Green Marketing Manifesto by John Grant
Today on our Monday's green book series
we're talking about green marketing. Our book for today is:
The Green Marketing Manifesto
Author: John Grant
John Grant co-founded St Luke’s the innovative and
socially aware London ad agency. Working with clients such
as the Body Shop as well as mainstream brands, St Luke’s
pioneered the view of a company’s “Total Role
in Society” and operated as an employee shareholder
democracy. Since leaving in 1999 he has worked as an independent
consultant.
John’s previous books which all deal with ‘what’s
new?’ have earned widespread praise, popularity and
critical acclaim, and include 'The New Marketing Manifesto'
(1999), 'After Image' (2002) and 'Brand Innovation Manifesto'
(2006). John is also a prolific blogger and writer of articles
and reports. His current thoughts on green marketing can be
found at http://greenormal.blogspot.com
and he is also the official blogger for the
Green Awards.
Publisher: Wiley
Published in: November 2007
What it is about: According
to the book description, the Green Marketing Manifesto provides
a roadmap on how to organize green marketing effectively and
sustainably. It offers a fresh start for green marketing,
one that provides a practical and ingenious approach.
The book offers many examples from companies and brands who
are making headway in this difficult arena, such as Marks
& Spencer, Sky, Virgin, Toyota, Tesco, O2 to give an indication
of the potential of this route.
John Grant creates a ‘Green Matrix’ as a tool
for examining current practice and the practice that the future
needs to embrace.
In an interview to psfk.com,
he explained where it all started: "I wrote the book
(originally it started as a paper for a potential client project)
to try to make sense of the torrent of recent green marketing
initiatives. I wanted to sift out what was greenwash and what
had substance – and also try to get to what was actually
working, and why; and to map out the terrain a bit."
This book is intended to assist marketers, by means of clear
and practical guidance, through a complex transition towards
meaningful green marketing.
Why you should get it:
1. Marketing is not everything, but it is critical for the
success of every green product or service.
2. The book is eco-friendly - printed on FSC certified paper
and using vegetable-based ink. It's also written on its cover:
Please don't put this book in a plastic shopping bag. It may
sounds obvious, but it's the first book where I see such a
text on the cover.
3. I like the way Grant defined it in another
interview as a book "about a sustainable economy
and making green normal as opposed to ‘green-washing’,
which is making normal look green. "
What others say on the book:
"brilliant book...that will forever change the way you
look at green marketing." (psfk.com, Nov 27, 2007)
"outlines how environmentalism increasingly informs business
strategy" (Reuters, Nov 29, 2007)
"...the book casts new insight into green marketing"
(naturalchoice.co.uk, Tuesday 18th December 2007)
This green
book review was original posted at the Eco-Libris blog.
More resources:
1. The
book on Amazon.com
2. John Grant's blog - greennormal
3. A
video of John Grant talking on the book launch in London
(Nov 2007)
Back to
Eco-Libris green books page
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