Two Words: Alignment and Authenticity

My new column for Greenbiz which will feature exclusive SHIFT Report data, launched this week with cool infographics on political affiliation and sustainability. Here is the article:

I was recently at lunch with two friends, one of whom brought her husband. After the couple departed, I found myself apologizing to my other friend for the husband’s rude behavior, the mildest part of which included leering gestures at the waitress and comments that don’t need to be repeated.

“Don’t worry about it,” he responded. “I always try to focus on the points of alignment with someone. There’s always something. And once I found them, it was an interesting conversation where we were both engaged.”

Alignment is crucial.

As businesses seek to define and tell their sustainability story in the landscape of shifting consumer values — which they must do in order to be culturally relevant — there has been significant focus on environmental issues where there is less likely to be alignment and which aren’t necessarily the most important to some people.

Sustainability (a word so overused, misused and abused that I’ve started calling it the S-Word) is about the issues that lie underneath it. These are a collection of issues that include but go beyond green and include personal, social and spiritual sustainability issues.

This was uncovered both qualitatively and quantitatively in our market intelligence tool, The SHIFT Report. These sustainability issues are important to mainstream consumers in varying degrees. However, across most consumers groups — from either a brand consumption, activity, demographic, lifestyle or political point of view — green issues are not necessarily the most important ones. They are significantly surpassed in importance by social and personal sustainability issues: community connection, fair trade and employee treatment. These are areas consumers feel personally affected by or connected to, and represent two key motivations for caring about brands and companies.

People aren’t waking up across the globe declaring, “I want a green life.” Rather, they are waking up saying that they want a connected, conscious, thriving and sustainable life (though they don’t necessarily use those words). Brands and their storytellers need to understand this in order to define and tell their stories and engage consumers in conversations. As one respondent put it during one of our focus groups, “How can we take care of the environment if we can’t even take care of ourselves?”

Environmental sustainability is crucial, but it’s not the only piece of the puzzle. Green needs to be looked at in the context of other sustainability issues, not in a silo. Green may turn out to be the best color of a brand’s sustainability message, but it might not be.

Unless brand manager focus on the issues that define a brand and determine which issues authentically align with their initiatives and audience, they risk making misleading claims, not connecting with their audience and potentially alienating others. When brand managers targeting a diverse global or national audience look primarily at environmental issues without interconnection and context to broader sustainability issues, the result can be a brand experience that doesn’t bring disparate and diverse audiences together, but keeps them apart. Looking at green in a silo doesn’t reflect a big-picture understanding of the cultural shift to sustainability, in which people are redefining the criteria by which they make lifestyle choices, purchases and brand decisions, It misses the forest for the trees, and in doing so can also reinforce sustainability myths, such as that those on the political left are more engaged with sustainability than those on the political right.

Indeed, looking at political parties in the U.S. and Canada and how voters connect with sustainability issues is a good way to assess brand alignment within a mass and diverse mainstream audience. For Republican and Democrat voters (or, in Canada, Conservative, Liberal, NDP and Green Party voters), alignment is not necessarily around environmental issues, it’s around all the other issues: schools, housing security, health care and general well-being. This bigger-picture, interconnected approach doesn’t minimize the importance of environmental sustainability. But it delivers on its importance in a different way.

Let’s take look at two social sustainability issues where there is alignment across a diverse audience: community connection and supporting locally based business, which are themselves interconnected. With the support of local business and local economies, the environment becomes the beneficiary (such as lower greenhouse gas emissions) rather than the direct strategy. Environmental sustainability issues are supported, but they are a direct result of focusing on key areas of alignment across a diverse audience: buying local and supporting locally based business.

Thus, brands — political or otherwise — that speak to a diverse audience have two key words to keep in mind when telling their story in a culture of shifting consumer values: authenticity and alignment. What can they authentically talk about given their initiatives around sustainability? And where do these internal sustainability truths align with their diverse audience?

Determining the sweet spot that aligns these truths will uncover opportunities that deliver on business priorities to drive positive change and business success.

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Impact of Political Affiliation on Connection with Sustainability Issues and Motivation

Inspired by The Visual Miscellaneum’s Left vs. Right Political Spectrum, we thought we’d take a dive into The SHIFT Report and see the impact of political affiliation on connection with sustainability issues and motivation. It is interesting to look at the issues where the parties diverge (environmental), where the more right wing views push ahead (spiritual) and where they are quite close together (social + personal).

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It ain’t about the dollar or trying to go fast.

Design for durability, or as it is sometimes called, is gaining traction is the world of industrial design, slowly but surely. It is a noble sustainable design strategy and it always makes me think of the lyrics to Buck 65’s song Craftsmenship.

It ain’t about the dollar or trying to go fast
Unless you take pride in what you’re doing, it won’t last
Craftsmanship is a quality that some lack
You got to give people a reason for them to come back

The world’s a different place than what I was introduced to
They don’t wear shineable shoes like they used to
Casual clothes in the office, what is this
The villain in sneakers is killing my business.

There have been a few products / projects that have come across my radar recently which fall into this arena though at different access points – Yves Behar’s Aesir cellphone ($8500), (concept) and recently my good friend purchased a new pair of beautiful 1000 mile Wolverine boots ($400).

Almost always buying the product that was built to last will be an upfront investment, requiring long term thinking over instant gratification. This is not always easy. In fact it’s almost never easy! But as we see in The SHIFT Report research, products that are designed to last rank highest among product design characteristics. Of the 60% of North Americans who say product design and lifecycle is an important sustainability sign post, 82% rank durability as important over material characteristics (toxin free, plastic free, compostable, etc.). North Americans want their material possessions to last. This is a huge insight and opportunity for industrial designers, producers and investors.

To learn more about which signposts consumers look to in determining whether a product or service is socially responsible, consider investing in our special innovation report “Defining and Telling Your Brand’s Sustainability Story“. We like to think of it as both incredibly timely and durable research.

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Sustainable Innovation: What is the Future We Want to Create?

The importance of courage and asking the right questions: Meet Darcy Winslow who represents both.

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Darcy Winslow

I’m thrilled to launch the latest Sustainable Innovators interview in the Experts Behind the Experts Series with Sustainable Life Media. In this latest interview, you’ll get inspired by Darcy Winslow – Founder,  Designs for a Sustainable World Collective as well as Executive in Residence at MIT. She is a proponent of Systems Thinking as the tool for the future, and actively involved with the Society for Organizational Learning founded by Peter Senge.

Like all of our EbE, Darcy Winslow is a passionate pioneer in the intersection of sustainability + business, with a track record in leveraging sustainability as a tool for innovation. For many years this came via her leadership role at Nike, Inc during her 20 year tenure at Nike during which she held several senior management positions within the business. She has been an active practitioner of sustainability frameworks and principles, exploring and experimenting with the application of these to all aspects of business.

An executive, a thought leader, an educator and an athlete who is committed 100% to sustainability, press play and listen to Darcy as she shares her thoughts on sustainability, success and innovation and where courage,  collaboration and goal setting fit into an equation that will support the cultural shift to sustainability.

Web:  dswcollective.com | Twitter: 

Thirsty for more? Listen to the other great EbE interviews here.

The Experts Behind the Experts Interview Series is a collaboration between Ci and  created and hosted by Kierstin De West.

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TED Ads Worth Spreading – Media built on passion

is right – TED is the role model for media companies of the future. As someone who doesn’t own a television but spends a fair amount of time online, I was curious to learn more about Chris Anderson’s (curator of the TED conference) point of view on one of TED’s new tentacles: Ads Worth Spreading. Anderson explains how advertising is failing, that attention is the great scarce resource and its value has to be rising. He says that quantity of attention (eyeball hours / clicks / demographics) is not necessarily the right metric by which to measure success, but that it is intensity we should be interested in – that focused high attention, leaning forward not slouching backward. Introduced as a competition, the winners were announced earlier this week. I’ve watched three so far (Savory Institute, The Topsy Foundation, and Girl Effect) and what strikes me is how these short spots so elegantly exude a combination of compassion, education and solution. It’s the power of a good creative brief, in this case: media built on passion. As Chris Anderson says: “passion is a proxy for potential’. I love that.

Of course any time I see the word passion, especially in the context of media and communications, I think of The SHIFT Report’s Sustainability Passion Index. If passion is a proxy for potential and The SHIFT Report research is designed to gauge the North American populations’ passion levels surrounding sustainability issues – it would seem we’re in a good place. A place from which to drive and support the cultural shift to sustainability by helping brands understand where that passion lies in relation to brand awareness, lifestyle choices and connection with sustainability issues (personal, social, spiritual and environmental).

Ads worth spreading, most definitely.

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Are People Who Meditate the Top Social Change Agents?

Image Credit: www.fronteerstrategy.com

Do you meditate?

A few weeks ago, the New York Times Article “How Meditation May Change the Brain” by Sindya Banhoo in the “Well Blog” garnered 590 comments and was number six on the list of most emailed articles that week. I became curious about people who meditate every day versus those who do not and wondered:

Are they more likely to be the agents of social change? Are they more empathetic towards brands that make an effort to be socially responsible?

How did people who meditate every day measure up against the general population in terms of:

  • How important key sustainability issues are to them.
  • Sustainability attitudes- action disconnect
  • Are meditators more or less likely to feel the brands they engage with are socially responsible?
  • Are daily meditators more or less likely to be motivated by altruism to care about these sustainability issues?
  • Are they more or less motivated by fear and how do they compare to those who never engage in meditation or prayer?
  • Does the increased empathy that comes with meditation (as some of the research noted in the article suggests)  carry over to their brand relationships?

Diving into the database (n=5000, general population) from The SHIFT Report‘s annual quantitative study and SPI segmentation update, I looked at people who engage in meditation or prayer every day across a few areas of the study: sustainability issues, motivation, sustainable consumption categories and perception of brands as socially responsible. Here are the results:

Overall, those who meditate are more likely to rate the sustainability issues as important,  There’s no surprise that this would ring true for some of the issues that fall into the spiritual sustainability pillar. Those issues that fall into the environmental sustainability only show the least difference.

Q: Please rate the importance of the following issues associated with sustainability as they relate to you

Are those who meditate daily actually living their values with lifestyle choices and purchase decisions that deliver on social change?

The attitude-action disconnect is an unavoidable truth for everyone. Hey, we can’t all be like the folks in Portlandia. It turns out that those who meditate every day are more likely to be making sustainable lifestyle choices and purchase decisions than those who don’t, showing that they are more likely to be turning their sustainability attitudes into actions.  Note to Social Innovators and NGOs – Start a ‘get meditating’ campaign (and go beyond green).

Q: Which of the following areas of your life have you already made sustainable lifestyle choices and purchase decisions?

If people who meditate are more empathetic, according to the research published by cited in Banhoo’s article does that empathy extend to brands?

Those who meditate or engage in prayer every day are more likely to want to know about the socially responsible behavior of brands whose products and services they buy: 73% versus 67% of the General North American population.

Here I selected a few brands from the study to look at. The first chart is clustered together a bit loosely, but with three groupings in mind and some overlap between them: competitors, those that spent consumer marketing $ on telling their sustainability story (authentic or otherwise), those that have sustainability ‘equity’ but didn’t spend significant consumer marketing $ telling their sustainability story.

Here we’ve sorted the brand list in a different way, ordered by perception as socially responsible. Those that North Americans (general population) feel are the most socially responsible sit at the top.

Me or We? Are meditators altruistic or are they equally motivated to care about sustainability issues by self-serving generosity as the average person?

Overall those who meditate are more motivated overall to make socially responsible lifestyle choices and purchase decisions and we can see that engaging in meditation or prayer leads to deeper motivation when looking at the differences between those who don’t ever, the general population and those who everyday.

Q: Please rate how motivating each of the following are in your interest to make socially responsible lifestyle choices and purchase decisions.

(Full disclosure: I meditate daily. )

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Innovator Interview: The Benefits of Mistakes and Multiple Personalities

Dawn Danby – Sustainable Design Program Manager at Autodesk

An Industrial Designer merged with a Sustainability Consultant merged with an MBA: Meet Dawn Danby.

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Another down to earth thought leader as part of our EbE Sustainable Innovators interview series, Dawn Danby explores the intersection of design, sustainability and business. Which is a fancy way of saying that she wants the things we make to benefit both people and the world.

In this interview Dawn shares the benefits of a diverse background, the upside of making mistakes and the importance for designers to look at the social sustainability context in which their environmental sustainability initiatives lives. An early game changer to the sustainability space, Dawn remans excited by the possibilities that design presents.

An industrial designer by training, she’s a boundary-spanner and synthesist who has acted as a cross-disciplinary designer, strategist, art director, project manager, producer and artist. She currently manages Autodesk’s Sustainable Design Program, integrating sustainable thinking into the digital tools used by 9 million designers and engineers worldwide.

Through  – Dawn is now connecting withstudents putting tools for change – and a dose of inspiration –  in their hands.

Dawn holds a design degree from the Rhode Island School of Design (2000), and an MBA in Sustainable Business from the Bainbridge Graduate Institute (2007). She apprenticed in green building and policy with the Fisk-Vittori team at CMPBS, and in furniture design with Macek Furniture. She collaborated with international artist Noel Harding on Windsor, Ontario’s Green Corridorinitiative, where she helped teach an interdisciplinary course at the University of Windsor. She designed a $3.5M tree-covered, wind-powered pedestrian bridge on the US-Canada border, has developed closed-loop manufacturing strategies for a leading outdoor footwear manufacturer, and helped establish a public art master plan for a major American airport. Dawn was also one of the founding writers behind Worldchanging.

Web:   | Twitter:  | Twitter: 

Thirsty for more? Listen to the other great EbE interviewshere.

The Experts Behind the Experts Interview Series is a collaboration between Ci and  created and hosted by Kierstin De West.

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SHIFT Data Love

The art and science of data visualization is blooming like algae. At Ci, we continue to sponge it up because we are in the midst of researching new ways to visualize The SHIFT Report quantitative data.

Peter Orntoft - Interest no.6 - Law and order Focus: gang related crime and whether the Danes have changed behaviour because of it.

Everyday across our favourite blogs (Fast Co., GOOD, Information is Beautiful, the list goes on…) we are exposed to new sets of data, drawing disparate connections in informative and elegant ways. People are getting creative too, breaking away from the digital and moving to the tangible as seen in . Or breaking from the static and using motion to tell the story (ex. ). Or harnessing the power of the web an designing in levels of interactivity. It’s also not a new discipline as I was reminded today on Co. Design where the infographic of the day portrays Black History in America after the Civil War.  Amazing to see the hand rendered marker lines.

The number of tools available to help create these visualizations is also on the rise.  They range from simple online tools (google) to completely new programming languages (processing.org) to sponsored open source platforms (visualzing.org) to comprehensive software packages for handing large sets of data.

All this to say, we are excited about employing new techniques to visualize The SHIFT Report data! The potential is enormous. In the coming months we’ll be asking you which queries are most interesting and will share these findings on our blog, visualized and contextualized. Your input may also be used to inform the next SHIFT Innovation Report.  If you haven’t downloaded the free summary of our current offering – Defining and Telling Your Brand’s Sustainability Story, .

Created for Seed magazine, this diagram maps the connections between the most disparate of forces, events and systems affecting our planet.

The infographic here quickly drew me in yesterday. It and I spent quite a few minutes together pondering the connections, following the lines. In the center of the concentric circles are the most fundamental influences. Rippling outward are the effects, which create a surprising number of synergies. It was published in SEED Magazine this week and also on view at Visulizing.org where SEED and GE Ecomagination are the founding partners for the online bank of relevant infographics. Click through . Enjoy!

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Portlandia vs. Supportland

It’s no secret that Vancouver has a crush on Portland. The city has such an established DIY culture. The perception from the visitor is a smooth blend of individuality, creativity, intellect and community connection. At the heart of this energy seems to be a sort of local pride. And we know that local is an important sustainability issue because it transcends the pillars (social, personal, environmental, spiritual). Supportland is an incentive program for local businesses which encourages customers to support local by using a swipe card at participating shops. It seems to be taking the idea of creating local currency to a level that is actually implementable and integrative. A cool branding project too employing lovely illustrations which makes it seem more accessible. Learn about how Supportland . I could see this system implemented in East Vancouver. We’ll have to let know about, if they don’t already.

But as cutting edge and grass roots as the Portland scene is, it’s always a pleasure to take a step back and have a laugh. Enter Portlandia – a dreamy and absurd rendering of Portland, Oregon. My first experience was the episode ‘Is is local’ where the two main characters, Fred Armisen and Carri Brownstein, are out for lunch and are probing the server about the chicken they may order. I could not stop laughing.

Both winners.

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Gen Why Media Project

Wow, I just discovered which is based here in Vancouver.  I am inspired and filled with hope. Cool to recognize some friends in there too!

We are the change we’ve been waiting for.

Gen Why is you. We are the spawn of globalization, technology, connectivity, environmental crisis, and have more questions than the authorities can answer. We believe in independent thinking, cultural alternatives, progressive politics, racial integration, art, music, creativity, peace, compassion, intelligence and respect for all living things.

Right now over half of the world’s population is under 35. We are the largest, most connected, most educated, most diverse generation in history. We have the collective power to create whatever we want.

Have a watch of the project’s trailer and spend some time on . You won’t feel even a tinge of apathy. I promise.

Clearly these kids fit right into the Vocal Globalist segment of CI’s Sustainability Passion Index. It makes me wonder how the Vocal Globalist demographics breakdown.  It makes me wonder how big this project will get.  Taking a quick dive into The SHIFT Report data, the study shows that 25% of people between the age of 18 and 24 and 33% of people between the ages of 25 and 34 Vocal Globalists. And looking at the population as a whole, 39% of the females and 27% of the males who participated in The SHIFT Report quantitative study fall into the Vocal Globalist segment.

Can’t wait to see how this project evolves.

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