As I look out over the horizon, I predict some tectonic shifts in the world of green marketing that well-intended marketers should heed if they want to stay off "greenwashing lists" and legal
department memos. Some are influenced by the FTC's hearings on green marketing claims and eco-labels last month, others the outcome of energy behind large retailers efforts to persuade suppliers to
come up with trimmed-down products and packages. Here are my top four predictions.
1. Discredited Green Claims Lose Traction
Expect some now-meaningless marketing terms to fall
by the wayside. For instance, expect to see fewer claims of "biodegradability," especially in regard to some types of corn-based plastics, which have been found not to degrade in backyard compost
heaps or even municipal systems.
There will be a virtual shut-down on claims of carbon offsetting until standards can be set and for-profits and NGOs who sell the offsets can be verified. This
year will also see the seeds planted to severely curb the use of self-imposed eco-labels like Home Depot's "Eco-Options" and Canon's "Clean Earth." Please, folks, let's stick with only those labels,
like Energy Star, FSC, and Organic, which have been issued by trusted third parties.
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Finally, I hope and pray that standards will finally be set for terms like "natural" so consumer confidence
can be restored in this most basic of green attributes.
2. Electronics Suppliers Tout Eco-Performance
Expect electronics firms to start marketing their green bona fides, earned by
creating programs to take back their products at end of useful life and reducing their use of toxic chemicals in response to European Directives, WEEE (Waste for Electric and Electronic Equipment) and
RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances). We've already been approached for help in crafting green strategies by no less than three of the big electronics firms - perhaps Wal-Mart has something to
do with it?
3. Companies Make More Green Products ...
Many more green products will hit the shelves in 2008 as industry takes additional, more confident steps to satisfy big retailer
demands for products with less packaging, less energy use, and reduced toxicity (e.g., no PVC or heavy metals). Many of these products will put primary benefits front and center in marketing
materials, reflecting resulting higher performance levels, aesthetics, and cost effectiveness, while green claims will recede, reflecting reticence from potential greenwashing backlash, and a simple
growing awareness in good green marketing practice.
4. ... and Companies Sell More Green Products
Green products sales will soar, boosted by the marketing heft of major consumer
products firms who've been on a green brand shopping spree of late. Examples include Clorox, which snapped up Burt's Bees in 2007 and launched its own GreenWorks brand, Colgate (Tom's of Maine),
Procter & Gamble (Crest Naturals and Tide Coldwater), and Danone (Stonyfield Farm).
Expect continued growth for deep green standalones like Method and Seventh Generation as they continue to grow
behind mass-market distribution. Myriad green product trade shows - Coop America's "Green Festivals" in Chicago, Washington D.C., and San Francisco, the "Go Green Expo" in New York, N.Y., and others
-- will introduce more consumers to greener alternatives, and this will help, too.
Jacquelyn Ottman is the president and founder of J. Ottman Consulting, Inc. Her book, Green Marketing:
Opportunity for Innovation, is called the "definitive work on the subject" by the American Marketing Association.