by: Joel Makower
Here we go again. In the run-up to yet another Earth Day, here is my third annual take on the bounty of polling data on consumer environmental attitudes that seems to hit my in-box this time each year. (See here for the 2007 and 2008 installments.) This year is no different. I've counted more than a dozen different surveys, market segmentations, and opinion polls since Barack Obama became president. By my estimation, that's a record.
I jumped the gun a couple months ago, marveling at how Americans continue to claim their environmental shopping cred, even during horrendous economic climes. ("Why do nearly all of the surveys seem so gushingly optimistic, even during pessimistic times?" I asked. I'm still scratching my head.) But those polls were just the leading edge of the 2009 data wave.
So, what do they all tell us? As usual, a little bit of everything. Consumers are both more willing and less willing to shop green than in previous years. Consumers care more and care less about environmental issues given the economic times. Consumers are willing and not willing to pay more for greener goods. You get the point.
But one thing remains fairly consistent across nearly all of these studies — and most of the ones I've reported on in recent years: Vast majorities of consumers say they have adopted greener habits in their daily lives, and shop for at least some products with a keen eye on their environmental provenance and energy and climate impacts. In other words: the marketplace is getting greener — way greener, if you were to believe the numbers.
You may wish to not believe them, based on your own experiences and observations. I certainly have doubts. Either way, here is a taste of what the studies are telling us about American consumers in 2009:
I'll be the first to tell you that some of this stuff is hard to report with a straight face. For example, according to Roper:
72% of parents discuss the importance of protecting the environment with their children on a regular basis (up 11 points from 2007). Not only are more American families having the "green talk," they are also emphasizing actionable issues. More are discussing recycling (86%, up 3 points), conserving energy (79%, up 5 points) and conserving water (76%, up 7 points). . . . Additionally, 88% of parents say they teach the importance of protecting the environment to their children by example (up 6 points from 2007).
Call me a cockeyed cynic, but I have a hard time believing that eight in ten parents are teaching their kids about saving energy and water, and that nearly nine in ten preach to them about "protecting the environment." (If it was the other way around — kids teaching parents – I might be more inclined to believe it.)
It's also hard to find solace in some of the rosier findings — for example, that 82 percent of Americans say they're still buying green products despite changes in the economy, according to EnviroMedia Social Marketing, or the 2009 Cone Consumer Environmental Survey finding that 34 percent of American consumers indicate they are more likely to buy environmentally responsible products today and another 44 percent indicate their environmental shopping habits have not changed as a result of the economy — when you also learn how utterly confused consumers are about what and who to trust. For example, according to BBMG, Wal-Mart was simultaneously named by consumers as the most and the least environmentally responsible company:
When asked unaided which companies come to mind as the most socially or environmentally responsible companies, 7 percent of Americans named Wal-Mart, followed by Johnson & Johnson (6%), Procter & Gamble (4%), GE (4%), and Whole Foods (3%). Wal-Mart also topped the list of the least responsible companies (9%), along with Exxon Mobil (9%), GM (3%), Ford (3%), Shell (2%) and McDonald's (2%).
And the kicker:
Interestingly, 41% of Americans could not name a single company that they consider the most socially and environmentally responsible.
Any questions?
Original Post: http://makower.typepad.com/joel_makower/2009/04/earth-day-green-marketing-and-the-polling-of-america-2009.html
This blog reflects the personal opinions of individual contributors and does not represent the views of Futurelab, Futurelab's clients, or the contributors' respective employers or clients.
Add your comment