Category Archive for Book Reviews

The Clean and Green Club, November 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: November 2023

Don’t Let ANYONE Tell You This is a Good Idea

Photo Credit: Andrea Piacquadio via Pexels

I tried to watch an SNL skit sent to me by a marketing colleague. First, a hoodie ad at 2:49–so I went and did something else. I have plenty of sweaters and almost never buy from online ads. Then they hit me with a 49-minute ad for some nutritional thing. No way to fast-forward to the end, so I exited immediately. And I never got to see the skit.

Good morning, YouTube. Didn’t anyone ever tell you that pissing off your customers is not a smart business strategy?

Never mind the mismatch of message and market (I don’t purchase nutritional supplements other than vitamins)—you don’t hit ANYONE with a 49-minute infomercial when they want to watch a three-minute video. The only thing YouTube accomplished with this was that henceforth, if people ask what video platform I recommend for their content, the answer will be Vimeo. And if I were running that nutritional company, I’d be hiring a different Chief Marketing Officer. It’s totally desirable to offer a 49-minute infomercial to those who are seeking detailed information—though it would be much better to offer a dozen 3-minute videos covering specific aspects plus an overview. But it’s totally counterproductive to jam it into the eyes and ears of people who weren’t even looking for that type of product. This unfortunate company actually paid YouTube to piss me off. Ugh!

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

From What Is to What If: Unleashing the Power of Imagination to Create the Future We Want

 From What Is to What If: Unleashing the Power of Imagination to Create the Future We Want
by: Rob Hopkins (Chelsea Green, 2019)

When I did my TEDx talk several years ago, I called it “‘Impossible’ Is A Dare!” So I was primed to love a book that looks at possibility as both an open door—and a door opener. And indeed, I loved it!


Hopkins, co-founder of the Transition Towns movement and of Transition Town Totnes (the community in the UK that created the concept), envisions a world where it’s always OK to ask questions, to try out new ideas, and to think holistically at local, regional, national, and global levels. He envisions societies that embrace—and democratize—the arts, follow patient-centered/student-centered health and educational models (including Reggio Emilia, p. 93, which was the educational model used by the elementary school my own kids attended), use biomimicry to harness nature’s wisdom develop over eons, and more.


While many of his examples are drawn from either the Transition Town movement or living experiments around the UK, he goes well beyond these sources, drawing on currents as diverse as comedy improv, art therapy, temporary takeovers of town squares and other public spaces—all leavened with a lot of play and humor—in locations as widespread as: Bolivia; rural Iceland; Jackson, Mississippi; Mexico including both extremely rural Chiapas and extremely urban Mexico City; Bologna, Italy; both modern and ancient China, to name a few. His thinking is influenced by practical visionaries from speculative fiction authors Moshin Hamid of Pakistan and Ursula LeGuin of the US to today’s Extinction Rebellion global youth movement.


Some of it we’ve heard before, like making sure to get away from our screens and devices and out into nature, get off social media and into real-world human-to-human connections. And some might be new, like the idea that “boredom is your imagination calling you” (p. 79).


A lot of it is telling the stories of people who dared to think and feel differently—and then build new and different kinds of experiences, institutions, and even entire communities out of those new thoughts and feelings—from the movement to declare all of London the UK’s first city-wide national park (pp. 62-64, 126-128) to a school system that supplies its cafeterias with student-grown organic food (p. 155) to asking the kinds of questions that create longing and wonder (p. 126).


Hopkins himself asks great questions, including how would we need to evolve democracy to replace “the imagination-devouring dragon of endless growth and economic development…with something more humane, more interesting, and better suited to meet the needs of the people and the planet?” (p. 142, and his answer posits the creation of a national Ministry of Imagination that would be involved in all aspects of governance).


Each chapter title is actually another sweeping question:

  1. What if we took play seriously?
  2. What if we considered imagination vital to our health?
  3. What if we followed nature’s lead
  4. What if we fought back to reclaim our attention?
  5. What if school nurtured young imagination?
  6. What if we became better storytellers
  7. What if we started asking better questions?
  8. What if your leaders prioritised [he’s British] the cultivation of imagination
  9. What if all this came to pass?

For Hopkins, imagination in all its forms, and the art across many disciplines that it generates, is essential—and he says it’s long past time for the educational system to acknowledge its importance. After noting that creative pursuits generate more jobs than aerospace, automotive, fossil fuels and life sciences together, he continues:

     Being involved in art at school can increase cognitive abilities by 17 percent and           improve attainment across all subjects. Students from low-income families are               three times more likely to get a degree and twice as likely to vote if they do art in           school. They are also more employable. (p. 88)

Ask yourself—and your government—the sorts of questions Hopkins does. And read this book. It could change your life.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

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The Clean and Green Club, October 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: October 2023

Products that Should Have Been
Photo Credit: Fauxels via Pexels 
One cool way to get the juices flowing AND have quite a bit of fun is to make stuff up and then write promotional material for it. The first time I remember doing this was in 1978 or 1979, when I worked as a manuscript reader for a New York City literary agency. A particularly bad manuscript led to this poem (copyright 1979 by Shel Horowitz, all rights reserved):

Advertisement (Melodramamine)
And now, from the makers of Dramamine, for motion sickness…
an exciting new product,
Melodramamine, for EMOTION sickness.
Yes, this special formula will overcome that nasty, nauseous feeling
from indulgence in overwritten books.
Let Melodramamine return YOU to the world of literary enjoyment.
Use only as directed.

My 2000 book Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World had a few examples, too. One was a series of six radio commercials for a fictitious Armenian grocery: five illustrating how the same business could target different market segments on different shows—and one demonstrating how they could get too clever and forget that the purpose of an ad is to get people to buy (that one involved singing apricots and the arrest of their importer). While Grassroots Marketing is officially out of print, I still have copies for sale, with the price reduced all the way from the original $22.95 down to just $10 before shipping for the paperback, $10 and no shipping cost for the PDF ebook. (And while you’re on my shopping cart, why not pick up a copy of my latest book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World? It’s all about building environmental and social good into profitable products, services, and mindsets. You’ll save on shipping costs by getting both at the same time.)

And sometimes, I make up products without writing copy for them. Anyone who wants to start a Chicagoland heavy metal festival called Illinoise or a nonsmoking vegan casino in (guess what city) called Las Vegans—you have my blessing. My daughter enjoys this kind of game too. Years ago, she came up with L’Auberge d’Aubergine, which translates as The Eggplant Inn. So, besides a few laughs, what do you get from doing this sort of exercise?

Most of all, you get a creativity jumpstart. It gets your brain thinking in different ways. You think about what’s missing in the marketplace and what niche you night fill (not with your imaginary product but with a real product that you imagine and then create)—and you think about what makes a good name for a product, service, company, or even an idea, which is a very good skill to have. I actually have a section of Grassroots Marketing covering eight factors to consider in choosing a name. And for those doing social change and planetary healing, it’s a way of expanding what’s possible. Conceiving of something can be a first step to achieving it. For every invention that happened through serendipity, a lot more showed up by doing the work.

Of course, if you’re in the market for a new business name and would rather not do it yourself, drop me a line. While I’m not a professional naming consultant (and I don’t charge like one either), I have named a fair number of things over the years.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

The Sustainability Scorecard: How to Implement and Profit from Unexpected Solutions

The Sustainability Scorecard: How to Implement and Profit from Unexpected Solutions
by Urvashi Bhatnagar and Paul Anastas (Chelsea Green, 2022)

Yes, another book brimming with examples of companies that re-imagined and then reinvented, piloting initiatives that if widely copied would go a long way toward greening the planet. I’ve reviewed plenty of those, and this will not be the last one, I’m sure. A few things make this one different:

  • Anastas’ expertise in green chemistry
  • A data-driven, quantifiable scorecard that companies can use or adopt to drive innovation, working on the principle that before you improve something, you have to measure it
  • Emphasis on large corporations
  • A proposed shift in the sustainability conversations at those corporations—from risk management to strategic opportunity (first introduced on page 14 and a theme throughout the book): “We can achieve superior performance, convenience, efficiency, and profitability not in spite of a focus on sustainability but because of it” (p. 28)

In my consulting, I personally don’t generally begin with the data, preferring to start with the vision and then figure out how the engineers can get us there—but I don’t think either approach precludes the other. And while I run a one-person business and don’t ever expect to be an employee of a huge corporation, I still found significant utility in this book. The writing is clear, and the data-driven outcomes are impressive. Small businesses and solopreneurs have to think differently about implementation, but can still draw many useful lessons.

Bhatnagar and Anastas design their whole-lifecycle scorecard around four principles: waste prevention, maximizing efficiency and performance, supply chain renewability, and safe degradation at the end of a product’s lifecycle—and measure three categories of impact: environmental, employee, and community (p. 16). One key takeaway is to design safety and end-of-life considerations in from the beginning—preferably by turning waste into monetizable inputs for other products (pp. 48-50, 81-83).


As a marketer, I find it odd that their scorecard aims for the lowest possible score: a zero in each metric. I would have designed it to give points for good initiatives so that a higher score provides companies with a clear and obvious marketing benefit. But even though it gives the book its name, the instrument is only a small portion of the content.


Much of the rest is examples of companies jumpstarting eco-friendly and socially just innovation. To list a few among many: design electronic chips WITHOUT generating 600 times the product weight in waste (p. 63); sequester not just whatever carbon you create but some of the backlog (p. 65); lower not just carbon footprint but water footprint (pp. 73-74); eliminate toxic chemical flame retardants by switching to non-flammable materials (p. 80); extract and recycle the water in human waste while turning urine into electricity (pp. 116, 118); replace forever chemicals including poisonous plasticizers such as phthalates with safe, degradable alternatives (p. 133) and chemical insecticides with yeast-grown non-toxic ones (p. 144); change pharmaceutical packaging so extra doses can be used instead of thrown away (p. 136); eliminate hunger by approaching food waste differently (pp. 147-149); extract and reuse materials like nickel and cobalt from used batteries (pp. 151-152); fund more expensive green and social justice initiatives through the savings in health care costs (p. 174)…


A few organizations get extended case studies, some including their full scorecards:

  • Electronics giant Philips (pp. 106-112; 191-197) already generates 70 percent of revenue from green products and services and is aiming for 100 percent.
  • Hospital system Gunderson Health (pp. 159-161) parlayed a $2MM investment into annual savings of $1.2MM—that’s an astounding 60 percent annual ROI— including slashing the cost of managing pharmaceutical waste from $151,000 to less than $10,000 per year.
  • Janitorial products company Coastwide Laboratories (pp. 161-170; 177-185) re-engineered its product line to combine functions in fewer products, marketed its private-label solutions to some of the largest manufacturers in the country, and brought distribution in-house, allowing them to market honestly as the lowest cost solution even while increasing the product price (because the customer only needed one product to replace two or more).
  • P2Science, maker of eco-friendly silicones for cosmetics and hair products, boosted yield to 95 percent while simplifying the production process.

The book is also full of sets of principles and steps that would be useful to companies of any size. And it has a terrific index, which I wish more publishers would model.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, September 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: September 2023

To all those, like me, who are entering the Jewish year 5784 tonight: Shanah tovah!
This Month’s Tip:
Rule-Breaking Wordless Ad Convinces a Word Nerd
Home being sold by singer Ray LaMontagne

Home being sold by singer Ray LaMontagne

Spend six minutes with this video, designed to sell a 104-acre estate belonging to the singer Ray LaMontagne, with an asking price of $5.25 MM. What did you notice?

Here are a few things I spotted:


1. It breaks a rule of mine that text is more important than visuals. There is not one word spoken, and almost no text displayed—just the property address in the first frame and a slide of contact info for the agents at the very end.

2. It breaks a well-known real estate rule to show rooms empty, so prospects can imagine their own furniture and taste imposed on the property. These rooms are lushly furnished and one of them prominently includes a full-size hand-loom, before we’ve even seen the kitchen.

3. Nearly the entire first minute is focused on the setting, most of it emphasizing an almost tactile immersion in the natural world. We don’t get to go inside except for one brief early glance until 1:25, almost a quarter of the way through. And the natural theme is carried through into the house by the presence of plants and flowers, the capturing of sunlight, etc., and returns in the quick tour of outbuildings and grounds at the end.

4. Subtle reminders sneak in about LaMontagne’s career—the mixing board, the beautiful piano—reinforcing that this house belonged to a celebrity.

5. It’s EFFECTIVE! I tend to be a hard sell, but if I were in the market for a multimillion-dollar historic home/estate/retreat center, I’d be setting up an appointment. Admittedly, falling in love with this property is easy for me because I live three towns away and am familiar with the area, happen to love the town where it’s located, and already live in a (much more modest and significantly older) historic home. I see the negatives: excessive reliance on open fireplaces (highly polluting and not efficient—and for me, a health irritant); no green features highlighted anywhere in the video—which means the house is probably an energy nightmare; possible absence of a two-base kitchen sink; lots of buildings and acreage to maintain, meaning a payroll. But they wouldn’t keep me from making a bid if I had a reason to own such a property.

With LaMontagne’s fame and celebrity friends, and an asking price that will seem really cheap in those circles for those used to California or New York prices, I’m expecting this house will not be on the market long and the video will probably be taken down once a deal closes. If it’s already gone when you go to look, you can see if a copy shows up on Archive.org’s Wayback Machine, or at least view still pictures on Zillow.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Recommended Book: The Blue Economy 3.0: The Marriage of Science, Innovation and Entrepreneurship Creates a New Business Model that Transforms Society

The Blue Economy 3.0: The Marriage of Science, Innovation and Entrepreneurship Creates a New Business Model that Transforms Society
by Gunter Pauli (Xlibris, 2017)

What can termites show us about zero-energy air conditioning and heating, or zebras about keeping cool outside on a hot day by turning themselves into air current machines?

How can coffee farmers create a new high-protein, high-profit crop that regenerates forests, protects oak trees, and has an economic return far greater than just the coffee bean—from the 99.8 percent of the plant that’s usually thrown away?

How can mosquitos teach the medical world how to make injections painless?


These are some of the many questions Pauli asks and answers in his amazing book. Pauli’s solutions are rooted in both biomimicry—learning from the plants, animals, fungi, microbes, and even rocks around us—and replacing invasive chemistry with eco-friendly physics. And he has decades of practical experience designing, funding, and implementing these systemic, holistic solutions and helping small communities build whole new economies from these insights.
I heard him speak at a conference about 20 years ago and was blown away, so I was thrilled to get my hands on his book.

Right from the beginning, pages 2-3, he lays out four principles (with several subsections):

  1. Be Constantly Inspired by Nature
  2. Change the Rules of the Game
  3. Focus on What is Locally Available
  4. See Change as the Only Constant

Taking inspiration from nature starts with understanding nature’s own principles: everything has at least one purpose—and usually several purposes, nothing is wasted, solutions are very efficient and use the least possible energy and materials, everything is interdependent and part of a complex ecosystem with many parts, and course-correction happens automatically.

Pauli’s solution set—much of it tested in real-world projects—includes circular systems where “residue” (he prefers not to think of it as waste) becomes input for the next link in the loop. So the 99.8 of the plant that coffee processors now pay to get rid of becomes fertile ground to grow shitake mushrooms (p. 10, p. 135, and many other references) as well as provide several other benefits including odor control (pp. 137-138); medical supply companies can mimic the mosquito’s conical penetrator to reduce injection pain; HVAC designers can copy termites’ ancient zero-energy temperature control for buildings (pp. 53-56)—or the way zebras’ stripes create convection currents and vortices that keep them cool outdoors in the hot African summers (pp. 56-57). Architects can design inexpensive earthquake-proof bamboo homes and regenerate the bamboo far more quickly than a forest (pp. 253-255).

Pauli envisions a world where we no longer need toxic batteries, health-hazardous radio-wave-based Internet (he prefers to use light), or even solar and wind farms. Innovations with cascading benefits across multiple industries will make them obsolete while raising living standards, health outcomes, local self-reliance, and connection with community. And much of this is stuff we already know how to do. Three among many examples:

  • Seaweed-based (p. 112) or even maggot-based antibacterial protection (p. 162) can replace antibiotics
  • Tomato processing residue can be turned into sunscreen and lipstick (pp. 181-182)
  • Mining, that traditionally dirty industry, can create paper from stone tailings (pp. 214-215), as well as pure drinking water as a byproduct while chelating bacteria can detoxify the metals that used to pollute that water (pp. 218-19).

He’s posted 109 more at https://www.theblueeconomy.org/en/project-library/
Pauli says we humans were designed to live in alkaline environments, yet many human constructions create an acid world that’s not healthy for us. Since this was the first time I encountered this idea, I checked with Terry Cline of Dwellright. Terry is an architect and Feng Shui practitioner who pays a lot of attention to the interaction of human factors with spaces. He and I are each other’s clients and friends. Terry agrees that our lives would be better if they were more alkaline.

One caution: while Pauli’s ideas are brilliant and his/his colleagues’ implementations are astonishing, his writing is less approachable than it could be (one more pass by a skilled editor would have helped a lot). He’s Austrian and he writes with the dense syntax of his first language (German). He’s also a non-linear thinker, so the book’s organization is a bit rough (and made worse by the lack of an index in a book that cries out for one). And I wish he would not revisit the same examples over and over again. But it’s worth the struggle. I took 9 pages of notes and feel that my life is better for reading it.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, August 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: August 2023

Do You HAVE to Kaizen Your Headline? Why Not Try This Instead?

Image Credit: Mikael Blomkvist via Pexels 

In 40+ years as a student and practitioner of copywriting, I’ve often come across the advice to only test one variable. But some people might be taking that too far. In my email recently, I saw someone assert that the variable has to be tiny, like changing a single word in a headline.

You might remember that I most recently discussed the difference between Kaizen (continuous improvement, usually through small steps) technology improvements and technological Great Leaps in my October newsletter. Just like any other culture change, I think copywriting changes can be Kaizen—or they can be Great Leaps.

Let’s say there was such a thing as a haircutting robot, and you’re a copywriter assigned to write headlines for that device. Sure, you can test a single-word Kaizen variable like New Instant Salon Cuts Your Hair While You Sleep vs. This Instant Salon Cuts Your Hair While You Sleep–but I think it’s also fine to test a big-leap variable like New Instant Salon Cuts Your Hair While You Sleep vs. Wake Up Tomorrow Morning with the Hairstyle of Your Dreams.

I’ve always understood the one-variable rule to mean that if you’re testing the headline, don’t change the body copy, the layout, etc. in the same test. But the change could be as small or as bold as you want.

And why not test three or even four headlines in an A/B/C or A/B/C/D test? As long as it’s emailed to the same demographics and the same list on the same day, we can track a lot more things now than we could in the old days, so why not? We can even test for things like how response translates into long-term customer value. One version may get more clicks but fewer buys or lower total purchases. Make sure your testing gives you the metrics you need to properly evaluate your efforts.

By the way, I’d argue that there may be good reasons to violate the one-change rule, and strategies for understanding the data when you do. As an example, if you’re dealing with a time-sensitive offer that’s going to be worthless in a month, you may want to test a whole lot of stuff all at once. Go ahead, call me a marketing heretic!

And if you want a heretic’s fresh thinking in YOUR marketing, especially if your firm makes a positive difference in the world call me: 413-586-2388 (8 a.m. to 10 p.m. US Eastern Time—or email me with the subject, Your Marketing Services—Newsletter Reader. (Note that I’ll be away with very limited email through August 22. I recommend writing your email right away but scheduling it to arrive a few days after I get back.)

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Living a Committed Life: Finding Freedom and Fulfillment in a Purpose Larger Than Yourself

Living a Committed Life: Finding Freedom and Fulfillment in a Purpose Larger Than Yourself
by Lynne Twist (Berrett-Koehler, 2023, with Mary Earle Chase)

“The greatest threat to creating the future we want is fear, discouragement, and cynicism. People are dis-couraged because they’re disconnected from their own courage. They think somebody else is supposed to fix things…Once you get back in touch with your own courage, you realize, ‘Oh, I can do something about this. I care. I have heart. I have power. I can act!’ It is only in action that we can find hope; active hope becomes a beacon for our lives.” (pp. 196-197, hyphenation of “discouraged” is in the original and is deliberate)

Lynne Twist knows a thing or two about finding the power and creating action. Starting as an ordinary housewife in an acquisitive, suburban lifestyle, she has focused since the 1970s on creating a better world. She started and nurtured several major organizations including Pachamama Alliance and played a key role in several others, among them The Hunger Project. She’s helped organize female Nobel Laureates to harness their celebrity to increase their impact. She’s helped remote indigenous communities in Latin America and Africa seek justice from the corporations exploiting their land and undermining their traditions—while, at the same time, finding ways to work respectfully within that culture to drastically improve health outcomes (especially around birthing) even when that meant changing millennia-old patterns. She’s even taken on the demon of creating a positive relationship with money: overcoming scarcity mentalities (personal, regional, global) while setting boundaries of sufficiency instead of always “needing” more. She’s also a warm and accessible human being, as I found out when I attended a conference several years ago where she was presenting.


Twist was lucky enough to be directly mentored by (and built personal relationships) with quite a few luminaries including Buckminster Fuller, Mother Teresa, and various indigenous shamans—and much of their wisdom is also in these pages.


And she’s written a wonderful memoir/how-to manual on how to create meaning through social and environmental justice. It didn’t take me long to read this well-written, very accessible, and super-inspiring book.


Twist tells us not to worry if we don’t know how we’ll accomplish whatever lofty goals we’ve set. We take a stand for something positive, make the commitment, and the pieces to enable it begin to come together (p. 23).


Twist’s own five key commitments are:

  1. Ending world hunger
  2. Preserving the Amazon rainforest
  3. “Changing the dream of the modern world” (away from materialism and hoarding and toward recognizing the enoughness around us)
  4. Transforming how people relate to money
  5. Empowering women (p. 38)

All within a larger purpose of “creating a world that works for everyone with no one and nothing left out—what I call a you and me world” (p. 56, emphasis in original). Some of that happens when we change the narrative and the context, for example, talking about resilient “survivors” rather than passive “victims” (p. 85)—whether the person has survived directly-experienced violence or abuse, fraud at the hands of the Bernie Madoffs of the world, environmental catastrophe, a health crisis, etc. Another reframing (pp. 90-91) is that events happen FOR us, rather than TO us, and there are gifts to be found in even the tough experiences. She describes finding her own resilience after setbacks throughout the book, particularly pp. 104-106, 135-139, and 157-160.

You need to read the rest of the book for full context, but don’t neglect the action-focused final chapters 13-15 and the brief conclusion. Think of them as a short-form guide to effective activism. Chapter 13 shines a light on the crucial but often-ignored steps of self-care so as not to burn out, forgiveness (in both directions) to avoid strangling on your own hatred, and always seeking the new possibilities that arise from the wreckage. Chapter 14 is about discovering your big dream, taking your stand, and nine different ways to stay energized as your commitment begins to manifest. Chapter 15 uses the metaphors of hospicing the dysfunctional society we inherited and birthing not only new systems and institutions, but “a new kind of human being” (p. 193). And the conclusion is a quick pep talk, recognizing not only the contributions of the full-time activists and the famous, but the power of ordinary people to make change:

“Living your commitment does not mean you have to do something big and global. People who live their commitments are kindergarten teachers, nurses, firefighters, entrepreneurs, mothers—anyone who sees their life as a gift that they feel called to give in service. What is different is that your work and your life are now held in a larger context. You are focused not just on yourself and your job, but on the bigger picture—seeking to bring about systemic or transformational change…It is not the size of the commitment, but the intention and focus: What is the fulfillment of your       life’s purpose—your ‘splendid torch’ to hand on to future generations?” (p.201)

Pick up this book and read its life-changing contents in full. Take notes, and look for—and implement—the ways YOU can make a difference!

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

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The Clean and Green Club, June 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: June 2023

 Will Your Packaging Make the SECOND Sale?
Smart business owners recognize that present and previous customers (clients, patients, students, etc.) are gold. Studies say it costs anywhere from five to ten times as much to bring in a new cold prospect as to bring back an old one. So when you succeed in bringing that person back, you’ve cut your marketing cost by up to 90 percent—and increased your profit by the amount you didn’t need to spend on marketing. And when that person tells a friend, your customer acquisition cost is a very happy zero.
Last month, we discussed some tips to design your packaging so it helps prospects select you. Can that packaging also turn the one-time buyer into a repeater, and maybe even an unpaid ambassador for your brand?

Yes, you can! The same kinds of talking points that got them to take your product off the shelf or click the buy button the first time (
see the list in the May newsletter) can also reinforce your brand’s relationship with them. And it works even better if you can make them feel special and honored because they’ve already purchased from you.

How do you make a customer feel special while reading a box printed in a run of thousands? Here’s one idea: use messaging in parts of the package that you can’t see until you open it. In the picture, you see a mild example: the inside flap from a box of Celestial Seasoning Bengal Spice herbal tea. I happen to love that tea blend, so I saw this because I bought the product.

But Celestial missed a chance to go much deeper to engage its customers. Why not use part of that inside space to create a VIP program or customers club? Give them reasons to join in community for a higher good? Provide them with even more ways to engage others and bring them into the fold?

Here’s how another premium natural-foods company, Equal Exchange, grabbed this ball and ran with it
. The outside wrapper offers some hints: “Grown by small farmer co-ops” on both the front and (in small letters above the barcode) back panels; organic, worker-owner, and kosher/pareve certification seals—and a relatively large “Join Us in Changing the Food System” slug with a picture of one of their farmers, a description in very small type with not one but two emotional outreaches: it begins “With your support” and concludes with “puts power back in the hands of small farmers, workers and chocolate lovers (like you).” Most importantly, the “Join Us” banner ends in an arrow directing readers to the inside of the label. That in itself is a subliminal call to buy—because the only way to see what’s on the inside is to buy and open the bar.

Once opened, the entire inside is a well-designed, informative magazine-style page. It starts with a call-to-action banner with three small graphics declaring a partnership of the small co-ops, the company, and its customers. The three paragraphs under the banner layout their philosophy and history, describe the challenge of doing this work amid climate change and greedy multinationals, and then another call to action with both a URL and a phone number to get involved. Then, wrapped around drawings of the cacao plant and a photo of the product, a puff paragraph about co-ops and a description of the sources, followed by another photo of the same farmer and a description of his coop.


I’d only change a few things if they’d been my client:

  1. Tighten up some of the copy and make it more benefit-oriented (especially the part about the online community)
  2. Add more reasons to click through (maybe a special offer like a newsletter with coupons)
  3. Most importantly, I’d acknowledge the disability issue they’ve created by adding, in larger type, something like “Is the print here too small for you? Don’t worry—we’ve got your back (and your eyes). Visit [URL] to read it comfortably online. There’s not much room on a chocolate bar wrapper, but online, you can make the print as big as you like.” While I’m 66 and can read it easily, I’m aware that many people in their 40s and beyond have trouble reading small print.

So, if you sell stuff in a package, think about how you can grab the opportunity they missed. (And if you need someone to write those messages, talk to me (email or phone): https://goingbeyondsustainability.com/aboutshel/#contactus

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Leadership By Example by Frank Sonnenberg

 Leadership By Example
 by Frank Sonnenberg

I don’t usually review books that tell us what most of us already know—but I have a good reason to make an exception for Leadership By Example. This book can make a real difference in the life of someone who has not been raised to pay attention to ethics or character. It provides tons of guidance and easy checklists to determine if you’re living your best life, or betraying yourself and others. Plus, it’s designed to be easy to read and not overwhelming, with short chapters, lots of white space, bold all-capitals for chapter headings and subheads. It doesn’t surprise me that Stephen M.R. Covey, author of The Speed of Trust (one of my favorite business books), endorsed it. (Disclosure: he also wrote a wonderful Foreword to my 2010 book Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green.)

And while most of the advice is very familiar (and in harmony with how I’ve chosen to live), quite a few pieces stand out as more unique and thought-provoking. A few examples:

  • Others’ good fortune is NOT your misfortune (p. 8)—and others’ success doesn’t threaten yours (p. 97)
  • Every time you complete a task, evaluate the positives, negatives, and what you could have done differently (pp. 43-44); poor results provide great lessons (p. 89)
  • Short-term desires often interfere with long-term success (p. 80)
  • If you ignore small issues, you risk turning them into emergencies (pp. 152-153)
  • Rewrite your negative programming and self-messaging. Example: change “why them and not me?” to “if they can do it, so can I.” (p. 176)
  • Instead of asking kids what they want to be when they grow up, ask what they want to accomplish (p. 189) [I think this is also a great question to ask grownups, by the way]
  • “When writing the story of your life, don’t let anyone else hold the pen” (p. 200)

I’d love to see a movement to buy this book for people graduating high school, college, or MBA programs. And I sure wish someone had given a copy at the right moment to the 45ththth US president, whose life has been the exact opposite of how Sonnenberg would have us live ours.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

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The Clean and Green Club, May 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: May 2023

 What Do They Notice FIRST About Your Product?
If you sell a physical product, the first thing someone notices is either the product itself—think of how heads turn when an exotic car rolls onto the street—or the packaging. In a retail environment, online or on a store shelf, it’s the packaging that helps buyers decide whether to pick up your product, or a competitor’s similar offering. If it’s a book, they first judge the front cover, then the title, then the back cover. If your book passes that initial screening, only then will they glance at the content. If it’s a typical household product or food, they search the box/jar/bag/can, seeking decision aids.

What helps people say yes? Here are a few among many—which ones can YOU use in your packaging?

  • Third-party validation: endorsements, awards, certifications, positive media coverage (including reader reviews online), pictures of people using the product, etc.
  • Useful information about the product’s capabilities, especially less obvious ones, like a certain skin product that’s widely used as a bug repellant (important note: if making any claims about improved health, be absolutely sure to research the laws on what you can and cannot claim, and discuss the language you plan to use on your packaging with an attorney before you rev up the presses)
  • Information about how this purchase helps people and planet: how your company is creating social justice, environmental healing, etc.
  • Simple instructions on how to assemble or use the product
  • For food products, easy recipes or serving suggestions
  • What the packaging is made of and how to recycle it

If you don’t think packaging makes a difference, consider Marcal, a household paper products company serving the northeast US. Founded in 1932, the company was bankrupt in the early oughts. Then they made their then-50+ year history of using only recycled paper the centerpiece of their marketing and used their packaging to urge customers to buy their brand in order to help save a million trees. Within about a year, the company was not only out of bankruptcy but became the market leader in recycled household paper products, even though it’s only a regional brand.

While this tip focuses on attracting the first-time customer, packaging is also a powerful tool to keep customers coming back. Stay tuned for next month’s newsletter, where we’ll highlight that.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Net Positive: How Courageous Companies Thrive by Giving More Than They Take

Net Positive: How Courageous Companies Thrive by Giving More Than They Take by Paul Polman and Andrew Winston (Harvard Business Review Press, 2021)

Typically, when I review a book, I take notes on the blank pages. Most books I review run between three and seven pages of handwritten notes. This one generated an astonishing 18 pages. The book is very well-written, but it took me quite a while to read because I kept stopping to write things down.

For ten years, Polman was the CEO of Unilever, one of the largest consumer-facing companies in the world, with more than 300 brands including Ben & Jerry’s, Hellmann’s, Dove, Lifebouy, and Seventh Generation. Winston is a well-known green business writer whose books include Green to Gold. Many examples in the book are taken from Unilever as a whole and its individual brands.

As soon as he took the reins, Polman began to shift away from the short-sighted typical business “wisdom” that quarterly profits matter more than anything else and that stockholders are the only stakeholders who count. He transformed shareholder value from a goal to a result (pp. 36-39).

And those results are terrific. Companies in the JUST Capital 100 list of purpose-driven companies created 56% higher shareholder returns over five years. Deloitte found mission-driven companies had 30 percent more innovation and 40 percent better employee retention. B Corps in the UK grew 28 times faster than the overall economy. 70 percent of consumers will pay more for more sustainable products (p. 77). 80 percent would make lifestyle changes to stop catastrophic climate change (p. 255).

By ditching this limited mindset in favor of a holistic long-term strategy of protecting the planet and its beings, Polman took a company that was a bit shaky and turned it into an astonishingly adept and handsomely profitable force for environmental and social good. Seven years into his tenure, he was able to fend off a hostile takeover by Kraft Heinz in just nine days, by rallying the allies he’d built through committing to a society and planet that works for all (pp. 1-3).

Those alliances are key for Polman. He regularly reached out to competitors, to NGOs that had protested the company’s practices, to government officials—and joined them in action-focused committees that actually create change on issues ranging from carbon footprint to sanitation (Lifebouy’s hand-washing campaign) to fair wages, to women’s self-image (Dove). He and his successors are often the first to set new and potentially scary goals, then leverage being one of the biggest players to push the rest of the industry along.

While the three goals of the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan, “help a billion people improve their health and well-being, halve the environmental footprint while doubling sales, and enhance the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of people” (p. 101) were implemented throughout the corporation, individual brands had great freedom to choose their causes and specific approaches.

Ten years in, the USLP had helped Unilever save €1.2 billion while switching to 100%-renewable electricity for manufacturing, slashing CO2 in manufacturing by 65 percent and water by 40 percent, and increasing sustainably produced agricultural ingredients from 14 to 67 percent (among eight successes listed on p. 83).

Using the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as benchmarks, Polman and Winston see enormous opportunity for other companies, too. Hitting these global goals, according to one report, “will open up at least $12 trillion in business opportunity and create 380 million jobs by 2030 (in just four sectors of the economy)” (p. 21). They note that the SDGs are designed to interlock with and reinforce each other—and that partnership, the 17
th goal, makes the other 16 possible (p. 138). One example is ELYSIS, codeveloped by aluminum competitors Alcoa and Rio Tinto in conjunction with Apple (which invested $13 million and purchased the first batch). This venture reinvented aluminum smelting to eliminate carbon emissions. Audi is now using this cleaner aluminum for the wheels of its electric sports car (pp.147-148).

Net Positive companies encourage their employees to challenge and question and push. Trane Technologies’ Operation Possible involved 35,000 employees who settled on addressing food waste. 9000 Amazon employees joined forces to pressure Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to focus on climate change (p. 89).

The biggest goals, helping us do the most reframing, typically start with “zero” or “all” and are paired with some sort of “and,” e.g., net-zero energy AND happier, more productive workers (p. 97).

And these commitments really do change the culture. Not only has Unilever continued post-Polman to be a force for good while creating great financial results, but high-level Unilever execs who leave the company either start their own net-positive businesses or take positions at companies where they can bring social and environmental action to the forefront (p. 243).

The book closes with this quote from Wangari Maathai’s Nobel Peace Prize speech:

There can be no peace without equitable development, and no development without sustainable management of the environment in a democratic and peaceful space…In the course of history, there comes a time when humanity is called to shift to a new level of consciousness, to reach a higher moral ground. A time when we have to shed our fear and give hope to each other. That time is now.

This review only scratches the surface of this amazing book. Get yourself a copy, dig in, take lots of notes, and implement!

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

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The Clean and Green Club, April 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: April 2023

 THIS Mindset is What Changes the World!
Image Credit: Katya Wolf via Pexels
Years ago, I added the phrase “optimistic creativity” to my signature speech, “’Impossible’ Is a Dare!” I’ve always felt that’s the sweet spot where meaningful change happens. Optimists are motivated to find solutions because we understand that change is possible. Creatives push the limits of what we see as possible, in part because they have an inner voice seeing “possible” as something that can grow and morph—but also because they see change as necessary, even crucial.

Ritchie blames “doomer culture” for disempowering people to the point where too many choose apathy instead of action because they feel they can’t have the impact they need to have. She starts off with a list of eight major positive trends (all of which, in my opinion, stem from optimistic creativity) and then points out why doomer culture itself is doomed to fail: “Scaring people into action doesn’t work…for almost any issue… To contend with environmental crises and make life better for everyone, we need the right kind of optimists: those who recognize that the world will only improve if we fight for it.”

Then comes many consultants’ perennial favorite, a four-part matrix. Her left axis rates the level of optimism, while the top measures people’s perceptions of the ability to make change. The sweet spot is the intersection of optimism and impact: “The future can be better if we work hard to change it.” She dismisses as ineffectual the denizens of the other three quadrants:

  • “The future will be better; it’ll all work out fine” (“complacent optimists” who don’t see the need to do the work)
  • “We’re doomed and need to take extreme action to protect ourselves” (pessimists who nevertheless believe in the power to create impact)
  • “We’re doomed and there’s nothing we can do about it” (pessimists who don’t think they can have impact)

Let’s look at how optimistic creativity has changed the world, in a relative nanosecond across human history. When I was born in 1956, the world was a very different place. The Internet didn’t exist, and the few institutions and businesses that could afford an enormously expensive computer had to devote special rooms to massive equipment operated by special technicians who “spoke” punch card. A day-rate long-distance phone call (on a tethered landline with an actual dial) between New York and California cost $3.70 for the first three minutes—that’s $40.92 in today’s dollars.

It wasn’t just that we didn’t have portable devices that could access the world’s entire base of written or taped knowledge and experience in seconds and also let us call people anywhere in the world at no cost. Hunger and poverty were rampant around the world. In the US and many parts of Europe, most women were denied professional careers and many professions excluded people of color. In the rest of the world, even the lands where people of color were a majority, discrimination was at least as widespread—and in some places, including South Africa, Rhodesia, and the American South, seriously repressive racism was the law of the land and integral to the culture. Vast areas, including the entire former Soviet Union as well as much of Latin America and Asia, strained under totalitarian governments that routinely violated human rights while funneling much of their nations’ wealth to the already super-wealthy.

On energy, renewables now account for 29 percent of global production, according to Ritchie, and she expects that number to increase rapidly, noting the dramatic fall in prices for solar and wind. It’s worth noting that it’s already increasing exponentially, from just 941 terawatt hours in 1965 to 2280 in 1990, and then zooming up in the past 31 years to 7493. That’s 8x in less than 60 years. Even the experts didn’t predict this rapid growth. And Ritchie is one of many experts who expects fossil fuels to wane even more quickly in the future.

Even as recently as 1990, more than a third of the world’s humans lived in “extreme poverty”: less than USD $2.15 per day. Yet, by 2019, that third had dropped to less than 10 percent. While the pandemic set the UN’s hunger and poverty goals back considerably, I would still call that one of the greatest achievements in human history.

We could keep going, discussing sector after sector: medicine, physics, astronomy, agriculture, circular economy (repurposing waste to use again), biomimicry (learning how to solve engineer challenges from nature), and so much more. In all of them, someone—or a bunch of someones—believed that things could be better and took initiative to make that happen.

And how are YOU harnessing or generating optimistic creativity in your life, your work, and your commitment to benefit the world?

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Evolution: 2.0 Breaking the Deadlock Between Darwin and Design

Evolution 2.0: Breaking the Deadlock Between Darwin and Design by Perry Marshall (BenBella Books, 2015)
I almost didn’t bother reading this book. I ordered it thinking it would be another of Marshall’s classic big-think business books, like the brilliant 80/20 Sales and Marketing (read my review at https://thecleanandgreenclub.com/the-clean-and-green-club-september-2014/).

It’s certainly a big-think book, but not a business book. When I realized it was actually about biological evolution, I put it aside for a few years. But I’m really glad I finally read it.
Evolution 2.0 is one of the most important, most provocative books I’ve ever read.

Marshall was raised in a belief system called “Young Earth Creationism”: a literal interpretation of the Old Testament creation story. But he’s an engineer with extensive knowledge of science, and he has absolutely no problem with recognizing that the Biblical timeframe is nothing like what actually happened, absolutely no problem with endorsing evolution, strongly. But he wants to find ways of reconciling the scientific evidence with Christian belief systems, even the Young Earth variety. And he obviously spent many years on this project. It’s incredibly thoroughly researched, with not only a 12-page index and a 5-page annotated reading list, but a 15-page, 9-section, tiny-type comprehensive bibliography referencing each of the hundreds of footnotes, along with a page+ of illustration and photo sources in even smaller print.

While it’s not typical of books I review, I think it’s extremely relevant to modern business. Some of Marshall’s principles even translate directly to actionable insight for social-impact businesses specifically, such as the idea I’ve often espoused about the advantages of cooperating with your “competitors”: collaborating, rather than competing. And
if you’re the first to prove one particular conclusion wrong, Marshall has put together a group of funders who would buy your IP rights for eight figures.

Parts I-IV make a very strong case for rethinking evolution: While traditional Darwinism, and especially neo-Darwinism, say evolution occurs very slowly, only when the occasional beneficial mutation pops up and is advanced by natural selection, Marshall—sharing data from dozens of prominent scientists, mathematicians, and even theologians—convincingly argues that it is not driven by random mutations, which create noise. Noise is destructive, never constructive. In Marshall’s view, DNA is a code, a language of instructions that gets decoded in the opposite order that it was encoded, just like the commands we give a computer or the letters we write on a page. Any cell already contains far more instructions than anything humans have built, and those cells will act to further the entity’s goals such as survival or reproduction.

Evolution can happen in something very close to real time. It may be repeated by cells across different organisms (which simply would not occur randomly). And it typically harnesses one or more techniques that he compares to a five-bladed Swiss Army knife:

  1. Transposition
  2. Horizontal gene transfer
  3. Epigenetics
  4. Symbiogenesis (this is the cooperation principle that I love)
  5. Genome duplication (at speed)

Each of these gets an initial chapter explaining it, and then is referenced many times as he builds a case for a complex system able to create new societies and even new species. It’s fascinating reading.

Marshall casually positions viruses as a potential sixth blade in the last line of his list of recommended book (p. 337). Viruses don’t get a chapter, though they get several mentions. I suspect if he were writing it now, he would elaborate more, as we’ve watched the coronavirus (Covid) spread rapidly and reinvent itself several times in new variants with different behaviors, even though it was only discovered late in 2019.

The second half of the book attempts to reconcile science with Christianity. Marshall believes that any system with coding and decoding, error correction, redundancy, and other features common to languages, codes, technology, and DNA has to have a designer; this much intelligence had to be set in motion, even if it becomes self-evolving later. And it’s true that the natural world (including the bacterial world) has skills we humans only dream about. I often touch on biomimicry—the use of science to imitate nature—in my speeches and writings. The humblest green plant collects and disseminates solar energy far more efficiently than any human-designed system. The GPS of a migrating butterfly or salmon far outstrips human devices. In my TEDx talk, “Impossible is a Dare,” I even say, “if you want to know about bridge-building, ask a spider; they know more than we do.”

Marshall reconciles the calendar issue with something I’ve seen many times before: just because something is labeled a day doesn’t mean it’s 24 modern hours. Each “day” of creation could be millions of years—and by his complex calculation, this corresponds well to both the Big Bang and the Biblical chronology (p. 325). But one insight is new to me: all of human history could be within the 7th day of creation (p. 316)—the day God rested, leaving us critters to figure things out using the codes we were given or that we evolved.” What if we understood God to be an engineer so skilled that he endows cells with the ability to engineer themselves?” (p. 331).

But here’s the thing he doesn’t address: He spends quite a bit of time on the idea that no sophisticated code exists without a designer, and that God’s design skills far exceed our own. BUT—and I don’t have an answer for this and doubt Perry Marshall does either—where did the designer come from? By his own logic, it couldn’t have just appeared.

Because this book is so ambitious, dare I say so “cosmic,” I’ve focused my review on the big concepts. I’ve written almost 1000 words and barely looked at my seven pages of notes. I could easily get into the weeds and write another 1000 or more on specifics that I agree with, disagree with, or question. But I’ll just urge you to read it and draw your own conclusions.

 

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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The Clean and Green Club, March 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: March 2023

 Where Left and Right Meet—and Where They Don’t

In her book, Orwell’s Roses (see book review, below), essayist Rebecca Solnit writes,

Past and present support for authoritarians and denial of their crimes among those who are supposed to be the left has long made me wonder what, if anything, the term left means, since at other times it means those who support the human rights, freedoms, and egalitarianism that are antithetical to this

Perhaps I have an answer for her: Left and right, libertarian and authoritarian are often thought of as linear: as a journey of static points along a continuum. Some people even see this “linear” journey as age-related: that most people grow more conservative and more comfortable with repression as they get older.

Maverick that I am, I see the world differently. My theory is much more circular. Think of two circles, intersecting at two 90-degree angles at opposite ends of each circle (180 degrees apart)—kind of like this drawing of a hydrogen atom, but with only two circles. One circle embodies points on the left-right spectrum, the other marks degrees of loving freedom or loving repression.

What are those points of intersection? Left and right come together at both libertarian and totalitarian ends. Similarly, along the freedom arc, they meet at both left and right. I see very little difference between Fascist thugs of the Right and Stalinist thugs of the Left; they are both into suppressing dissent and inflicting an all-powerful state. And this, I believe, is how the socialist George Orwell—who fought in the militia against the Franco version of Fascism in the Spanish Civil War until he realized that totalitarians of the Left were equally dangerous—came to write two of the most powerful anti-Communist books ever written.


Finding and Harnessing That Common Ground

On the freedom side of the spectrum, it’s no coincidence that Right- and Left-libertarians have both used the “Don’t Tread On Me” flag from the revolution that created the United States of America. Both value personal freedom enormously, but not necessarily the same aspects of freedom. For someone on the progressive side, it might be the freedom to wear clothing more typical of a different gender, while a conservative might be more interested in reducing regulation of small business. And people on both sides might advocate for various positions on issues ranging from homeschooling to firearms to organic foods to unrestricted speech.

Still, Tea-Party libertarians (the real ones, who actually believe in individual freedom even for those who don’t look like them or share their backgrounds) and civil liberties progressives have more in common with each other than either do with the Fascists and Stalinists.
What this means is that politics can indeed create strange bedfellows. You may find opportunities to coalition with people whom you disagree with on many fundamental issues—but where you agree, you can work together, powerfully and effectively.

Want real-life examples? How about these two:
  1. In 1999, I founded a movement called Save the Mountain, to stop a proposed luxury home development that would have ruined the four-state view at the top of the much-loved state park immediately abutting the site. In the press release announcing the group’s formation, I wrote (as close as I can remember it), “Mr. ___________ [developer’s name] has vastly underestimated the love that people of Hampshire County have for this mountain.”

    And it was true! By using messaging that crossed all demographic and psychographic divisions, attracting not just environmental activists but farmers, store owners, academics, local politicians, and more, we created a near-consensus movement that could routinely bring 400 people out to public hearings in a town of 5000—and we achieved near-total victory in just over a year. Even though I expected to win all along, even I’d thought it would take us five years.
  2. Since 1994, environmentalists and Tea Partiers in the Green Scissors movement have worked in coalition to expose and oppose wasteful government spending on things that aren’t good for the environment. They recognize they’re stronger together than separately.

 

Aging Doesn’t Mean Ossifying

As for people getting more conservative with age, I disagree with that too. From my initial flowering into activism at age 12, I was constantly influenced by my elders—sometimes people who were 60 or more years older than me. I’ve been to two birthday parties four years apart for women who were still passionate activists on their 100th birthdays (the link goes to my blog entry for the earlier one, in 2015). I remember after my arrest during the Seabrook Occupation of 1977 that the largest and most vocal faction inside our armory was the “gray hair caucus,” numbering at least 100 out of the 700 or so gathered inside.

And at 66, I’m still an activist, working on progressive causes such as immigration justice and protection of diversity—but also on showing the business world that addressing the environment and our toughest social issues can be profitable. There have been victories and defeats along the way—but if I make it to 100 like my two friends, I expect I’ll still be doing my part to improve the world.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Orwell’s Roses

Solnit, a well-known voice in progressive politics, shows us a very different side of Eric Blair, the complex bundle of contradictions better known as George Orwell. The world knows him as a dystopian author of Animal Farm and 1984: two scathing novels attacking Stalinist Totalitarian Communism. Academics also know his work chronicling the lives of coal miners in his native UK, the impact of imperialism in Burma (where, as a young man, he was a police officer), and fighters in the Spanish Civil War (where he was a soldier fighting against Franco’s fascists). Solnit knows him as an avid gardener with a special passion for roses—who sought refuge from polluted London first in the small cottage where he gardened in 1936, and near the end of his life on a farm on a remote Scottish island where the last eight miles of the journey could only be done on foot; a fighter for the principle of clear language and opponent of government or corporate euphemisms; and above all, an optimist who maintained hope all the way through his life.

Why am I reviewing this book HERE, in my newsletter? What relevance does this fascinating portrait of a many-faceted man have for my audience of business leaders involved in social and environmental good, with an interest in marketing?

First, because Orwell was incredibly aware of the interplay of humans with the natural world. Second, because he was involved in social causes throughout his adulthood, even putting his own life at risk several times. Third, because he himself was a solopreneur, running a little shop in the cottage with his wife. Fourth, because Orwell, himself an outcast as a working-class student at elite Eton and then as an Eton-educated person seen as trying to be better than his peers (p. 22), understood that history is shaped by people on the margins. Fifth and perhaps most germane, because this book has a lot of relevance in its discussions of messaging, building positive AND negative movements, and influencing culture.

Solnit starts (p. 8) by noting that planting can be a semi-permanent legacy; trees we plant might outlive us by generations, sometimes centuries. A tree in my front yard was planted in 1916, when my oldest grandparent was 11; I’ve eaten carob from the 2000+-year-old tree that sustained Shimon Bar-Yochai when he hid from the Romans in a cave in northern Israel for thirteen years when people who had known Christ were still alive. Orwell suggested planting an acorn for “every time you commit an antisocial act (p. 10).”

Solnit has a gift for lyrical writing. She refers to the Carboniferous Era as “a sixty-million-year inhale by plants, sucking carbon dioxide from the sky, and the last two hundred years as a monstrous human-engineered exhale, undoing what the plants did so long ago” (p. 60). Here’s another of many beautiful passages:

Much of the beauty that moves us in the natural world is not the static visual splendor that can be captured in a picture, but time itself as patterns, recurrences, the rhythmic passages of days and seasons and years, the lunar cycle and the tides, birth and death. As harmony, organization, coherence, pattern itself is a kind of beauty, and some of the psychic distress of climate change and environmental disruption is in the shattering of this rhythm… (p. 189).

Solnit celebrates Orwell’s joy in the natural beauty and simple pleasures around him, decrying the puritan, humorless aspects of the Left (e.g., pp. 91-92). Having been criticized for making space for pleasure travel, daily time in nature, and eating delicious food instead of being an activist every waking minute, I appreciate this celebration, and the third-party validation she offers through people like Emma Goldman. In my 20s, I proudly wore a t-shirt with a picture of Emma and a distilled version of her response to an activist who criticized her for dancing, “If I can’t dance, I don’t want to be a part of your revolution.” I still agree, even though the shirt wore out long ago. Solnit gives the complete and accurate quote, in context (p. 114).

So much more to say, but this is already long. Quick highlights:

  • Class perspectives on how we experience nature (p. 163) and beauty—and their interaction with justice/injustice, including visiting a sweatshop “rose factory” in Colombia (pp. 189-219)
  • How authoritarians exploit lies and gaslighting (pp. 222-224)—and the dangers of letting them create and control history (pp. 222-228 and in numerous references to 1984 protagonist Winston Smith’s career expunging inconvenient history from the written record)
  • Orwell’s surprising critique of Gandhi as dogmatic and questioning his tactics (pp. 263-264)
  • Right at the end, a key insight: Orwell wasn’t a prophet of doom but a merchant of hope (pp. 259-264). Orwell issued warnings, not prophecies. Warnings give people the option to change, and avoid calamity. In his own words, “I do not believe that the kind of society I describe [in 1984] necessarily will arrive, but…something resembling it could arrive” (p. 262), “The essence of being human is that one does not seek perfection” (p. 263), and “Our job is to make life worth living on this earth, which is the only earth we have” (p. 264).

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

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The Clean and Green Club, February 2023

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: February 2023

 This Letter Made Me Cringe!
It happened again. Someone emailed to sell me something. Nothing wrong with that. But if you’re sending a pitch letter, demonstrate your competence—NOT your incompetence.
My correspondent was selling press release writing and distribution. I’ve written hundreds of press releases for my clients, my own business, and community groups—but don’t do the distribution part. So, bingo–this email got opened…Ugh!Take a look at the first two paragraphs. What issues do you notice? (Scroll down to see the ones I spotted.)

For Press Release needs and more, we provide your business with comprehensive solutions. We have worked with hundreds of businesses around the world. We have worked with companies of all shapes and sizes, addressing such needs as Targeted Media Distribution, Web Distribution, and even PR writing services.

In other words, will help you shape your Press Release with the best possible scope, style, and language. We then take things to the next stage by utilizing our powerhouse network of media sources.

Here’s my list:

  1. The biggest red flag is in the first line of the second paragraph. That “will” should either be “we will” or “we’ll”—something 30 seconds with a grammar checker would have flagged. Who’s going to trust this organization to write a press release?
  2. The writing is unnecessarily stiff (contractions would help). Having developed “story-behind-the-story” press releases that people say feel like reading a good novel, why switch to one that sounds like a job application cover letter from the 1970s?
  3. It’s a perfect example of “we, we, we all the way home” copywriting. In ten lines, three “we” statements plus one missing one (see #1 above). Scroll down to see one of many ways to do it differently.
  4. It suffers from excessive, inappropriate capitalization.
  5. It makes me feel like the person in the picture ?

Why NOT to “we, we, we all the way home”

Copy should not be about you, your company, your brand. It should be about how you help your prospects and customers (or clients, patients, students, direct reports, etc.) remove a problem, fix a pain point, accomplish a goal, or experience something wonderful. In this example, why should a prospect care that this agency has “worked with companies of all shapes and sizes”?

(For more on why “we, we, we” usually doesn’t work—and the one situation where you actually WANT to use it, please visit this article from the Clean and Green Club archives.)

If this were my copywriting assignment, it might have looked something like this:

Have you been featured in any major media lately? Would you like be?

Media attention helps you not only get noticed in a crowded world, it builds credibility, loyalty, and a desire to be part of the “in crowd” by working with you. But too often, entrepreneurs like you fail to get that media attention—maybe their competitors got it instead.

Why? Because they don’t know how to write a press release that gets noticed and picked up.

Maybe you’ve experienced this. Have you spent hours writing a press release, sent it off with great expectations—and pffft, it died a quiet death in the trash folders of all the reporters’ email programs? Maybe you hate to write and passed the task off to an untrained secretary or intern with no marketing expertise.
And then, did you decide that PR doesn’t work? But that’s like missing your first shot at a basket when nobody’s ever showed you how to shoot one, and then deciding you’re no good at basketball.

Here’s some good news: you can have all the benefit of press coverage without having to write anything, and without dragging in people who don’t have the skills to make it work. What would it be like—how would it improve your business—to work with an experienced copywriting and distribution team that’s gotten coverage for [name two famous clients] and many others in publications and TV networks like [name three well-known media outlets where your work got your clients coverage]?

See the difference?

Oh, and by the way, this was a quick spontaneous riff. It took 20 or 30 minutes to write replacement copy to replace the real and awkward note. No research, no interviews. Just one draft.

For an actual client, of course, a lot more energy would go into it. If you think you could benefit from a press release or other marketing copy from a copywriter who understands you-focused, benefit-oriented marketing—and especially if you have a story to tell about sustainability, regenerativity, or social equity in your business—there’s room in my schedule for a couple of more clients. Learn more at https://goingbeyondsustainability.com/marketing-consulting-copywriting/ (green/social equity organizations).

PS: Because most of us have been taught to write that way, the first draft of this article contained 15 instances of the first-person singular (the capitalized letter that sits alphabetically between H and J. All but one were edited out in this draft—proving that it may not come naturally even to someone who knows to look for it, but it certainly can be done.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.
View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything

Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner (Harper Perennial Paperback, 2009)

I’d been hearing amazing things about Freakonomics, which won several awards and garnered fabulous reviews in the mainstream press, since it was published in 2005. The book’s premise is simple: we should dig deeper and find the true, non-obvious causes of various phenomena backing our hypotheses with data—recognizing the differences among cause-and-effect, coincidence or the same factor impacting more than one variable . And they look at some fascinating questions—like why many crack dealers live with their parents because they can’t afford to move out (pp. 100-104) or how real estate agents actually have more incentive to sell quickly and cheaply than to get the best price for their clients (pp. 68-73).

That’s a totally valid perspective. But it isn’t enough, and this book disappointed me. I didn’t feel it came close to living up to the hype. And the bait-and-switch techniques they occasionally use were very irritating to me. For example, after going on at some length about how nature is more important than nurture, examining adopted kids from low-performing birth families raised by high-performing parents, they undermine the entire argument by showing that while those kids perform poorly at the beginning of their school careers (p. 173, with a related argument on p. 211), they more than make it up over the entire course of their education (pp. 178-179). Admittedly, this “we didn’t mean it” narrative may have been more annoying right now because I was reading this book as the story broke that newly elected Congressman George Santos had lied about almost anything that mattered in his entire history. And it felt like I’d been “Santosed.”

Perhaps the most controversial conclusion they draw is that the reduction in crime in the 1990s had far less to do with changes in policing policy and strategy than with the far smaller number of unwanted babies born into unloving homes following the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion throughout the US. I think there is a good chance that they are right. If the 2022 holding in Dobbs that effectively reversed Roe continues to allow states to undo that right, and if the data 20 years from now shows a dramatic increase in crime, we will have pretty good evidence that they were correct.

Page numbers are from the 2009 Harper Perennial paperback edition.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

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The Clean and Green Club, December 2022

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Shel Horowitz’s Clean and Green Marketing Tip: December 2022

Be sure to read the blog post, This Could Change Everything–it’s crucial to understanding a big shift that’s upon us. The link is below the main article and seasonal message.

Marketing Lessons from a Fruit Tree and a Spider Web? Yup.

Last month, we talked about operational reasons why one size DOESN’T fit all. This month, we continue that conversation, but look directly at why it doesn’t work in marketing either—looking to nature for examples.

I’ve been really interested in biomimicry for many years, and have written and spoken about how it can improve our engineering and design. My latest book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World, even has sections about biomimicry visionaries like Janine Benyus, Amory Lovins, and John Todd. It also has a section on John Kremer’s concept of biological marketing, where he talks about a single ear of corn generating thousands of ears.

But it was only just last month, on a beautiful day where I spent half an hour telling a prospect why I was uniquely qualified to write him a marketing plan for a venture that actually is unique (synthesizing ideas from at least three different industries) and then another hour planting garlic, that I really GOT how biomimicry applies to marketing.

Let’s ask some questions of our friends in nature.

Reporter: “Fruit tree, what’s your marketing plan?”

Fruit tree: “You’re going to think this is really funny, because it’s not a human thing—my marketing plan is to be eaten.”

Reporter: “Wow, that sounds crazy. How does that even work?”

Fruit tree: “Birds and animals nibble my fruit, then they move someplace else, poop out my powerful seeds—and my little babies, little clones of me, grow in all sorts of places I can’t reach (in case you haven’t noticed, I’m rooted deep into the ground. Not only is this how I reproduce, it’s the only way I can travel—and I love to travel).”

Reporter: “How about you, Spider—what’s your marketing plan?”

Spider: “Remember that famous book, The Lazy Man’s Way to Riches by Joe Karbo? He was so lazy he took his idea from me. I’ve been doing lazy spider marketing for 250 million years [see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_spiders], and Joe-com-lately didn’t show up until 40 years ago. All that talk about passive income, that’s my jam since before there were any humans. OK, I do work hard spinning a fancy web—but hey, the artistry feeds my soul and the craftsmanship feeds my body. Because once it’s done and my web looks gorgeous, all I have to do is lay back, quiet down, and wait for some company to drop by—and get stuck until I can have a nice snack. It’s eco-friendly, too, by the way. Zero carbon footprint—and without me and my sisters and daughters, this world would be overrun with pesky bugs.”

So what are the lessons here? I’ll offer two of them. If you come up with others, I just might mention you and your idea.

1. Just as the fruit tree’s marketing plan wouldn’t work for the spider and vice versa, a marketing plan for a B2B (business-to-business) green engineering firm would be useless to a B2C (business-to-consumer) weatherization company, even though are both are sub-slices of the green building scene. Your marketing plan has to make sense for your products and services, your market niches and their demographics/psychographics, and yes, your mission, values, and impact on the wider world.

2. Both the tree and the spider offered benefits. The tree’s ultimate client is its own progeny, but to achieve that ultimate goal, it offers food to hungry animals in search of sweetness—just as so many industries (social media networks, Internet search tools, and traditional media, to name three) entice users with services—but their real clients are buying eyeballs, or data. And the spider, perhaps aware of her own arrogant reply, points out the bug protection benefit to us, which helps to neutralize a predator (humans kill a lot of spiders).

If you need help thinking through the best ways to apply this in your particular organization, I’ll happily give you a 15-minute phone or Zoom consultation. Request a time at https://calendly.com/meet-shel/15min (Note: Calendly sometimes offers times it shouldn’t, and I sometimes miss the notifications—so after you get instantly “confirmed” from the Calendly robot, you’ll also get a manual confirmation or request to shift from me.)

Blessings of the Season
If you celebrate a special holiday at this season, such as Christmas, Chanukah (I do that one), Kwanzaa, or Solstice, may you enjoy many blessings and joys in your celebration. If you celebrate a holiday at a different time, such as Ramadan or Diwali, may the blessings I’m sending now ripen and blossom at the time they apply. Here in the U.S., we also celebrate the beginning of a new calendar year; many parts of Asia mark that time a month or two later. Jewish culture celebrates several New Years, the earliest of which is Tu B’Shvat, the New Year for the Trees (this year, it’s the evening of February 5th and all day February 6th. And the one you’ve probably heard of, Rosh HaShanah, is always in the fall, usually in September.

Discover why Chicken Soup’s Jack Canfield, futurist Seth Godin, and many others recommend Shel’s 10th book, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (and download a free sampler). Autographed and inscribed copies available.

View highlights from (and listen to) more than 30 podcasts ranging from 5 minutes to a full hour. Click here to see descriptions and replay links.

The Capitalist and the Activist

The Capitalist and the Activist: Corporate Social Activism and the New Business of Change by Tom C.W. Lin (Berrett-Koehler, 2022).

Lin urges coalitions between activists and capitalists. Since I’ve written four books on activist business success (most recently, Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World), I’m very familiar (and agree) with that case.

Lin covers some ground that I don’t. I appreciate his analysis of both sides’ strengths. He cites corporate skills in communications, operations, and accountability (p. 104)—and I’d elaborate to specify analytical/data capture/measurement skills (accountability), exponentially larger resources (operations), and global presence. But I see activists as the better communicators; their passion, tenacity, and creative tactics capture public attention, at no cost, that corporations often have to purchase.

And I appreciate his call for both groups to enlist governments—with far larger resources than activists and corporations combined—as partners (pp. 151-152), and how much power those combinations can bring to bear. He starts off with the four—four!—teenage Parkland shooting survivors who not only organized a massive Washington million-person demonstration (plus satellite demonstrations around the world) in just six weeks but also actually got gun safety legislation passed into law in notoriously gun-friendly Florida (pp. 1-4). Later (pp. 109-113), he discusses JP Morgan Chase’s $200 million economic and skills investment—in close collaboration with local government, business, and activist organizations—to rebuild Detroit’s shattered economy. Chase CEO Jamie Dimon freely acknowledges its self-interest. This effort turned it into “the home bank,” with 65 percent market share (p. 112). The company plans to replicate the effort elsewhere.

He documents many other corporations benefitting through social and environmental advocacy and argues that companies should choose their activism targets according to their strengths: logistics for a delivery service like UPS, housing for AirBNB, financial activism for banks… (p. 153). And he notes that social and environmental action can attract more impact investors and more capital (p. 115).

Also, recency creates relevancy. Lin documents many events and trends that hadn’t happened yet when I wrote my books. He covers the revulsion of CEOs like Apple’s Tim Cook and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg against the previous administration’s policies of deliberate cruelty, open racism, othering of numerous groups from Muslims (pp. 72-74) to women to people with disabilities to protestors exercising their rights to dissent to immigrants—even to the point of caging children (pp. 76-79). He also chronicles business response to the nationwide elevation of the Black Lives Matter movement following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis (pp. 86-89), the gender gap and #MeToo movement (pp. 92-96), and the attack on democracy itself that culminated in the violent riot of January 6, 2021 (pp. 79-81).

Refreshingly, he warns against over-reliance on corporate saviors (pp. 117-131). Corporate elites (especially those not yet changed by diversity efforts) may slant their causes toward the most mediagenic or the ones with the largest financial stake (p. 127) rather than the most important, may attempt to deflect attention from bad actions in other areas, may water down legislation, etc. And causes without profit potential still need attention—thus, he sees a major role for government.

He encourages companies to see their purpose-driven mission not as PR but as a key element in the company’s core identity (something I’ve advocated for years). And he applauds the many ways activist corporate execs are making changes from the inside.

But he lacks deeper analysis of business’s ability to benefit by addressing really big problems in a systemic way. Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World has a lot more depth there. In short, the books complement each other, and you’ll benefit by reading both.

Connect with Shel

Turn Your Sustainability/CSR Report Into Powerful Marketing!  http://goingbeyondsustainability.com/turn-that-nobody-reads-it-csr-report-into-a-marketing-win/

About Shel

Speaker, author, and consultant Shel Horowitz of GoingBeyondSustainabiity.com helps businesses find the sweet spot at the intersections of profitability with environmental and social good — creating and marketing profitable products and services that make a direct difference on problems like hunger, poverty, war, and catastrophic climate change. His 10th book is Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World.

If you’re not already a subscriber, please visit http://goingbeyondsustainability.com and scroll to the very bottom left corner. You’ll find lots of interesting information on your way to the subscription form, too.

————–

Links in this newsletter may earn commissions. Please click here for our privacy and endorsement policy.

 

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