Archive for the ‘Environment’ Category

I Wish I Worked There!

Posted by Julie | February 11th, 2010

Do creative environments really help foster more creativity?

I think so. And so do the authors of I Wish I Worked There.

The author Kursty Groves (with Will Knight and photos by Edward Denison) bills the book as “the first book to go behind the scenes of some of the world’s most famous companies, revealing how they maintain their creative edge.”

Lots of books have been written on the “creative secret sauce” of innovative companies…what intrigues me about this one is the apparent emphasis on physical environment as a big part of their success. (The book comes out in the UK in March, and the States in the Spring).

In the spirit of full disclosure, one of the buildings featured is the Virgin Management offices in the UK. It is quite an extraordinary building. A converted schoolhouse that now boasts a 10 foot high candy tube in the lobby, themed conference rooms around topics like love and space, colorful artwork highlighting the brand’s history on the walls, and candid photos of all the employees when you first walk in.

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Keeping Green Resolutions

Posted by Julie | January 27th, 2010

Recently I was talking to some colleagues about New Year’s resolutions and one said his resolution was to try and not use any plastic bags in 2010.

This surprised me in that he isn’t the sort of person that you would readily identify as the “tree hugger” type. But then on further reflection I realized it actually made sense because the “plastic issue” seems to have gone pretty mainstream. I myself blogged about it last May in a post The Scarlett P.

I’ve made a few resolutions myself this New Year and most, I am happy to say, I am doing pretty well at keeping.

Except one.

The one that’s turning out to be the doozy is to drink less bottled water.

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The Scarlet P

Posted by Julie | May 4th, 2009


I was walking up Park Avenue from Soho the other night with a plastic bag of groceries. Suddenly I felt incredibly negatively conspicuous toting my plastic sack.

I was getting dirty looks from everyone I passed. (I’m pretty sure it was not my imagination). It was as if there was a huge scarlet “P” for “Plastic User” seared into my forehead.

In my defense, this blatant “plastic toting” is no longer my standard behavior. Thanks to pressure from my daughter, I now bring the canvas sacks to Stop & Shop on the weekends. I just happened to be doing some spontaneous lunchtime shopping near my office and didn’t have my canvas tote with me. (I swear your honor).

It got me thinking…when did scorning plastic bags go from a marginal “greenie” behavior to such a mainstream one?

The speed in which new consumer behaviors are taking root is dizzying. Some of these new behaviors are motivated by concern for the environment, others are a response to the recession. But what seems really clear (and a bit frightening) is the way that people behave is changing…and changing fast.

What other behaviors driven by the environment, the recession or both are rapidly taking hold?

One macro-trend that keeps coming up in the conferences I’ve been attending is “Fashionable Frugality”. The idea that saving money, and flaunting those savings is suddenly super chic.

Here are a few examples of this:

Buying at thrift stores…and telling everyone about it
Shopping our own closets and even hiring consultants to help us do this
Holding “swap” parties which address both the environment and the recession
“No gifts please” birthday parties, weddings, bat mitzvahs etc.

It makes me wonder what’s the next “new world” behavior (or “Scarlet P”) and how as marketers can we make sure we are prepared for these rapidly shifting trends?

Perhaps one way to be prepared is to do a “scarlet P” audit.

Take a look at our brands through the lens of wanton wastefulness- both in terms of literal environmental waste (e.g packaging, renewable materials, energy sources etc.) and perceived financial wastefulness (e.g. how does usage of this product or service appear to others in a more frugally chic world?).

This requires objectivity and also a bit of forward projection. You need to imagine that current trends will be exaggerated and that seemingly benign products and services may soon be under scrutiny.

Better to take inventory now and get ahead of the curve.

One result of this kind of audit is to re-engineer products and services.

Although I would be careful that your claims are genuine and don’t appear like a marketing gimmick. The recently launched Ziploc evolve sandwich bags struck a sour note with me. They’re made with less plastic, wind power, and come in bio-degradable packaging. But some how it feels off. (Maybe it’s the lower case “e” in the evolve name). Rather than launching a separate SKU, I think Ziploc’s efforts would feel more authentic if they just made this change automatically on all their products because it’s the right thing to do. Not because green is suddenly chic.

I know it’s a tough one to call. Sometimes you are damned if you do and damned if you don’t. Hmm…that makes me think of Hester Prynne and that other scarlet letter.

That’s my point of view. What’s your twist?

What’s the next “Scarlet P”?