Sustainability advertising tends to target my demographic profile — a young,
socially conscious female whose ideal Sunday plans include a $5 oat milk latte
and a visit to the farmers’ market. Brands consistently see research that
supports this stereotype. In a
study
by First Insight and the Wharton School, for example, Gen Z is the
generation most likely to prioritise sustainability over a brand name.
Elsewhere, Gen Z ranked the environment their number-one concern in
Deloitte’s Global 2021 Millennial and Gen Z
Survey.
But there’s a problem here: By narrowing the demographic focus to a handful of
easy target profiles, brands exclude swaths of people — the people who most
need to be included in the narrative. This may make sense (sometimes) from a
commercial perspective; but it doesn’t serve the broader needs of our transition
as a society.
If campaigns and communications repeatedly neglect people like you, you’ll start
to think the subject isn’t for you. That is not okay. Sustainability issues
affect every living being on this planet, regardless of age or gender. In
addition to moral reasons for broadening our views, some of the data reveal that
reality is much more nuanced.
Age
It's a myth that younger generations are leading the way and dragging the
reluctant older cohort with them. When it comes to climate action, it’s quite
the opposite. A recent
study
by New Scientist and the Policy Institute at King’s College London found
18- to 34-year-olds in both the UK and US have, in fact, the most
defeatist worldview — and are thus least likely to change their behaviours.
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The same is true for other environmental behaviors — we see in our work with
WRAP
that boomers are best at recycling. In the UK, an Aviva
study
found “over-55s are more likely to recycle waste (84 percent), avoid
single-use-plastic, and buy only seasonal fruit and vegetables (47 percent) than
any other age group.”
These better individual behaviours might flow naturally for this group: They
spend more time at home; have more disposable income; and, one hopes, have
gathered more wisdom by this stage in their lives. Above all, Professor Bobby
Duffy at King’s College London’s Policy Institute rightly reminds us that
“parents and grandparents care deeply about the legacy they’re leaving for their
children and grandchildren — not just their house or jewelry, but the state of
the planet.”
Need more convincing? Don’t forget that boomers still hold the purse strings of
the economy. In the US, millennials hold just 5 percent of wealth, while
boomers hold a whopping 53
percent.
On the other side of the pond, baby boomers in the UK have experienced the
greatest increase in household
wealth.
Compound this with ageism in
advertising
and you have a recipe for a massive target group of wealthy, powerful, motivated
and action-oriented citizens who are categorically ignored in the sustainability
discourse.
Gender
Many surveys point to an “eco-gender
gap.”
But one global
study found
that more women than men had changed their habits to fight climate change, from
recycling
and buying local to buying less and reducing meat consumption. With women still
running most household purchasing decisions, it’s an easy win for brands to
target women with sustainability messaging.
It doesn’t help that the sustainability lexicon feels inherently feminine.
“Caring” for the planet, tropes such as “Mother” Earth, and altruistic messages
still lie at the heart of most communications. As a result, some men
unconsciously shun environmental behaviours as it doesn’t jibe with their
masculine self-image. In an
experiment
involving more than 2,000 US and Chinese participants, men were more likely
to donate to an environmental non-profit with a more masculine logo than
traditional “green” sustainability visuals (which are problematic in their own
right, but that’s an
article for another day).
By now, you know the drill — the more brands default to targeting women, the
more men will feel excluded; and half the population will increasingly distance
themselves from what should be a gender-neutral topic. The communication and
aesthetics around sustainability need to reflect this inclusive vision.
And to name the elephant in the room: Men also control most of the world’s
wealth and power. Only 8 percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are
women,
just 5 percent of FTSE 350
CEOs,
the wealth of the richest 22 men equals the wealth of all women in
Africa
— I could go on. Though these numbers are changing (and I truly hope to see
gender parity in my lifetime), we can’t ignore that in society’s current state,
galvanising systemic action around sustainability needs full participation from
men.
Let’s rethink who we speak to
Like it or not, you cannot deny that brands influence culture. The next time you
brief your agency, write a brand plan or comb through consumer data, I hope
you’re motivated to rethink assumptions of who the sustainable consumer is or
could be.
Now is the time to challenge some of these tired categories and energise a more
forward-looking, inclusive picture of the change-makers we all need to be. Dare
to herald boomers as the sustainability heroes they are. Counter norms by
showing a tattooed pick-up truck driver sporting a reusable mug. Break the
stereotypes, one campaign at a time.
Radley Yeldar is a creative consultancy based in London,
UK. Together we’re made up of more than 200 specialist brand and digital
strategists, sustainability gurus, film-makers, developers, UX designers,
creatives, reporting consultants, and employee engagement experts.
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Published Apr 7, 2022 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST