to produce, but in the end, it just might be enough of a difference that people would not only choose it over a competitor who isn't thinking this way, but they might also be willing to pay a little more for it.

Anyway, thought it was a good idea worth sharing so that the next time you, or your client, is working on a package design/redesign, you might consider making the package do more than just look good.

Purchase PlantLove™ Botanical Lipstick here.

(ad)vocate for change

Gore

An article in The New York Times today announced a new contest being headed up by Al Gore and his group, The Alliance for Climate Protection, asking agencies and consumers alike to create videos/commercials that inspire people to take action against global warming.

The NY Times reports:

Mr. Gore, through his environmental group, the Alliance for Climate Protection, has sent invitations to advertising agencies to submit 15-, 30- and 60-second “ecospots” explaining the global warming phenomenon and urging action to address it, at either the local or national level. The alliance is soliciting entries from anyone with a camera or video-editing capabilities.
Submissions are due by Sept. 12, and the spots will be judged by a panel of activists, scientists and celebrities like Cameron Diaz and George Clooney. The alliance may choose to broadcast several of the entries; a Toyota Highlander hybrid S.U.V. will be awarded for the best spot.

Get more details here.

I like this idea. Working towards ending climate change requires getting a significant number of people engaged and involved. This is one way of doing that. Especially for people of a creative nature. A lot of people have energy and passion around this topic. It could make for some compelling communications that help bring more information to light.

Hopefully this will generate some great work for an even greater purpose. And if that's not motivation enough for you agency types, then consider that this has the potential to launch a relatively unknown group, organization or agency into the global spotlight.

Now go get to it all you smart communications/ad people!

[ image via filmweb ]

a good idea - usedcardboardboxes.com

Picture_12Found out about UsedCardboardBoxes.com in an email this morning. Thought that it's a great idea. I've been through several moves in my life. Both with the place I call home and at work. You always need boxes. Some people run around the office scrounging up paper boxes. Some go to grocery and liquor stores. Now you can just order them on-line and do something good in doing so.

Also, if you work for a large company that goes through several boxes a week (for paper, or other shipping items), you might want to pass this along to someone who could make the call to work with these guys for your used boxes. I know several companies are starting to create "green" initiatives and task forces. This could be a good thing to get involved with.

i take it back. they are a bad idea.

Earlier, I posted that at first seeing these spots from BP, I started out being horrified that a gas station/petroleum company would even think about insinuating they were the least bit green. Then as I dug into what they're doing, I softened up to it a little. I was wrong.

I am back to thinking they're just plain bad. Horrible even. Now they have cartoon babies driving and fueling up? C'mon BP. Get a grip. You're selling gas. It's a necessary evil for the time being. Accept it and don't try to sugar coat it. (Yes, no matter how much you want to think people could quit driving and using gas, you're wrong. Too many industries are locked into it and to get out of it really is cost prohibitive currently. We can all work to use less, but it's not going away any time soon.)

Even if you are doing a little bit to make things a little better, it's not enough. It's all a bunch of greenwash. God forbid they have a tanker spill, are they going to try to make that "a little better" too? You're selling glass freeze pops here, BP. Stop it.

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