Showing posts with label green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

How to Beat a Giant


Valuable lessons to learn from the story from the Times:

A Local Dry Cleaner Tries to Compete Against P.&G.

FOUNDED in 2004, Hangers Cleaners of Kansas City, Mo., was started as an environmentally safe dry cleaner. It uses colorless, odorless liquid carbon dioxide instead of the aggressive chemicals applied at traditional dry cleaners. It has 35 employees and 2009 revenue of $1.6 million.

THE CHALLENGE To survive the arrival of a huge new competitor, Procter & Gamble, which began testing a Tide dry-cleaning service in Kansas City in 2008.

THE BACKGROUND When Joe Runyan started Hangers, he was hoping to bring a fresh approach to what he considered a stagnant industry. A first-time entrepreneur who had left a marketing career at Sprint, he had been dissatisfied with the local dry cleaners, finding dirty facilities and rude workers to be the norm.

Then, while researching the business, he discovered that the chemicals used by most cleaners were prohibiting new entrants. Building owners refused to lease space to cleaners using perchloroethylene, or “perc,” which is now heavily regulated. “By no means was I a tree hugger,” Mr. Runyan said. “But from a business perspective, it was clear this industry had to change.”

He found that liquid carbon dioxide was acceptable to landlords and as effective as perc in cleaning. Mr. Runyan decided to employ the new process.

While his business plan had called for 12 to 14 storefronts and drive-through counters throughout the city, pick-up-and-delivery vans emerged as Hangers’ most effective sales channel. At a storefront, customers might forget to retrieve garments, and Mr. Runyan might never get paid. His six vans, however, picked up and delivered clothes in waterproof bags from patrons’ porches or garages twice a week. Upon delivery, Mr. Runyan immediately charged his customers’ credit cards. He didn’t charge extra for the service, but he said, “It’s so much less expensive to roll a van.”

Better yet, he found that if customers never put clothes in their own cars, they were less tempted by competitor sales. “Our bricks-and-mortar storefronts provide credibility,” he said, “but we encourage our employees to convert customers to the vans. Our stickiness is so much higher. It’s one more errand people don’t have to run.”

And then, in 2008, Procter & Gamble opened an eco-friendly dry cleaner about 1.5 miles from Hangers’ headquarters. Using Kansas City as a test market for a new line of franchised Tide Dry Cleaners, P.&G. offered drive-through service, 24-hour lockers, an on-site tailor and traditional “wet” cleaning, as well.

“I think there’s enough business in town for both, especially if they focus on storefronts, but they’re spending tons of money marketing and undercutting price,” Mr. Runyan said. “How do we overcome the gorilla down the road?”

THE OPTIONS One way to differentiate Hangers from a global brand, Mr. Runyan hoped, would be to increase the quirky messaging he believed his patrons enjoyed. Hangers gave away T-shirts that say “Sniff me” and sent promotional e-mail messages with riffs on the latest “American Idol” episode. It returned garments on hangers with slogans like “In the closet and proud” and “You’re the 23rd person I’ve seen naked. Please recycle hangers.” These efforts had brought positive feedback in person and through Mr. Runyan’s social networking on Facebook and Twitter.

Another option was to cast the company as an integral member of the community. For example, Mr. Runyan could try to partner with local businesses and charities, picking up from and delivering to their offices. A single point of contact might introduce Hangers’ services to thousands of employees, bypassing the cost of traditional media.

Third, Mr. Runyan could re-evaluate his storefront strategy, promoting the best ones but placing an even bigger bet on the vans.

Finally, he contemplated offering “wash ’n fold” laundry, too. “How can we leverage the trust we’ve built, the payment mechanism, and the vans to capture a larger share of wallet?” he asked. “What else can we sell?”

THE DECISION Mr. Runyan decided to pursue a combination of these options:

Hangers continued to cultivate its offbeat image. “We have a personality in a business devoid of it,” Mr. Runyan said. “We can’t out-price or out-spend our big competitor, but we can be genuine, funny and edgy.”

He worked to create a tight-knit culture of service and accountability. If a garment was damaged, a store representative would call the customer immediately and offer to replace it. He held a St. Patrick’s Day tailgate party for 60 people in a Hangers parking lot and financed a float in the local parade. “Maybe it’s goofy and old-fashioned,” he said, “but it seems to be resonating with the folks in K.C. Who would expect people to party with their dry cleaner?”

He initiated partnerships with corporations, nonprofit organizations and community groups, and he can quantify the patrons gained from each. He also contacted schools and donates 10 percent of the proceeds from parents’ dry cleaning back to each school.

In 2009, Hangers closed an underperforming storefront. And he concentrated Hangers’ van service on affluent, densely populated neighborhoods, hiring an additional sales representative to explain and expand the service in these areas. “We were already focused on the vans,” he said, “but P.&G.’s arrival made us work even harder.” (So far, Procter & Gamble has not offered van service.)

Additionally, Hangers began offering laundry service at $1.55 a pound (Tide cleans primarily pressed shirts and charges per article of clothing).

THE RESULTS While other local dry cleaners have told him that their year-over-year revenue is flat or down as much as 25 percent, Mr. Runyan said his revenue grew 2 to 3 percent in 2009 and his profits quadrupled, largely as a result of closing the unprofitable location. The laundry service proved a hard sell to suburbanites with their own washers and dryers, but young professionals and dual-income families responded; it now accounts for 2 percent of Hangers’ revenue.

Procter & Gamble now has three locations in Kansas City, and according to Lisa Popyk, a communications representative, they have been “a big win.” The company is advertising franchise opportunities in Cincinnati, Columbus and Dayton, Ohio, and in Lexington, Ky.

Mr. Runyan noted, however, that several of his customers had tried Tide’s service and returned to Hangers; he can tell, he said, because of the bar codes “the gorilla” leaves on each garment.

Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Going Green? Or Saving a Buck

Great Article this week from Drew's Marketing Minute:

The Marketing Minute


How dumb do you think your customers are?

Posted: 06 Nov 2008 05:28 AM CST

Save We give a lot of lip service to the idea of authenticity.

But come on...do we really think hotels don't want to wash our sheets and towels every day because they care about the environment?

I'd have a much higher opinion of the hotel if they said...if we can save a few hundred thousand dollars every year by not washing unused towels and sheets -- we can keep your room rates down and pay our people better.

Tell the truth. No one is fond of someone who talks to them like they're a moron.

Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Paper or....


Andie Golden, who sits with me on the Board for our local Advertising Federation sent this to me this week:

Which has a Greater Impact on the Environment:
Printed Materials or Electronic Content?


Conventional wisdom says that printed materials result in fallen trees and discarded paper clogging up landfills. But two studies from Germany found that electronic newspapers can actually have a greater environmental impact than print newspapers. This is thanks to the energy required to make content available 24/7 on electronic devices, as well as the energy consumption of the required devices, not to mention discarded batteries clogging up landfills.

Environmental impact is less straightforward than we think, and while electronic media reduce paper consumption and landfill use, they use more energy. So the use of electronic media over paper trades a renewable resource (trees) for a non-renewable one (fossil fuels used in energy production).

Print can actually be more environmentally friendly than electronic media, but there are opportunities to make it even more so.

Environmental issues have taken center stage in the past year, and there is a "green" shift in the graphic arts, evidence suggesting changes.

Recent surveys from The Industry Measure (formerly TrendWatch Graphic Arts) have found that, when specifying paper, graphic design and production professionals only occasionally take into account the source of a paper's fiber, or a paper mill's record on environmental sustainability. While these data don't indicate a groundswell in environment-friendly print buying, they do suggest a not inconsiderable level of interest. Savvy graphic design professionals have the opportunity to further act on their conscience while at the same time boost business by appealing to the "green" market among their own customers (present or potential)­a win-win scenario.

These same surveys have found that only 24% of graphic design professionals specify their own paper. Clearly there is room for a more proactive approach to eco-friendly paper on the part of print buyers.

There are two basic types of environmentally friendly paper:

Non-wood fiber sources, such as straw, cotton, kenaf, bamboo and other materials can be used as a fibrous source for papermaking, helping to take the strain off of wood forests.

Recovered and recycled paper helps reduce the demand for virgin wood pulp and diverts discarded paper from landfills.

Many paper mills offer recycled paper in a variety of grades, and the quality, "runnability" and cost of recycled grades have improved to the point where they are often competitive with non-recycled grades. When specifying paper to your printer, explore alternative fibers, recycled papers or other environmentally friendly options.

However, there is more to being environmentally conscious than simply specifying recycled or alternative papers. Considering a specific paper mill's overall record on environmental sustainability, which includes CO2 emissions generated during paper production, is just as important as its offering recycled grades.

For graphic design professionals seeking to improve their own records on environmental responsibility, the Internet and paper companies and industry organizations themselves offer a wealth of resources. After all, touting one's design business as "eco-friendly" is a good way to attract the business of customers who are either already environmentally conscious or who are on the fence about the issue and are looking for service providers to make these decisions easy. And given the inherent environmental advantages of printing over many alternative media, running a "green" design shop can be a good way to stimulate demand for print among clients who might be considering other media.

© 2007


Yale University Report

Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, October 23, 2008

The Natural Green Machine

Over the past 18 months, I have seen an increase in more and more Multi-Level Marketing representatives attending some of the business networking meetings I attend. The latest trend is health and beauty, with an emphasis on "Natural". But it's not just MLM's:

Study: Natural Beauty Products Flooding the Market

-By Elaine Wong


bw/photos/stylus/42931-Burts-Bees_medium.jpg
Fueled by the beauty industry's focus on natural ingredients, the number of organic and "ethical" cosmetic products introduced this year is up 23% from 2007, per a new study released by Mintel this week.

The study found that nearly 30% of all U.S. beauty products launched this year were organic, ethical or all natural. Globally, one in every seven products was organic, ethical or all natural, while last year it was one in every nine. Mintel, Chicago, attributed the rise to beauty companies wanting to unmask the ingredients in cosmetic formulations.

"What we saw a lot of in 2007 was products that said 'natural' or 'organic' but when you turned it over, you couldn't pronounce any of the ingredients . . . Now there is a level of natural, organic and ethical philosophies behind these products," said Mintel senior beauty analyst Taya Tomasello. She added that manufacturers try to convey these philosophies through either environment-friendly packaging or organic certifications on product labels.

Macy's, for instance, last month introduced a shop-within-a-shop cosmetic center that carries all natural brands such as Burt's Bees, Care by Stella McCartney and Pangea Organics. Called "A Beautiful Planet," the concept is currently in place at its New York, Philadelphia and Boston locations. The shop boasts packaging and display fixtures all constructed from eco-friendly materials.

Mintel said going forward, the challenge will be for retailers to distinguish themselves as being truly organic. Stores like The Body Shop have already jump-started on this approach. Shelley Simmons, brand and values initiatives director at The Body Shop, said the retailer will make 80% of its products preservative-free by 2010. The store also will convert to using 100% recycled PET bottles by the end of this year (Body Shop currently uses bottles made of 30% recycled materials).

"You can't just become 'green' because it's fashionable," said Simmons. "It has to be a serious commitment if you are really going to make a genuine difference."

Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Green Tips

Since I was attending conferences Friday and Saturday, Today, I am reviewing some emails that arrived while I was out. Here's one:

The Marketing Minute


5 easy steps to begin going green (Anita Revzani)

Posted: 03 Oct 2008 07:55 AM CDT

19146086 Drew's Note: As I try to do every Friday, I'm pleased to bring you a guest post. Meet another thought leader who shares her insights via the blogosphere. So without further ado...Anita Revzani. Again. Enjoy!

It is fairly easy for a business to make a declaration of environmentally-friendly practices and call itself green . But consumers are now leading the green revolution and they are quick to call businesses that do not practice what they preach.

Green or not your business should operate in the most eco-friendly manner possible. But you don't have to make drastic changes all at once. Most business have been operating a certain way for many years, hence they can make changes at a relatively slow pace. This also allows them to learn about sustainability one practice at the time.

Here are 5 easy steps you can take to start:

1. Recycle. You can pay a little extra to the waste management company handling in order to ensure everything possible is recycled, but this is a justifiable expense...especially if you are going to make the claim that you are a green business. Instead of throwing things away after the first use you may be able to reuse them in a different capacity. If you find a particularly innovative way to reuse something you may be able to share it when highlighting your green efforts.

2. Reduce resource consumption. Find ways to scale back on the resources you use to run your business by printing less and using online collaborative tools , turning off computers at the end of the day etc..... Not only will you save money, but make your business more environmentally friendly. At my company, Bizcard we use recycled paper when producing business cards and other print marketing materials.

3. Buy green. Make sure that the supplies you use for your business are as green as possible. At Bizcard, we buy our supplies from Green certified companies. By supporting each other, we become stronger and easily influence more businesses. Besides your production supplies, you can take a look at what you consume on a day-to-day basis see BuyGreen.

4. Pledge. Unless you are specific in your efforts to be an environmentally-friendly business, your customers may not be clear on what exactly makes you green. A pledge or mission statement about your green efforts spells out what steps you're taking and what you hope to accomplish with regards to making the world a better place.

Find an environmental cause that you personally believe in and that complements your business and then make regular contributions to the cause. You might even encourage your customers to contribute to the same cause. By creating an affiliation with green organizations you're conveying an image of unity among environmentally-conscious companies. This may also result in referrals from these companies, resulting in more customers.

5. Engage employees. Don't just advertise your green intentions without actually explaining them to your employees. You can ask everyone on staff to participate in your efforts to become greener and set up staff outings to do some volunteer work to benefit the environment. Upload photos or recorded videos images of employees cleaning up a local park or volunteering at a community garden on a gallery on your website. This will encourage other companies to do the same.

Every business should take several steps toward sustainability but you do not have to make changes drastic changes in the beginning. You'll be pleased to find, however, that most of the changes you make in order to make your business green will actually increase your profitability exponentially.

Anita Revzani is the co-founder and President of Bizcard, a print solutions company. Anita's past experience includes running operations for the ABC Group and helped to create $4 million dollars in annual revenue. Prior to the ABC Group she worked at American Express where she managed key national accounts including high-end brands like Gucci, Neiman Marcus ,Lord & Taylor, and America West Airlines while they were in chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Sphere: Related Content

Monday, September 29, 2008

Does "Green" Matter?


Take a look at this study:


Green Not Consumers GO Button

According to a recent Yankelovich survey, Going Green, of 2,763 consumers and their environmental attitudes, only 34% of consumers feel much more concerned about environmental issues today than a year ago. And less than one-quarter of consumers feel they can make a difference when it comes to the environment.

J. Walker Smith, president of Yankelovich, concludes that "While (consumers) are highly aware of environmental issues due to the glut of media attention... 'going green' in their everyday life is simply not a big concern or a high priority."

Even though Al Gore's book, An Inconvenient Truth, received widespread acclaim from media and scientists alike, 82% of consumers neither saw the film nor read it, says the study.

Mr. Smith asserts that consumers are far more knowledgeable about green than they're generally given credit for. Al Gore's "10 Myths" in An Inconvenient Truth are not considered myths by consumers at all. According to the Survey:

  • Only 7% of consumers believe Gore's "Myth" that it's already too late to do something about climate change
  • Only 4% believe global warming is a good thing
  • Only 8% agree that the warming that scientists are recording is just the effect of cities trapping heat rather than anything to do with greenhouse gases

Smith says that companies can exploit the "green-ness" of their products since the environment does represent a niche opportunity in the marketplace, with just over 30 million Americans (13% of the 234 million people 16+) "strongly concerned" about it. Smith posits that it makes sense to try and leverage the ‘new and improved' green product to consumers.

The Yankelovich Marketing Action Framework illustrates the degree to which all consumers - from "Green-less" to "Green-Enthusiasts" - are currently likely to buy a product based on its green features.

Green Marketing Action Framework (Yankelovich)

Consumer Category

% of Respondents

Mindset

Position

Greenless

29%

Lowest Attitudes & Lowest Behaviors

Unmoved by environmental issues & alarms

Greenbits

19%

Behaviors Higher Than Lower Attitudes

Don't care but doing a few things

Greensteps

25%

Moderate Attitudes & Moderate Behaviors

Aware, concerned, taking steps

Greenspeaks

15%

Behaviors Lower Than High Attitudes

Talk the talk more than walk the walk

Greenthusiasts

13%

Highest Attitudes & Highest Behaviors

Environment is a passionate concern

Source: Yankelovich Going green, July 2008

Smith suggest that marketers "... employ behavioral tactics that move consumers up the continuum to greater levels of ‘green-ness'... (vs.) focusing on these segments in isolation... "

For more information about the study, please visit Bliss Public Relations here.

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Who's the Greenest of them All?

Old Hippies, or former hippie-types? Flower Children of the 60's? Take a look:

Older Demographics Biggest Users of Green Products

Bucking the belief that environmentalism is a youth movement, a new survey finds that male and female consumers over age 55 are the most prolific users of green products in the United States, reports Retailer Daily.

Groups age 55+ reported above average usage of environmentally friendly home goods, according to a survey from ICOM Information & Communications.

Leading the way is the 55-59-year-old female demographic - more than twice as likely as the average consumer to use green products. Males age 65-69 are next - more than 1.7 times as likely to use than the average American.

Among the key survey findings:

  • Green products have penetrated into most American homes: 61.9% of respondents said they use some type of environmentally friendly product.
  • Asked why they elect to purchase eco-friendly goods, the leading response - by 33% of the group - selected the self-gratifying “makes me feel good about myself” respons.
  • Asked why they elect not to purchase or use green products, 50% of non-adopters cited high prices as the main factor. The next reason selected was “I do not believe that they are that much better for the environment,” at 17%.
  • Of those who said they do not use environmentally friendly products, both male and female demographics age 25-34 years were among the “least likely to use” when compared with the national average.

“While the numbers show that significant inroads have been made with the older demographics, they also suggest untapped potential in prime younger consumer groups to engage them with eco-friendly products,” remarked ICOM VP of Marketing Peter Meyers.

“Younger demographics are still green - that is, inexperienced when it comes to engaging with environmentally friendly goods,” Meyers added. “The data suggests that targeting these groups with more calculated offers - such as at slightly more aggressive price points, appealing to their personal values or reinforcing the true benefits for the environment - could introduce green products to a new, promising consumer base.”

ICOM conducted the household products survey in March and April 2008 with 6,036 people responding nationwide.

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Feeling Green


Clickable headlines:

Coke Greens the Democratic National Convention
The plastic bottle that Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama drank out of at the Democratic National Convention might very well become your plastic bottle. Coca-Cola Enterprises, Coke’s largest bottler, is attempting to recycle 100% materials sold and consumed at both the Democratic and Republican National Conventions. MORE >>

Body Shop Finds New Way to Beauty
The Body Shop has a healthy offering of sustainable products sold at its 2,500 retail stories. However, the chain felt it wasn't communicating its commitment to the environment strongly enough. That will change beginning, August 28, when The Body Shop rolls out its "Nature's Way to Beautiful" print, online and in-store effort. MORE >>

P&G Intros First Oral-B Floss Pick
Procter & Gamble will extend its Oral-B floss line into pick form with the launch of its new Oral-B Advantages Floss Pick next month. The initiative marks the brand's first foray into pick flossing as a way to encourage consumers to floss more often. "People know they should be flossing, but so often they don't because the experience can be too messy and uncomfortable," said P&G rep Allison Yang. "We designed these picks to give consumers a more enjoyable flossing experience with an easy-to-use design." MORE>>

A-B Amplifies Green Message
Anheuser-Busch is showing off its green credentials with new TV spots airing during NBC's Olympics telecast through the weekend. The campaign, created by Waylon Ads, St. Louis, stars employees and A-B beer distributors to highlight the brewer's efforts with energy and water conservation, recycling, alternative fuel usage and wildlife conservation. One spot features the company's utilities process manager explaining the recycling program started by Adolphus Busch in 1899 continues to this day. Even the leftover grain from the brewing process is used as cattle feed. "You know what they call feed time at the farm? Happy hour," he quips. MORE >>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Not Everyone likes Green


The media might have you believing that in order to survive, you have to "go green."

Not so fast...

Forget the Environment Say the 'Never Greens'

July 13, 2008

-By Jim Edwards


bw/photos/stylus/32662-Milk_greens.jpg
William Coverley has nine cars, including four Porsches, a pickup and a Ferrari. Last week, he bought a 10th—a 2008 GMC Yukon XL—because he needs something to tow his boat. The three-quarter-ton SUV gets a dismal 14 miles per gallon in traffic.

As consumers flee gigantic trucks for environmentally friendly small cars and hybrids, Coverley is an increasingly rare beast: He wants one of the biggest gas-guzzlers that $40,000 can buy. "Do I care that I'm wasting gas? No, I really don't," the Hudson, Ohio, resident said.

Coverley is part of a small but persistent new consumer demographic: The "Never Greens"— people who either don't care or are not interested in America's new passion for sustainable, green products.

It's a demo that's been overlooked by marketers as they rush to tout their carbon offsets, recycled content and eco-friendly manufacturing.

About 10% of the population are Never Greens, according to a survey by Mintel International in Chicago, a research firm.

The Never Greens don't buy green products, don't remember green advertising when they see it and are irritated by it even if they do, according to Mintel.

Never Greens also showed up in a survey by Shelton Group, an ad agency for BP Solar, the oil giant's renewable unit. About 26% of Americans are hardcore skeptics, according to Suzanne Shelton, the CEO of the Knoxville, Tenn., firm. They tend to be upper-income, middle-aged, conservative males, she said.

Coverley, a retired investment banker, fits the profile almost perfectly. He lives in the middle of the country, is highly educated, has lots of disposal income, and is a man who is not shy with his opinions about the economy and the price of oil.

"I don't care about the environmental reasons and I'll tell you why," Coverley said. "All this stuff about carbon emissions, no one really knows about the output of the sun and yet it's the single most important input behind global warming . . . Are the Chinese going to be environmentalists? Are the Indians going to be environmentalists? Are the Russians? I don't think so."

Although Never Greens are outliers—most Americans are raising their expectations of companies' green efforts—marketers would do well to pay attention to these naysayers. Why? Because several companies have stumbled as consumers have rejected green products even while ostensibly clamoring for more.

Click here for more

Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, July 06, 2008

Best Buy Going Green?





This was in my email Sunday Morning. Does this mean Best Buy has decided to Go Green?

Or what exactly is their thinking?

4th of July Weekend, newspaper too expensive?....

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Feeling Green?


Here's this week's green report:


BK Kids Meals Go Green, Healthy
Apple fries, low fat milk and recycled packaging are among new changes. MORE

Green Automaker Gives Its Two Cents About Typ-1
Aptera CMO Tony Kirton says the vehicle may lead the pack for both design and mileage. MORE

Study: Older Consumers Think Recycling Is a Waste
49% of 63-plus consumers feel environmental efforts won't make a difference. MORE

Marketers Go Green for Boston Celtics
After winning NBA championship, team is feted with ad support. MORE

Aveda Founder's New Venture: Hairspray So Organic You Can Drink It
Launch includes 30 SKUs of aromas, haircare and styling aids, lip balm, body cleansers and an anti-aging seed oil complex. MORE

Going Green at the Bank
Paperless banking, recycling only actions are expected to catch on in mainstream. MORE

Sphere: Related Content

Monday, June 23, 2008

Going Green Creatively

Where I live, I have plenty of vegetation. I counted 11 trees on our property along with ivy, bushes, and other plants. Take a look at this creative way to spread the green in Philly:

SEPTA Launches Living, Green Campaign
By Amy Corr , Monday, June 23, 2008

With going green being the new black, SEPTA launched an eco-friendly campaign earlier this year that urged Philadelphia residents to ride public transportation and make a positive impact on the environment.

With a break in gas prices unlikely to happen anytime soon, taking public transport can add green to wallets, too.

Moss was placed outside Philadelphia's Market East station inside SEPTA's logo as part of its "Go Green Go SEPTA" campaign, which also included 3-D posters and elevator ads encouraging a "live green by riding public transportation" theme.

Moss appeared to grow in and around signage at the station's Information Desk. Looking up at the word "tickets" or "passenger services," for example, probably raised some eyebrows -- and, for some folks, the need to water.

Red Tettemer created the campaign, and Brooklyn-based street artists Edina Tokodi and József Vályi-Tóth helped implement the moss into station elements.

"Riding SEPTA helps reduce smog-forming pollutants by 90%. Now that's a breath of fresh air," reads one station ad, depicting a train and tracks made from actual moss.

SEPTA also handed out eco-friendly seed packets to commuters, an element that reminded me of a campaign for a landscape company that distributed grass seed to potential clients. The seeds were sealed in small packets that doubled as company business cards.

Lastly, and most importantly, SEPTA is improving its means of transportation to benefit the environment. It presently has 32 diesel-electric hybrid buses on the road, with an additional 400 joining the fleet by 2011.

SEPTA's non-hybrid buses have been retrofitted to accept cleaner, ultra low-sulfur fuel.

Amy Corr is managing editor, online newsletters for MediaPost. She can be reached at amyc@mediapost.com.

Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, June 01, 2008

Fresh Ideas from Springwise

Weekend housecleaning of my inbox, found this to stimulate your brain:

It's time for your weekly fix of entrepreneurial ideas! The latest Springwise newsletter
is now online
. Here's a quick run-down of the business concepts featured in this edition:


Glass of beerCrowdfunded breweries
Food & beverage

Britain's BeerBankroll and New Zealand's OurBrew are taking the
crowdfunding approach to beer with the creation of new, community
managed breweries.


Partial image of coffee cargo bikePedal-powered coffee retailer
Retail / Food & beverage / Eco & sustainability

Most mobile coffee carts are motorised, but UK-based Bikecaffe came
up with a pedal-powered alternative. Using cargo tricycles, Bikecaffe
travels emission-free as it serves up a range of coffee blends.


Detail of book coverWiki publisher for collaborative writing
Media & publishing

We've written about publishers for the content-producing masses,
and now a wiki-like site aims to leverage the wisdom of the crowds to
create, rate and publish the best community-sourced content.


Rolls of flooring materialCommunity-focused deconstruction & salvage
Homes & housing / Eco & sustainability

Vacant, run-down buildings are usually viewed as a community liability
and demolished. A more sustainable approach is deconstruction,
which allows for the salvage of the building's still-usable pieces.


Two dogs wearing striped sailor shirtsProduct portal for independent retailers
Retail / Media & publishing

Small retailers face the constant challenge of finding new & innovative
products to sell as they compete with the big-box heavyweights. A new
search portal aims to make the process easier.


Child's drawing of a faceArchiving children's artwork
Lifestyle & leisure

Focusing on preserving and showcasing children's drawings and
other artwork, theART:archives team photographs each one and sends
back a DVD catalogue that can be viewed on a computer screen or TV.


Image of new home's interiorFree plans for eco homes
Homes & housing / Eco & sustainability

Working on the belief that green design should be available to all,
FreeGreen is a new site that offers free, downloadable building
plans for eco-friendlier houses.


Detail of diagram explaining how Knewsroom worksNews site lets users pick stories & share in revenues
Media & publishing

Knewsroom is a community-directed news publication where readers
not only have a voice, but they get paid to use it, either by creating their
own content or investing in stories written by others.

Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Feeling Green?


One thing that most Americans can agree on, this Memorial Day Weekend is costing us more than last year.

One other thing that most Americans also agree on, is that we should be good stewards of our environment, but what that means and the motivation varies widely.

Before she took off for her long holiday weekend, Sarah Mahoney from Mediapost wrote this for our reading pleasure:

by Sarah Mahoney
Maybe he's something of a cliché. Try as he might, he still can't peel that Gore-Lieberman sticker off the bumper of his Prius. There's probably granola from Whole Foods spilling out of the reusable canvas shopping bag in the back seat next to the book about bio-diesel. Just don't try to pigeonhole him, because he's as elusive as Bigfoot, or maybe, more aptly, the Jolly Green Giant. If there's one thing Janet Little, a nutritionist for Henry's Farmers Market, knows by now, it's that there's no such thing as a plain green shopper. ... Read the whole story

Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Back up your Claims


One Marketing Strategy that almost Always works:

Be Honest.


This was Earth Week with Earth Day on April 22.


The Environment is now a political issue.

One way to create good will and positive feelings about your business is to team up with a worthy cause.


But remember, Be Honest.


Click on the charts to make them bigger as you read this green report from MarketingCharts.com:


Consumers Recall Green Ads, but Often Skeptical of Them

Consumer recall of advertising with “green” messaging is high - more than one-third of consumers (37.1%) say they frequently recall green messaging and another third say they recall it occasionally (33.1%), according to a new Burst Media survey.

The online survey, conducted in April 2008 with more than 6,000 web users 18 years or older, explores how consumers are incorporating green or environmentally friendly services and products into their daily life, and their perception of green claims made by advertisers.

Among the key findings:

  • Consumers do not automatically accept green claims made in advertisements:
    • One in five respondents (22.7%) say they seldom or never believe green claims made in advertisements.
    • Two-thirds (65.3%) of respondents say they “sometimes” believe green claims made in advertisements.
    • 12.1% say they “always” believe green advertising claims.

burst-media-green-ad-claims-believability.jpg

  • Skeptical consumers want to be able to investigate claims, and many do:
    • 41.6% of consumers frequently or occasionally research the claims made in green advertisements.
    • Just 30.1% refraining from any research.
  • Four out of five (79.6%) respondents say they use the internet to conduct personal research on green initiatives and products.
  • Many respondents find corporate information on green and environmentally safe products and services lacking: 41.6% rate corporate information as average, 20.8% rate the information as fair, 17.2% rate it poor.

The Burst survey also revealed some characteristics of green consumers:

  • Green is a goal of many, but attained by few:
    • More than four out of five (81.9%) respondents have incorporated some level of green activity into their lives - just 12.9% are “not green at all.”
    • Although most respondents have integrated green activity into their daily lives, few (5.2%) are “completely green.”
    • In fact, most respondents are “aspirationally green” - a plurality (43.9%) incorporate a few things that are green into their daily lives but “have a long way to go,” and another 38.0% attempt to be “as green as possible, but not 100%.”

burst-media-green-consumers-degree-of-green.jpg

  • Reasons for pursuing green activities are varied:
    • The motivators to go green are many, but respondents most frequently (53.3%) cite “good for the environment” as the reason they include green behavior in their daily lives.
    • Other reasons for going green include to impact the future (41.5%), to live a better quality of life (34.1%), good for the community (32.5%), desire to make a difference (31.2%), desire for a healthy body (29.8%), and desire to live simply and use less (29.2%).
    • Three out of five respondents who are “aspirationally green” cite “good for the environment” as a reason for going green - clearly the leader among all reasons offered.
    • However, among the “completely green” segment the top reason for going green is “to live a better quality of life,” followed by “good for the environment.”
  • Disparate Green topics motivate online research:
    • Consumers research many green topics: The most popular online green content is recycling information and healthy recipes.
    • Those are followed by information on alternative energy sources, natural remedies, eco-friendly cleaning products, green technologies, nature/outdoor recreation, tips for simple living, gardening/organic gardening, and organic foods.

“Businesses that can support their claims in their green messaging and sustainability topics in a way that incorporates the consumers in the conversation are at an advantage in the marketplace,” said Jarvis Coffin, CEO of Burst Media. “In providing information that is accessible, transparent and easy for consumers to share, businesses have the opportunity to reach consumers in relation to a core personal value.”

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Customer Incentives


In today's economy, consumers are on the lookout for ways to save. This morning, I took a different route to work to buy gas at a station that offered me a savings of 20 cents a gallon when I bought a car wash which I needed too.

Here's some links to other incentives that are out there. Hopefully, these companies will do a better job than Walgreens did today, because not everyone gets these bits of info in their email:

Office Depot

Walmart

And then there' this news to that customers should know about:

Rite-aid


Panera

Remember it takes more muscle than a Press Release to the news media to reach your customers, it takes advertising, buzz, and in-house marketing too.

Sphere: Related Content

Monday, March 10, 2008

Exclusive Interview With Ben & Jerry co-founder Jerry Greenfield

2 weeks ago, Bob Nicholson interviewed Jerry Greenfield of Ben & Jerry's fame for the radio show he does on WGL Your Business Matters, Saturday mornings from 8 to 9am.

I completed the transformation of the interview into 5 You Tube Video's. Here they are:










Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Just a thought


First the news reported by Mediapost:

Greener: 'Outside' Chucks Inserts Cards
Tuesday, Feb 19, 2008 9:00 AM ET
Outside Magazine is chucking those pesky insert subscription cards as part of its effort to go green. It will encourage people to go online and communicate with the magazine. The pub's goal is to "establish a paperless relationship," according to Paul Rolnick, consumer marketing director.


How about really "greening it up" by not using any paper and just do an online magazine? Just a thought........

Sphere: Related Content

Monday, February 11, 2008

Music, Money, Munchies, Walmart, and Shopping Green

Each week, (I think), I get a collection of 5 facts from these folks in my email. Take a look and see how they affect the way you do business:



Volume 3 Issue 6 - February 11, 2008

1.

The number of households with an MP3 player reached 33.5 million in 2007, up 53.7% from the prior year, reports Forrester Research.

2.

Wealthy consumers say it's important for companies to take product returns without questions (8.7 on a scale of 0-10); they most commonly say Nordstrom (8.1%) has the best return policy, according to The Luxury Institute.



3.

Traffic to restaurants during breakfast time in July-August 2007 increased 7% compared to the same period the prior year, says NPD Group.

4.

Shoppers most commonly say that Wal-Mart (17%) provided the best holiday shopping experience in 2007, while 8% say that no store was enjoyable to shop, says TNS Retail Forward.

5.

Consumers who actively seek out green products and are willing to spend more on them are also 33% less likely than average to avoid watching TV commercials and 40% more likely to shop online, according to Experian Research Services.

EPM Datafile Info:
Publisher: Ira Mayer imayer@epmcom.com

The EPM Datafile is an EPM Communications, Inc. service.
(c)Copyright 2008 EPM Communications, Inc. http://www.epmcom.com

160 Mercer Street, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10012 | P: (212) 941-0099 | F: (212) 941-1622

Sphere: Related Content