Greener marketing
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Greener marketing
Wiley, 2020
- Other Title
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The green marketing manifesto
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Note
First ed. published as: The green marketing manifesto. Wiley, 2007
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
***BUSINESS BOOK AWARDS - FINALIST 2021***
This timely book is a sequel to John Grant's Green Marketing Manifesto (2007) the award-winning and bestselling definitive guide to green marketing (and not greenwashing).
Fast forward to mid-2020. Climate Change is back at the top of the public and political agenda. Even after covid-19, hundreds of big-name CEOs are committing to a #greenrecovery. And surveys show widespread global public support for this and recent shifts in sustainable behaviours and attitudes in markets ranging from organic food to flying. Sustainable brands are significantly outperforming conventional ones. As are sustainability related stock prices. Companies like Unilever continue to set ambitious targets related not just to climate, but biodiversity and deforestation, plastics, social justice, regenerative farming. Sustainability related trends such as plant-based foods and electric vehicles are showing steep growth and creating tomorrow's superbrands (Impossible, TESLA...).
This book is packed with up to date learnings, case examples and trends, covering everything from eco labelling, transparency and the circular economy; to rebound effects, sustainable finance, blockchain and regenerative farming. A core message being that to drive sustainability, marketers firstly do really need to properly understand sustainability, its many applications and implications. Secondly to be effective, marketers need to understand what it means to their consumers and other significant audiences. Hence the book takes a long hard look at what was driving all the protests, boycotts and petitions in 2019 and what ideas, causes and platforms caught the public imagination.
The ultimate goal is to go beyond marketing that simply looks good, to marketing that does good.
This book helps in achieving that goal by showing the reader how to:
Uncover strategies for sustainable marketing that actually deliver on green and social objectives, not just greenwashing
Reconceptualise marketing and business models, and learn to recognise the commercial strategies and approaches that are no longer fit for purpose
Learn how hot topics like the climate crisis, biodiversity, social justice, single use plastics and supply chain transparency influence green and social marketing
Read about numerous examples and case studies from both brand leaders and challengers that have developed innovations and fresh creative approaches to green and social marketing
Get practical tools, models, facts, strategies, workshop and project processes and business case rationales - so that you can build your own plans and proposals
This book is intended to assist marketers, by means of clear and practical guidance, through a complex transition towards meaningful marketing that makes a positive creative impact on the climate crisis and on improving human life in troubled times.
Aimed both at big companies that are trying to be good, and good companies that are trying to be big.
Table of Contents
Foreword for 'Greener Marketing' By John Grant VII
Introduction 1
Section I Not Bad 13
1.1 Waking up to an Environmental Crisis (again) 16
1.2 Actually, Consumers Do Buy Sustainable Goods 22
1.3 From Plastic Brands to the Circular Economy 24
1.4 Instagram, Influencers, and Brands as Folklore 29
1.5 Simple Marketing, Complex Sustainability 35
1.6 Fifty Shades of Greenwash 39
1.7 Transparency? Or Another Facade 49
1.8 An Advertising Vow of Chastity? 55
1.9 What is Sustainability? An Ethic and an Emergency 59
1.10 Sustainability as a New Way of Doing Business 71
1.11 Eco-Labels, Their Struggle and Ongoing Role 81
1.12 Let's Redesign Life 88
Section II Net Good 99
2.1 Year of the Street Protest 102
2.2 The Blue Planet Effect 107
2.3 Plant-Based Revolution 115
2.4 Capitalism. Time for a Reset 123
2.5 Corporate Citizens 127
2.6 Every Business a Social Venture 136
2.7 Is it a Purpose (or Just a Pose?) 150
2.8 Brands Doing Good 162
2.9 Consumer Behaviour - Snakes & Ladders 170
2.10 Design for Nature and Human Nature 179
2.11 Build your own Paradigm Shift in 15 Steps 191
Section III Aim, Frame, and Game 211
3.1 AIM - Defining the Task 213
3.2 Frame - Cultural and Cognitive Positioning 220
3.3 Game - The Greener Marketing Grid 226
What Now? (Concluding Thoughts) 243
Index 245
by "Nielsen BookData"