As someone who champions green certified homes, I am certain this is the question that I get asked the most. The answer is yes, but before I tell you why let me digress with a recent personal anecdote.
This past weekend I was shopping for some laundry stain booster. If you don’t know what that is you probably don’t have either toddlers or baseball players in your house – I have both. Needless to say, I use a lot of this product. My favorite brand was on sale in two versions – the standard version and the “PERFUME & DYE FREE” version. Not needing perfumes or dyes and just wanting the stain removal powers, I was about to select the “FREE” version. But wait … the FREE version cost a lot more! While I didn’t really want or need the added smells and colors, it galled me that the version that was presumably more “pure” with fewer added raw materials cost more.
Herein lies the green marketing lesson. Consumers do care about green, but just because a product has green attributes doesn’t mean that they believe it should cost more. I do pay more for some green attributes that are very important to me. But just because a product has a green label and conspicuous green packaging doesn’t mean that I will pay more. In fact, it just might make me cranky enough to taint my opinion of the brand and write an email to complain. Which I did (only to receive a coupon to make up for the company’s shameless greenwashing, but I digress).
Performance matters. For a consumer to purchase a green product it must perform at least as well as a product that doesn’t have green attributes. Of course, performance can be measured in a number of ways, and the more complex the product the more complicated the performance indicators. Let’s start with green cleaners as a basic product category. Method is one of the fastest-growing private companies in America. They had two products goals: make cleaners that you didn’t want to hide in a cabinet (performance = aesthetics); and make cleaners without any dirty ingredients (performance = environmentally-friendly). On their website they have five listed attributes –the first being “clean.” No one was going to buy a cleaning product that didn’t clean, at least not more than once. Homes are a much more complex product than cleaning agents, but the same principle applies. People want their home to perform. Without question that include aesthetics and design – I don’t believe we will ever see a large housing market for yurts as they simply don’t fit into our national ideal of what a home looks like. Second, they want comfortable spaces that are cool in the summer and warm in the winter and affordable to heat and cool. Third, they want healthy indoor environments free of harmful pollutants or excessive moisture where they can live safely and raise families.
Green is mainstream. According to “Mainstream Green,” completed by Ogilvy & Mather in April 2011, 16% of Americans identify as Super Greens. These are people whose everyday behavior is modified to ensure that their impact on the environment is lessened in one way or another. A much more impressive statistic is that two-thirds of Americans (66%) identify as Upper & Middle Greens. These are consumers who are following the green movement, as opposed to leading it, but green influences their purchasing decisions so long as it doesn’t cost too much. This group is also largely motivated by personal interests, so if you offer a product that has green attributes, provides them a benefit, and helps save the environment, it’s a win-win. These two groups together account for 82% of consumers influenced by green product offerings – do you really care if you are not selling to the other 18%? And, to be clear, there may be a percentage of this latter group that is influenced by your green product but not for strictly environmental reasons. Energy independence and nationalism are alternative reasons for some consumers to favor attributes like energy efficiency.
Certification matters. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) recently commissioned a study that found 80% of respondents believed certification by independent, third-party organizations provides extra credibility and assurance. So you don’t take my word for it, defer to the FTC. Certification matters, so long as it is the right type … which I’ll discuss another day. Stay tuned!
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