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Social Media an Invaluable Tool for Helping Conscious Consumers Live Even More Consciously

At my company, TerraCycle, we too have continually seen the value social media can bring to our partners’, and our own, sustainability and eco-activism efforts. Just this April, we worked with our longtime friends atTom’s of Maine to help support the Less Waste Challenge. This Earth Month social media campaign challenged Tom’s of Maine consumers and TerraCycle participants to reduce from their lives one pound of waste per week.

How The Right Toothpaste Can Help You Live A Better Life

If you do buy Tom’s of Maine Rapid Relief Sensitive Toothpaste, you’ll also gain the knowledge of knowing that with every purchase of this toothpaste at $5.99 for a 4 oz. tube at your local Walmart, Walgreens, CVS, and Amazon will also mean 10% of the profits goes into supporting people and the planet. Every package is packaged through TerraCycle Tom’s of Maine Recycling Program. It’s Kosher and halal-certified too.

5 ways to reduce one pound (and more) of waste a week

Getting inspired to go green can be a challenge, even for the most earth-conscious individual. Sometimes, however, summoning that motivation starts with smaller, practical changes to your lifestyle. Whether that means switching from paper to cloth towels, conserving water, or abandoning disposable cutlery in favor of durable alternatives, “going green” doesn’t have to be an uphill battle.

Can Your Family Reduce Just 1 lb. of Waste?

Did you know that April is Earth Month? It is a pretty important month seeing as we all have to live here as do our future generations. Earth Month is a reminder that we need to keep the planet healthy and clean. Tom’s of Maine is a company that believes basically everyday can be Earth Day. For over 45 years they have been inspired to make natural, effective products while still nurturting the environment. With the average family producing nearly 125 pounds of trash every week, Tom’s of Maine is encouraging families to keep as much waste out of landfills as possible.

Will Consumers Pay to Recycle Their Waste?

Consumers are steadily becoming more conscious of environmental issues, and more eager to reduce waste at home and work — but are these enough to translate into action? Moreover, will consumers pay to live up to ‘green’ standards and aspirations in their lives? The success my company, TerraCycle, is seeing with our Zero Waste Box platform seems to indicate that many are willing. Due to the economics of garbage, recycling traditionally difficult-to-recycle waste streams has always been a challenge for us. Overcoming those roadblocks was not easy, but we found a way through our ‘sponsored waste’ recycling programs. Consumer product companies such as Procter & Gamble and Colgate, and major brands such as Tom’s of Maine sponsor our recycling programs, allowing us to offer them to consumers, school groups, offices, and community organizations for free. People join a program; collect waste at home, at work or in their communities; print out a free shipping label and send the waste to TerraCycle for recycling.

4 New Year’s Resolutions for Sustainability Marketers

A new year means four more quarters to pitch, market and advertise your sustainable product or brand to eager consumers across the globe. The world is shifting toward environmental consciousness whether you believe it or not, and reaching consumers in this product climate requires more than just a big marketing budget and hollow promises of greater social responsibility. These four pieces of advice are my recommendations to sustainable brand marketers moving into the new year.

Be Transparent About Sustainability Claims

Questionable environmental claims abound in the products market. For example, there are indeed plastics that biodegrade, but many will only break down when processed in an industrial composter. A label touting a plastic product’s biodegradability may be scientifically accurate, but without any further explanation or direction on the package itself, many of these plastics will not biodegrade in any reasonable amount of time in a consumer’s home composting system. Any lack of transparency in this regard is a sure way to catalyze skepticism and criticism. Instead, clarify sustainability claims for consumers in an accessible way — direct them to a web portal with more information, cite any peer-reviewed or third party-supported evidence for your sustainability claims, and perhaps most importantly, admit when and why you are wrong or have missed the mark. Outline the series of events that led to the failure of a sustainability claim or promise, and explain how the company plans to refocus its efforts in a more realistic fashion. Whatever you can do to engage more closely with your consumer base is a great way to bring them back to the brand again and again.

Focus on the Product, Not the “Green”

A product should first be defined by its quality and price competitiveness — any sustainability claims or “green” qualities should be the cherry on top. As I’ve said before, the green gap still very much exists in today’s product environment, and most consumers believe that a product claiming sustainability is going to cost them more at the register. Without a quality product to back up those claims, all you have is a product that makes nice, flowery environmental promises with few customers to actually support it. This is especially true for smaller brands that have to compete with massive, multinational product companies. Without the capital, market share, budget and established consumer base of a huge corporation, your product has to stand on its own. Once that happens, any additional sustainable qualities will help to differentiate the product and give you room to claim your own share of the market.

Educate Consumers about Proper Disposal

Most consumers will not put forth any extra effort to learn how to best dispose of a product or product packaging. Knowing what forms of plastic are widely recyclable, for example, can be particularly confusing thanks to the unintuitive resin identification coding system — potentially recyclable plastics may end up in the trash, and non-recyclable plastics can end up contaminating the recycling stream. The How2Recycle Label decreases confusion and educates consumers on the ground simply and effectively. Through simple graphics and concise labeling, it tells consumers precisely how to dispose of each component of a product or piece of packaging. If a material’s recyclability depends on the region, the label tells consumers to “Check Locally.” If residual product might present a contamination risk, it might say “Empty & Replace Cap.” It’s such a simple system that one has to wonder why it hasn’t been adopted sooner. Luckily, dozens of major brands have already joined the How2Recycle program.

Appeal to Conscious Consumers

Social responsibility means a lot to consumers, more so today than ever before. If they trust a brand and believe in its underlying approach to sustainability, they are more likely to become loyal, returning customers. To start, establish your company or brand as one that cares about more than just a profit margin. Tom’s of Maine, The North Face, Patagonia and Clif Bar are just a few that come to mind. They provide in-depth outlines and overviews of their sustainability initiatives, approach them in a realistic and transparent way, partner with third-party auditors to improve manufacturing efficiencies and supply chain security, and admit where improvements can be made along the way. When you prove you care about more than just what is in consumers’ wallets, they are more prone to listen.