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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.17.2007 - 12:15pm ET
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Americans Report Increased Environmental Consciousness and Expectation That Companies Will Take Action
National survey finds almost half of Americans are now environmental "doers;" highlights untapped opportunity for sale of green products
(CSRwire) BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 17, 2007--The 2007 Cone Consumer
Environmental Survey released today finds one-third of Americans (32%)
report heightened interest in the environment compared to a year ago. In
addition, they are overwhelmingly looking to companies to act: 93% of
Americans believe companies have a responsibility to help preserve the
environment.
The new study indicates a large number of Americans are now environmental
"doers" themselves- in the past year, almost half (47%) have purchased
environmentally-friendly products, more than one in five (21%) have
donated to an environmental organization, and almost that many (18%) have
advocated for environmental issues. Most Americans report they are also
making efforts in their personal lives to intentionally reduce their
impact on the environment, including:
- Conserving energy- 93%
- Recycling- 89%
- Conserving water- 86%
- Telling family/friends about environmental issues- 70%
What Americans Expect of Business
Americans are calling on companies to be proactive in their day-to-day
operations when it comes to the environment. Concerns over packaging and
transportation compete with pollution as an issue. Solid majorities
support meaningful company actions including:
- Reducing pollution through office and manufacturing
operations- 71%
- Designing products/packaging with more
environmentally-friendly contents and minimal packaging- 69%
- Distributing and transporting products more efficiently- 69%
- Communicating environmental efforts to consumers and
employees
so each group can support those efforts- 62%
- Donating money to environmental causes- 59%
- Lobbying for environmentally-friendly policies- 57%
"Americans clearly have a heightened environmental consciousness, and
their expectations now touch on a range of business practices," explains
Mike Lawrence, executive vice president of Corporate Responsibility, Cone
LLC. "Companies need to have a credible environmental strategy that
reaches across their operations if they expect to secure consumer trust
and loyalty."
Consumers Will Use Their Purchasing Power to Reward or Punish
The vast majority of Americans (91%) say they have a more positive image
of a company when it is environmentally responsible. On the flip side,
almost as many (85%) indicated they would consider switching to another
company's products or services because of a company's negative corporate
responsibility practices.
Among those Americans who report buying environmentally-friendly products,
these items include:
- Products with recycled content- 62%
- Energy-efficient home improvements- 56%
- Cleaning supplies- 48%
- Organic or other third-party certified foods/beverages- 24%
- Energy-efficient cars- 13%
- Green apparel- 10%
In addition, many Americans report there are factors that would motivate
them to pay more for environmentally-friendly products. These include:
- Saving money in the long-term- 72%
- Shopping convenience/readily available- 63%
- Health and welfare of future generations- 63%
"This is a call-to-action for companies. It's an opportunity for
innovation in product design, packaging, and distribution," says Julia
Hobbs Kivistik, executive vice president of Cause Branding(sm), Cone LLC.
"Companies ultimately need to engage consumers and effectively communicate
the impact their business practices and products have on the environment.
Consumers are listening."
Communicating the Impact
Advertising is the leading way Americans prefer companies communicate
their social and environmental issues and practices (45%), but electronic
communications, particularly via company Web sites, are growing in
popularity. Communication by way of a company's Web site now falls just
behind advertising as the second leading outlet for social and
environmental communication (41%), reinforcing the idea that as companies
become more environmentally-friendly, their communications vehicles should
too.
About the survey:
The 2007 Cone Consumer Environmental Survey presents the findings of an
online survey conducted March 29, 2007 by Opinion Research Corporation
among a sample of 1,066 adults comprising 499 men and 567 women 18 years
of age and older. The margin of error associated with a sample size of
1,000 is +/- 3%.
About Cone:
Cone LLC (www.coneinc.com) is a strategy and
communications agency engaged in building brand trust. Cone creates
stakeholder loyalty and long-term relationships through the development
and execution of Cause Branding(SM), Brand Marketing, Corporate
Responsibility, and Crisis Prevention and Management initiatives. Cone is
a member of the Omnicom Group.
For more information about the 2007 Cone Consumer Environmental Survey or
for a copy of the complete fact sheet, please contact Sarah Kerkian at
Cone (skerkian@coneinc.com).
Copyright Business Wire 2007
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