Dove, Chipotle
and Patagonia are among some of the companies trying to get out ahead of their
competitors by aggressively backing social and environmental issues.
Companies have
traditionally competed to release the best products or provide the best
services, but experts say a new type of gold rush is unfolding, one in which
brands race each other to claim an environmental or social cause.
“Corporate
social responsibility is getting competitive,” Simon Mainwaring, CEO of brand
consultancy We First Branding, said at a sustainability conference in Los
Angeles earlier this month. “Hurry, carve out what you want to own now.”
Issues like
climate change, poverty and gender inequality require urgent attention, he
said, and those companies that focus on their values and not the bottom line
gain a competitive advantage.
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“One of the
big mistakes brands make is they dumb themselves down and play to the lowest
common denominator by taking a profit mentality,” he said.
Brands need to
position themselves as a positive force for change in relation to a specific
social cause, said Mainwaring.
“This expands
the role of the brand into the culture at large, inspiring internal and
external stakeholders to engage and to take action,” he said.
There are a
number of big brands that are leading the way in this regard, he said. Outdoor
clothing and gear company Patagonia was one of the first to carve out a niche
sustainability message with its commitment to responsible consumption, which it
has pushed in various campaigns over the past decade. In 2011, the company
released a full-page print advertisement detailing the environmental costs of
its bestselling sweater, asking customers to think twice before buying it.
Patagonia has
seen double digit growth annually over the past five years.
“It’s the
marriage of storytelling and integrity of what they’re doing that gives them
credibility in the marketplace, and it lives in your mind,” said Mainwaring.
Other brands that
have claimed a specific sustainability message include coffee giant Starbucks
and its “Shared Planet” slogan, based on the premise that everyone has the
ability, and a responsibility, to help tackle the big environmental and social
issues of the day.
Mexican fast food chain Chipotle’s commitment to selling
“Food With Integrity” includes using fresh foods free of artificial flavors or
preservatives, sourcing meat that has been responsibly raised, and eliminating
genetically modified ingredients from its products. And personal care company
Dove’s “Real Beauty” campaign - launched more than a decade ago - which aims to
challenge beauty stereotypes and encourage women to feel more comfortable in
their bodies. The company, owned by Unilever, has gained attention over the
years for its advertisements featuring women with different body types, and
more recently, its “Real Beauty Sketches,” a short film that went viral in
2013, which pushed the idea that women are overly critical of their own
appearance.
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Mainwaring
said these companies get it right by pitching themselves at an “elevated level”
and transcending their products and services.
“[Dove’s]
cultural conversation is not about soap, it’s a conversation about what real
beauty is,” he said. “Dove is using its product as a facilitator of that.”
Other experts
agreed that once a big brand becomes known for a certain cause, it does make it
more difficult for another company to gain the same amount of attention for
doing something similar.
Chipotle has
committed to only using meat that has been responsibly raised and cutting
genetically modified ingredients from its products. Fast food chain and rival
McDonald’s has also committed to improving animal welfare and providing more
fruit and vegetable options to its customers, but its message is less loud and
clear, said Chris Guenther, research director at thinktank SustainAbility.
“For Chipotle
to be out in front in this way, it has an impact for the rest of the market,”
he said. “I do think there’s room for McDonald’s to come surprise us but we’d
have be really impressed.”
That doesn’t
mean other brands will forever be trailing behind, as people’s priorities
change and new issues come to the fore, he said.
“It’s not
permanent,” he said. “It’s a constant evolution of cultural reference points
and values depending on what consumer the company is targeting, and what issues
are resonating in the media.”
Not everyone
believes that there are only so many sustainability causes to go around. “There
is ample scope for all companies to include a positive impact on society and
the environment in their goals,” said Kevin Moss, global director of the
Business Center at nonprofit World Resources Institute. “I would argue that no
one company can claim ownership of a sustainability goal.”
He said
tackling big environmental and social issues requires a collaborative effort
among companies.
“These
problems are systemic and require cross-cutting approaches,” Moss said, citing
industry group the Consumer Goods Forum’s approach to deforestation-free palm
oil as an example of companies working together on a goal rather than competing
for ownership.
But healthy
competition among brands pushes them to become better, both in a business sense
and in terms of the greater good, said corporate sustainability expert Susan
McPherson.
“Much like the
race to innovate in order to deliver better products and services, faster and
easier, I think this kind of competition is a win-win for businesses and the
greater good, provided they are authentic and take substantive action,” she
said.
-theguardian
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