Green + WIRED = Sexy

Now that almost everyone across the political spectrum agrees that we are facing an ecological crisis, the main challenge of the green movement seems to be getting people to actually change behaviors. But this challenge is greater than it seems. It involves changing lifestyles that have become central to our culture for the past 100 years, ever since electricity has become part of our lives.

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One of the best examples of marketing this lifestyle change is the Smart Home Green + WIRED exhibit at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry (pictured above). This fun exhibit takes green and conservation needs and mixes it with the sexy, sizzle of the geekery known as WIRED! But more on this later. First, let’s take a look at the communications challenge that the green movement faces.

Three Big Hurdles

This inability to get past acknowledging the ecocrisis and actually acting upon it reminds me of an old adage. If a frog decides to jump off a log what happens? Nothing. He just “decided,” he didn’t do anything to actually physically leave the log.

So people talk green, but don’t act green. They keep taking 20 minute showers, leave the lights and computer on, and buy gas guzzlers while avoiding hybrid cars or mass transit. Companies greenwash their marketing message, and then serve bottles of water and print every email possible. As we can see, green is not necessarily pure green, it’s light green, medium green, and dark treehugger green (or any shade in between).

There’s a core of barriers stopping green from achieving immediate movement status with people. These issues are beyond the political differences that stand between the various range of liberal and conservative stakeholders in the ecomovement. For green to be quickly and successfully adapted, these hurdles need to be addressed by environmental groups, companies, and governing bodies alike:

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1) Green products and services are technological innovations, too. That means the diffusion of green is suffering from the usual cycle of innovators and early adopters, as discussed by Everett Rogers in his timeless classic, “Diffusion of Innovations.” So while they make sense, they’re unproven, expensive and quite frankly, most people don’t feel comfortable (safe) buying these products yet.

2) The cost of green does not outweigh the cheapness and comfortable lifestyle of the current carbon footprint. And the good samaritan argument is not compelling enough to get people to move forward. Many feel the situation needs to get worse before people act. The most common lament I hear about this from green bloggers and environmentalists is, “by the time the crisis hits, it will be too late!”

3) There’s still a school marmish attitude towards green. I associate the word “conservation” with this attitude. In short, beyond the economics, beyond the fear of new technology, it’s just not cool or sexy to be green. It’s the right thing to do, but so is staying home on school nights. :)

These three factors equal a massive communications problem for everyone, businesses and consumers alike. And to me, this is not a public awareness campaign, more the need for green companies to make their wares attractive to end-users — as opposed to the right thing to do. We need Steve Jobs now, not Al Gore.

Green + WIRED = Sexy

Remember when nerds were really just nerds? You know, dorks?

Well those days are long over. The iPhone culture means being a geek girl or boy is sexy, and popularity contests for follower or friend counts dominate discussions of what makes for a good community member. Social media and tech geekery has become avant garde.

Nothing epitomizes this more than WIRED magazine, which has been at the forefront of the tech revolution for past two decades. Heck, WIRED even has a sexiest geeks contest every year.

One of the more interesting aspects of WIRED editorial coverage is its evolution beyond Internet related matters into the environmental space. Exhibits like the Green + WIRED teaming make environmental technology more than just the right thing to do, or an act of conservation. Accompanying efforts online, include blogs like EcoGeek and ecofriend are adding to the fire.

The geekification of green technology has begun in earnest, and in it lies great promise for societal adoption of environmentally progressive purchasing en masse. The discussion and seeding of green tech amongst innovators and early adopters in today’s geek community hastens the adoption curve. We’ve already seen the widespread adoption of social media and Internet access toys like netbooks and mobile Internet phones over the past few years.

It’s no secret that when there’s an air of panache associated with products, people are willing to pay a higher price for them. Hello iMac! Making green technology products more than the right thing to do, and adding an air of attractiveness to them is just smart.

In our current context, these activities open green tech to a new stakeholder beyond the do-gooder ecologist. And they add an element of sex appeal to green. While the climatologist is necessary, it’s time to move beyond brow beating environmental action into slow adoption. It’s time to market green + geek.

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5 Responses to "Green + WIRED = Sexy

  • MA Says:
     

    Nice piece.

    But “not cool or sexy to be green”?

    I was visiting the US briefly last week and was struck by the number of people carrying reusable bags with green messages; many brands trying to get across to consumers through green TV messaging; and media personalities falling over each to look environmentally responsible.

    The general impression I got was that it is actually “cool and sexy to LOOK green”. Whether that translates into actual behavior change is another matter.

     
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    “MA” I think people are quick to do a once in 6 month trash pick up, but not adapt the lifestyle at home. There is movement though, and green is really starting to enter the collective consiousness.

    A reader on Twitter, @boxednoise, referred me to a Governator series of comments on the need to add a sexy hue to green last month. Here are those comments:

    http://explore.georgetown.edu/news/?ID=24454

     
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    Geoff, thanks for this great post inspired by Chicago’s WIRED Home exhibit. I saw it a few months ago, and its messages have stayed with me too.

    As MA mentioned, there are definitely niches where green = sexy. I’d second her mention of the clothing market + Hollywood celebrities. Another area where this was making much headway was the real estate market (before it went bust). Even apartment buildings were jumping on the cool, green, sexy bandwagon.

    Too many marketers have focused on motivations for green as being EITHER altruistic (go green because it’s good for you and the planet) OR cost-savings related (ie, the Walmart model of sustainability). But let’s face it, SEX SELLS. Always has, always will. If we can use it for good, let’s do it. Green = sexy will motivate far more positive behavior than green = good or green = cheap.

    Green + tech + sex … bring it on…I can’t wait to see what great things you’ll be up with Live Earth!

     
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    Geoff: You are so right, the good samaritan argument is not enough. There must be a compelling business reason. My friend, Rick Krska, owns a company called InkCycle that has developed a new process for remanufacturing inkjet cartridges – it’s called Grenk. Grenk offers high quality, lower cost, documented proof of environmental friendliness AND the good samaritan argument. That’s what it’s going to take.

     
  • Kami Huyse Says:
     

    I am not sure what it will take. Performance perchance? I have them all through my house but actually hate the energy-saving compact fluorescent lights. They take too long to “warm” up and then when they burn out (much earlier than 7 years by the way) you have to find a special drop off location to properly dispose of them. Unfortunately these decidedly unsexy lights have become one of the most visible parts of the go green movement.

    Hopefully cool, green tech can overcome this. Of course, everyone will have to give up their iPhone to be truly green, the battery life is horrendous! :-)

     


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