Do Customers Care About Your "Green-ness"?
Al Gore, Social Responsibility, and Customer Experiences
What do these three have in common? The first two are fairly obvious. Gore’s documentary, “An Uncomfortable Truth,” has raised the level of consciousness about an individual’s responsibility for taking care of the environment. Customers are now seeking experiences that satisfy their conscience as well as their sensory, emotional and psychological considerations.
Here is related excerpt from my recent book, Addicted Customers: How to Get Them Hooked on Your Company (www.AddictedCustomers.com):
The Edelman and Datamonitor trust studies both indicate that customers increasingly associate a company’s relationship with its employees as evidence of social responsibility and trustworthiness. The impact is not trivial. The Datamonitor study reported that more than 70 percent of respondents considered a good track record in business ethics to be an important factor in their judgment of that company’s trustworthiness.
Patagonia is a socially responsible company to the core. But it goes a step further. It actively evangelizes environmentally-friendly behavior to its customers. Customers like the fact that Patagonia seeks ways to offer them high-quality, environmentally-friendly products. They also look to Patagonia for advice about how to live a more environmentally-friendly life—and they demonstrate their appreciation with their wallets. When the proportion of the content devoted to environmental education in the Patagonia catalog drops below 45 percent, sales decline.
Thanks to the publicity of Gores’ documentary, this movement is spreading fast and customers want it to be part of their customer experience. Check out the following quotes from the San Francisco Chronicle of 3.21.07:
“At a small but growing number of sustainably inclined Bay Area restaurants, bottled water has become as much an outcast as farmed salmon and out-of-season tomatoes. Instead of bottled water, diners now are served free carafes of — gasp! — tap water. It’s filtered, and comes still or sparkling, fizzed up by a soda-fountain-style carbonating machine.
...(before this) restaurants did not want to give up popular—and profitable—bottled water.
(now) “our goal of sustainability means using as little energy as we have to. Shipping bottles of water from Italy doesn’t make sense.” (GM of Chez Panisse).
It is interesting that “shipping bottles of water from Italy” suddenly doesn’t make sense any more. It is, however, reassuring that some companies are recognizing that what customers’ value will dictate how they vote with their pocket book. To take full advantage of this, companies will need to accept that today’s customers increasingly define VALUE in terms of experiences that are meaningful to them. This is in direct contrast to seeing value as the product or the utility is delivers. In an era of abundance and overwhelming choice, customers can easily gain utility from commodities, but meaning and value are another issue.
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Don’t Compete on Price: Competitive Strategies for the Small Business, A discussion between Small business consultant Blake Hendrix of saltmineconsulting.com and John I. Todor, Ph.D., of The Whetstone Edge, LLC. Download
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In our next issue we will cover: The Two Side of Customer Emotions
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For additional information on the new book by John I. Todor, Ph.D. Addicted Customers: How to Get Them Hooked on Your Company, go to www.AddictedCustomers.com.
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