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6.0: Chapter Introduction: What Is Sustainable Marketing?

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    23197
    • Anonymous
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    Learning Objectives
    • Describe sustainable marketing and how it differs from traditional marketing.
    • Define the size of the sustainable product and service market and its growth potential.
    • Explain the key challenges in sustainable marketing and how they can be overcome.
    • Identify key growth drivers of sustainable marketing.

    This chapter was written by Diane Devine with contributions from Lee Mizusawa and Ross Gittell.

    There is significant and increasing interest and demand by both consumers and companies in being more sustainable. The sustainability market includes an increasingly wide range of companies, products, and services, all in some way intending to address sustainability concerns.

    Why do companies adopt sustainability principles? Sustainable practices are good business practices. Not only does it help the greater good by improving a company’s ecological footprint, but it can reduce waste, increase consumer engagement and loyalty, and provide a competitive edge, all contributing to the bottom line. Unlike more traditional companies that focus almost solely on the bottom line alone, sustainable companies focus on the triple bottom line, which includes (1) people, (2) planet, and (3) profits.

    Sustainable marketing involves developing and promoting products and services that meet consumer and business user needs utilizing society’s natural, human, and cultural resources responsibly to ensure a better quality of life now and for future generations to come. The focus of this chapter is to help students better understand what is meant by sustainable marketing and how it differs from traditional marketing.

    Sustainable marketing is not just about taking steps to appear more environmentally friendly or more socially conscious and advertising that fact to consumers. It is more substantive and meaningful. Sustainable marketing draws on traditional marketing methods and in addition requires the following:

    • Understanding of consumer’s values, emotions, and buying behavior related to sustainability
    • Knowledge of the evolving sustainability marketplace
    • Organizational commitment to sustainability and to positive relationships with their customers, communities, and the planet

    An increasing number of consumers base their purchases in some way on the environmental and social impact of the product and services they buy and the companies from which they purchase. In an October 2011 study, Cone Communications and Echo Research identified that 81 percent of respondents said that companies had a responsibility to “address key social and environmental issues” and 76 percent of respondents said they had bought a product with “an environmental benefit” in the last twelve months.“2011 Cone/Echo Global CR Report,” Cone Communications, www.coneinc.com/2011globalcrreport.

    The size of the sustainable market (defined by Mintel, a research company, as “healthy products/healthy planet”) is significant and is expected to grow to $922 billion by 2014.“Consumers Claim They Are Willing to Pay Extra for Green,” eMarketer Green, last modified April 1, 2010, accessed April 1, 2010, www.emarketergreen.com/blog/index.php/consumers-pay-extra-green; “Definitions of Healthy Products, Healthy Planet (‘HP2’) Sectors,” Nutrition Business Journal, last modified May 15, 2008, newhope360.com/business-directory/definitions-healthy-products-healthy-planet-hp2-sectors. This represents an increasing but still relatively small portion of the US and world economy, with the size of the US economy being approximately $15 trillion and world economy being about $60 trillion in 2010. New sustainable product launches are continuing to grow with consumer demand. In the food and beverage category alone, Mintel Global New Products Database (GNPD) has tracked more than thirteen thousand new sustainable food and drink products since 2005.Mintel, “Sustainable Food and Drink Category,” press release, October 2010, http://www.mintel.com/press-centre/press-releases/614/sustainable-food-and-drink-lovers-attracted-by-perceived-superior-quality.

    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Source: Mintel, Global New Product Database (GNDP), March 2010, www.eMarketerGreen.com.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): Source: Datamonitor Product Launch Analytics cited in www.horizons.gc.ca/doclib/2011-0058_eng.pdf.
    Sidebar
    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\): Source: Nielsen, Global Online Survey, 2011, www.nielsen.com/content/dam/c...ity-report.pdf.

    Survey of Global Consumers on Environmental Issues of Concern

    According to Nielsen’s 2011 Global Online Environment and Sustainability Survey (www.nielsen.com/us/en/insights/press-room/2011/global-warming-cools-off-as-top-concern.html) of more than 25,000 Internet respondents in fifty-one countries, three out of four global consumers rated air pollution (77 percent) and water pollution (75 percent) as top concerns, both increasing 6 percentage points compared to 2009. The areas where concern is mounting fastest is over the use of pesticides, packaging waste, and water shortages, with reported concern increasing 16, 14, and 13 percentage points, respectively. Top environmental concerns among Asia Pacific consumers include water shortages and air pollution. Water pollution was the main concern for Latin Americans, Middle Easterners, Africans, Europeans, and North Americans.

    The following are key drivers of sustainable marketing:

    • Consumers increased demand for socially responsible products and actions, as consumers worldwide are increasingly concerned about what is included in products and their environmental footprint
    • Large corporations—such as Walmart—demanding sustainability initiatives from their suppliers
    • The ability to gain a competitive edge and customer loyalty in a growing market for sustainable goods and services
    • Regulations and public policies requiring and encouraging more sustainable products and practices
    • The increasing cost and volatile prices of natural resources
    Figure \(\PageIndex{4}\): Source: Unilever, www.melodiesinmarketing.com/2...ton-knorr-dove.
    Sidebar

    One Company’s Approach to Sustainability: P&G

    More and more companies are realizing the importance of incorporating sustainability principles into their business model. Keys to success are (1) complete integration and adoption of sustainability into the company’s vision and business strategy; (2) clear transparency and honest communication to the consumers, stakeholders, and community at large; and (3) measureable progress against well-defined sustainability goals.

    In 2010 one of the largest consumer packaged goods company in the world, Procter & Gamble (P&G), announced a new long-term sustainability vision. P&G’s “Purpose-inspired Growth Strategy” is about “improving the lives of more consumers, in more parts of the world, more completely.”

    As P&G describes it,“Environmental Sustainability,” Procter & Gamble, www.pg.com/en_US/sustainability/environmental_sustainability/index.shtml.

    We developed this vision over the course of a year, partnering with external experts and soliciting input from hundreds of P&G employees at all levels and functions.

    Our complete visionary end-points are outlined below. These end-points are long-term in nature because some of them will take decades to come to fruition.

    • Using 100 percent renewable or recycled materials for all products and packaging
    • Having zero consumer waste go to landfills
    • Designing products to delight consumers while maximizing the conservation of resources
    • Powering our plants with 100 percent renewable energy
    • Emitting no fossil-based CO2 or toxic emissions
    • Delivering effluent water quality that is as good as or better than influent water quality with no contribution to water scarcity
    • Having zero manufacturing waste go to landfills
    KEY TAKEAWAYS
    • Sustainable marketing involves developing and promoting products and services that meet consumer needs utilizing resources responsibly to ensure a better quality of life now and for future generations to come.
    • The sustainability market is of significant size and growing due to increased consumer and customer demand, rising resource costs, and increased governmental regulations.
    • Sustainable marketing draws on traditional marketing methods and applies them specifically to environmental and social initiatives and products and services.

    For exercise 1-4:

    P&G has made a serious commitment to sustainability.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Do you think this will negatively or positively affect their products and their bottom line? Explain how.

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{2}\)

    Which of their goals do you believe will be their biggest challenge and why?

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{3}\)

    What sustainable practices might cause P&G product prices to increase, and which ones might cause pricing to decrease? Why?

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{4}\)

    Would this make you more favorable or less favorable to buying P&G brands? Why?


    This page titled 6.0: Chapter Introduction: What Is Sustainable Marketing? is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Anonymous.

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