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INTRODUCTION
Although green issues have been with us for several decades itâs only recently that brands have started to take them seriously. But rather than exercise carefully considered marketing many have jumped on the green bandwagon. Now millions of dollars and pounds of marketing spend are being spent on campaigns to make brands look more ethical, sadly most are a waste of money. Phrases like âgreen-washâ and âethicalwashâ are an apt way to describe most marketing activity. There seems to be little communication between CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) and marketing departments and little understanding of consumer attitudes. Call it lazy, ignorant, poorly advised or just that too many brands have fallen into a process of just churning ads out - and green is just another brief - but there really isnât much good eco- ethical marketing about.
On one level this book should help marketing and brand managers avoid becoming a victim of greenwash or worse, damaging the reputation of their brand. For eco - ethical businesses it will provide useful marketing guidance. And for students, it will offer some challenging ideas.
This book seeks to explore new ideas, provide a better understanding of the eco-ethical or â newâ consumer and turn a few ideas upside down and even inside out. There are already a few myths that need exploding and as for any rules which youâve been told, ignore them. One thing youâll discover is that maybe green isnât the best way forward if you want to be seen as an ethical brand. When we started the People versus Planet debate we challenged a lot of people to think about people messages against environmental ones. The outcome of our research was both illuminating and surprising to many.
The book will also show you how using traditional advertising techniques may be less effective than you thought. Or that you probably need to start with a different strategy than the one you first thought if you want to communicate the ethical values of a brand.
Advertising and marketing are not a science and there are no rules, just learning. Itâs an area full of well argued opinions and debate and as soon as someone thinks they have discovered a rule everything changes. I always compare it to music and fashion, whatâs in one year is out the next. The consumer is constantly changing and weâve seen a dramatic change over the last few years. Combined with a recession, the world of marketing is being shaken up.
This book isnât a rule book, a guide maybe but more than anything itâs been written to get you thinking, to challenge conventional ideas and explore new areas. When people ask me what I do for a living I say I make people think and help them solve problems, hopefully this book will do exactly that. Marketing is an adventure, a journey of the unexplored, which is why itâs such an exciting area to work in. But the moment it becomes a process itâs usually not good marketing. Think of any great campaign and great marketing idea and almost all of them broke with tradition. New ideas equal new opportunities. But this also requires people to be brave, âthereâs no success in the comfort zoneâ was a quote from of one very successful entrepreneur I know. Another entrepreneur who I worked with, Simon Woodroffe (Yo!) said, âIf you follow conventional thinking, all youâll ever be is conventionalâ. Worse, and this is my addition, you could be out of business.
One key thing that Iâve learnt over the years is that too many brands start in the wrong place. They make assumptions, base decisions on wrong information and then write briefs that end up sending everyone in the wrong direction. The tools that youâll find in this book such the R&E Line, the Ethical Sphere and a few other ideas will provide you with very powerful weapons to improve your marketing. There are sections that will help give you a greater insight into consumers. We havenât filled the book with case studies, but we are inviting any business to submit their own case studies on the website http://www.ecoethicalmarketing.info. There will also be room for discussion and debate, and in this area thereâs a lot of it. In time we hope that it will become a hub of ideas and information for brands, students and small businesses working within the eco - ethical arena.
THE STRUCTURE
When Wiley first asked me to write this book (and it took longer than planned with so much material), as a creative marketing consultant I asked a few questions about readers, distribution and statistics about reading.
One fact that was hardly surprising is that a large percentage of business books that are bought are never read properly. Of those books that are read few are read cover to cover, most are dipped in and out of. How many of us have shelves of books that we mean to read one day? Many of which have travelled thousands of miles in our hand luggage without ever being opened?
To âeat the elephant wholeâ is something most of us donât do, we live in an age of bite size media, in a world where we seek out information in fast to digest forms. Time is one thing few of us have to spare. We no longer think in a linear way but within a chaotic âfuzzyâ world. Thanks to the internet to start at the beginning and end at the end is now a very outdated idea. We like to drop in and drop out, zig zag about, gathering up those nuggets of relevant information as we go along. Time is too short and precious a commodity to waste on waffle or irrelevance. A hundred words of insight or vision are worth more than 10 000 words of rubbish. We are all in search of knowledge and leadership.
Rather than write a book that linked one chapter to another this book is designed to be read in any order, you decide. There is a structure but there is no reason to start at the beginning and read to the end. Itâs not really a unique or original model, many education books are written this way, as are magazines.
THANKS
There are many people who have helped in putting this book together, too many to list - they know who they are. My apologies to those whose case studies, interviews, brands or thoughts have not been included - we had to cut over 20% of the original manuscript. But we have launched a website where case studies and deleted chapters will be posted (see the final chapter). However, my greatest thanks go to Sarah Eden, an eco -writer who has helped with research, processing a great deal of information and doing the first edit. A green star if there ever was one.
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THE POWER OF BRAND ETHOS
FROM ETHICS TO ETHOS MARKETING
We talk about âethical marketingâ but perhaps we should adopt a more progressive term, âethos marketingâ. This makes a brand feel less marginal, and after all, shouldnât all marketing be ethical?
Ethos is probably one of the most important things a brand (and therefore a business) has. Yet so few bother to market it. Worse, many businesses have lost it, turning into bland brands with few, if any, values.
The mistake many brands make is when it comes to a makeover. Things are tough and the board needs the company to reinvent itself so they decide they need a new corporate identity. âWe need a rebrandâ. What they get is a new look, not a new brand. A brand isnât defined by its logo but by what it does. What it does is defined by its ethos, which gives it the why. It really is that simple.
Brands are like people and no matter what clothes you wear others will see you for what you are through your behaviour. I once worked with a manager whose only value was how much things cost and whether he could cut it. He did everything on the cheap, not surprisingly quality or ethics were not part of his agenda. How many companies behave in the same way? The public can soon spot a company that cares only about money, which means it wonât care about quality, people or ethics. âA principle isnât a principle unless it costs you somethingâ. And in the business of ethics, you often have to sacrifice some margin for values.
WHY REPUTATION IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN LOGOS
The other great mistake companies make is to think brand. People talk about reputation. So does the City. Reputation is what others say about you, it reflects your true values.
Innocent is a prime example of a brand that has grown off a strong ethos and reputation. Every touching point with the brand is defined by its ethos. If you meet their marketing team at a show they are friendly, energetic and honest. Itâs all about quality. The ingredients and the people are the best. You can tell the company cares about what is put into its bottle and who puts it in.
You canât say the same for any other soft drink. Brands like Coke have suffered so much adverse publicity, especially over the water scandal in India, that its behaviour has redefined the brand. Even given billions of dollars of advertising, kids see it as a bad brand.
Ethos is what defines the why and what we do. I always say that if your company has a strong ethos then you should be able to send any member of staff out to buy coffee cups and theyâll know exactly what to buy. I heard a story about a very dynamic digital company who sent their PA out to get napkins. She returned with Christmas themed ones, and this was in July. Her explanation was that it felt like Christmas every day in the office. Thatâs one hell of a great ethos to have.
NO ETHOS
But when it comes to no ethos, the classic was Woolworthâs. When I first started my career in advertising at McCann-Erickson in London it was the first account I worked on. It wasnât much fun and the client played so safe. Even then, over 20 years ago, it was in trouble. The store had become too diverse and no one knew what it really stood for. Twenty years on the same problem has led to its failure in the UK. Even ordinary consumers have used the phrase âWoolworthâs, what do they stand for these days?â
The original store started in 1878 in America and was a five & dime store, the original ÂŁ1 shop. In the beginning its purpose was simple - bring great value and choice to the customer. Having grown to one of the worldâs largest retail brands in the world, it started to decline in the 1980s. In the US it diversified into sportswear by way of the Foot Locker brand, with the last Woolworthâs closing in 1997.
It first opened in the UK in 1909 in Liverpool, growing to over 800 stores with almost 90% of the general public making at least one visit a year. But now everyone was bringing great value to the customer and you needed a new angle. Woolworthâs tried numerous routes but a failure to define its ethos and values, and therefore its brand, is one of the reasons it failed. I noticed recently that there wasnât one product in the store that championed any aspect of ethics. Just how far can you have your finger off the pulse? It seems that the real âwonder of Woolliesâ (as the ad slogan used to go) was how it managed to survive for so long.
BECOMING RICHER THROUGH ETHICS
Ethos is one of the most powerful things a business can tap into, yet Iâve rarely heard any corporate identity design company mention the word. The trouble with ethos is that itâs hard to fake or to demand that people adopt it, if your behaviour as a business is in conflict. Worse is when a business, like Body Shop, is built on a strong ethical ethos and then the money men move in and ethics is replaced with greed.
When Body Shop was sold to LâOrĂ©al in 2006 there was a massive clash of ethos. Body Shop under Anita Roddick had a strong policy of not testing on animals. By contrast, LâOrĂ©al had tested on animals (though they claimed they hadnât done so since 1989, but these things stick to a brand, as NestlĂ© knows all too well when it comes to baby milk). Customers were outraged. There were even boycotts. Many thought Roddick had sold out. She was after all the driving force behind the company and her ethos was the brandâs. LâOrĂ©al also represented the type of company driven by profits and this again jarred with the publicâs view of The Body Shop, even though it was financially very successful with over 2000 shops in over 50 countries and a sale value of over ÂŁ650 million - who says you canât make money from ethics?
The combination of a strong ethos and a strong personality is one of the most powerful things you can take to market. It connects on every level with the public. Even a grey brand like M&S found new life in Plan A, not just because itâs a great piece of marketing but because it was delivered via the head of the company. Somehow, one believed that Plan A was as much Stuart Roseâs vision as the companyâs. We trust people not corporations and when people speak we listen and want to believe. So many ethical brands are started by passionate individuals whose values are those of their brand, so itâs not surprising that we trust them more than large corporate ones.
LOOKING IN THE MIRROR
My advice to any business is to look at yourself first before you start to waste a fortune on marketing. Get your ethos right. Do you even have one? If not then you need to develop one. Ask all your staff, suppliers and customers what they think your values and ethos are. What drives the business? What is the spirit of it? You could be in for a shock.
Now ask, are we communicating this? Chances are, you arenât. Instead youâve drifted off into product advantage or highlighting some rare bean youâve discovered on a field trip to the rainforest. Thatâs all well and good but make sure you also tell people the why. Why you picked it. Why you would rather buy it from a tribe in Bolivia than a chemist in Romford. Why you think itâs important. Values soon come through. And when the customer knows the why behind what you do, that it is a good and ethical one, they trust you. And without trust, few brands can survive.
Your ethos can also be a platform to grow from. A company that sells organic fair trade nuts can do other things. It can champion causes, challenge the bad boys or seek to use its influence (and customers) to make change in society. Body Shop and Lush have sometimes acted more like Greenpeace than retailers. Benetton made us think about ethical diversity while shopping for clothes. These actions may seem frivolous to narrow minded accountants but they bring depth to a brand, and actions do speak louder than words. This is the new spirit of the age which some people talk about in business. An extra dimension to marketing the old school canât see; the thir...