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Corporate Social Responsibility
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4.15.2008 - 10:00am ET
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Americans Misunderstand Environmental Marketing Messages
As federal hearing nears, new survey shows consumers want oversight by government, third parties
(CSRwire) BOSTON - April 15, 2008 – Americans misunderstand key phrases commonly
used in environmental marketing and advertising, giving products a greater
environmental halo than they deserve and creating a growing risk of
backlash. At the same time, with days until a U.S. Federal Trade
Commission public hearing on the subject, a majority of Americans support
government regulation of such messages.
These are among the findings of the 2008 Green Gap Survey, conducted by
Cone LLC and The Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship.
A Green Gap
According to the survey, almost four in 10 (39%) Americans are
preferentially buying products they believe to be "environmentally
friendly." At the same time, almost half (48%) of the population
erroneously believes a product marketed as "green" or "environmentally
friendly" has a positive (i.e., beneficial) impact on the environment.
Only 22 percent understand these terms more accurately describe products
with less negative environmental impact than previous versions or
competing products.
The survey clearly shows that Americans do not realize this green gap
exists:
47 percent trust companies to tell them the truth in environmental
messaging
45 percent believe companies are accurately communicating information
about their impact on the environment
61 percent of Americans say they understand the environmental terms
companies use in their advertising
"The gap creates significant risk of embarrassment for companies and
disillusionment for consumers," says Mike Lawrence, executive vice
president of corporate responsibility, Cone LLC. "Activists are closely
monitoring green claims and can quickly share information online about the
actual environmental impact of a product. The result can be accusations
that a company is engaging in 'greenwashing' and is misleading the
public."
Americans Want Oversight
Despite not recognizing the existing green gap, more than half of
Americans (59%) support a move by the government to ensure the accuracy of
environmental messaging by regulating it. On April 30, the FTC will hold a
workshop in Washington D.C. as part of the agency's regulatory review of
the "Guides for the Use of Environmental Marketing Claims," commonly known
as the Green Guides.
In addition to government, Americans believe other entities can play an
important oversight role to ensure accuracy in environmental messaging:
Certification by third-party organizations – 80%
Review and reporting by watchdog groups, news media, bloggers, etc.
– 78%
Regulation by government – 76%
Self-policing by industry or business groups – 75%
"The fact that Americans are so primed to trust companies may suggest the
lack of control they feel around complex environmental issues, so it is
not surprising that they also seek a third-party gatekeeper to help ensure
the messages they see and hear are accurate," says Bradley Googins
executive director of The Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship.
"The motto really could be ‘trust, but verify.’ Maintaining the trust
of consumers needs to be a top priority for companies."
Five Guidelines for Effective Environmental Marketing
People are listening to, interested in and positively affected by
environmental messaging. Fully 38 percent say they feel informed by such
messaging and another 11 percent feel empowered or inspired to act. Only
14 percent of the population says environmental messaging makes them
either feel cynical or overwhelmed.
Cone LLC and The Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship believe
the research suggests several strategies companies should use to
effectively and credibly communicate about how their products or services
impact the environment:
Be precise. Make specific claims that provide quantitative
impacts.
70 percent of Americans say quantifying the actual environmental
impact of a product or service is influential in their purchasing
decisions. In addition, the more precise an environmental claim, the more
convincing Americans believe it to be. For example, 36 percent found the
message “environmentally friendly” credible when used to describe a
paper product, but 60 percent found the message “made with 80%
post-consumer recycled paper” credible.
Be relevant. Demonstrate a clear connection between the product
or service and the environment.
74 percent of Americans say providing a clear connection between the
product/service and the environmental issue (i.e., a hybrid car and lower
emissions) influences their purchasing decisions.
Be a resource. Provide additional information for consumers in
a place where they want it.
Americans say they are most likely to seek information online via a
company's Web site (54%), a third-party Web site (51%), a search engine
(48%) or via product packaging (45%).
Be consistent. Don’t let marketing images send a signal that
contradicts the carefully chosen words and facts you use. For example,
showing an automobile parked in a virgin forest may be seen as
insensitive, while a product growing out of a tree may be seen as
exaggeration.
Be realistic. There are always more environmental improvements that
can be made to a product or service, and they are but one piece of a much
larger environmental journey for society. Communications that include
some sense of context, as well as a "work in progress" tone, will be more
credible and less subject to criticism.
About the survey:
The 2008 Green Gap Survey presents the findings of an online survey
conducted February 21-22, 2008 by Opinion Research Corporation among 1,080
adults comprising 520 men and 560 women 18 years of age and older The
margin of error associated with a sample of this size is +/- 3%.
About Cone:
Cone LLC (www.coneinc.com) is a strategy and
communications agency engaged in building brand trust. Cone creates
stakeholder loyalty and long-term relationships through the development
and execution of Cause BrandingSM, Brand Marketing, Corporate
Responsibility, and Crisis Prevention and Management initiatives. Cone is
a member of the Omnicom Group.
About The Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship:
For 20 years The Boston College Center for Corporate Citizenship (www.bcccc.net) has
provided research, executive education and convenings on corporate
citizenship topics. The center works with global corporations to help
them define, plan and operationalize their corporate citizenship. The
center functions as an educational institution, a think tank and an
informational research center—all in one place. The center’s goal is
to help business leverage its social, economic and human assets to ensure
both its success and a more just and sustainable world.
For a copy of the complete fact sheet, please contact Sarah Kerkian at
Cone (skerkian@coneinc.com).
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