about jobs advertise subscribe: Email/RSS

GreenBuzz from GreenBiz

Categorized

» About
» Agriculture & Food
» CSR
» Clean Tech
» Climate Change
» Conflicts & Communication
» Conscious Entrepreneurship
» Eco Products
» Energy
» Green Building
» Greenwashing
» Investment & Markets
» MBA
» Management
» Marketing & Branding
» Policy & Government
» Poverty Solutions
» Renewable Energy
» Social Enterprise
» Supply Chain
» Transportation

Worth Your Time

Green Business Links

Sustainabilty

« back to the latest from 3p

May 4, 2005

Marketing Global Warming?

globalwarming.jpgIf global warming, the greenhouse effect, or climate change or anything else you want to call it is really as bad as people say it is, why does the general public persist in doing virtually nothing about it? It's a pressing question that plagues anyone who thinks of themselves as having a high level of awareness about such things.

Legendary business guru Tom Peters' weblog has an interesting discussion going on that starts by suggesting the issue is "poorly marketed", and has a "weak brand".

If you've read George Lakoff's Don't Think of an Elephant then you've got some idea of where this is headed....

post-continues.gif
our-sponsor-message.gif

The very idea of looking at "global warming" as a "brand" is a little weird. It's the kind of thing that people assume will be understood simply because of its potential gravity, but when signs of catastrophe are not apparant in everyday life, people tune out.

It "branding" really part of the issue? If it were branded as "scarier" would it change people's behavior, or produce a backlash? Commenters on the site suggest a few more ideas: Scientists are bad at reporting on science to a general audience, energy prices are not priced to account for externalities which keeps people in a imaginary world, and careless leaders.

Personally, I like the phrase "Global Weirding" as it implies that a) We're not entirely sure what the heck is going to happen, and b) whatever it is, it's may be weird and problematic. What do you think?

(via Treehugger)

email-updates.gif

Comments

Global Warming is way too mild of a term. We need to use the term: Global Overheating.

When our cars overheat and we ignore the warning lights, our cars will soon stop running because we will have destroyed the engine.

Our overheating of the earth warning lights have been on for too long. If we keep ignoring the warnings, it may be too late.

Life as we know it will soon come to an end.

» Kirk Muse at May 4, 2005 8:43 PM

Perhaps the reason that the general public is unconcerned is that there are no apparent effects at all. First, very few people understand the difference between 'weather' and 'climate.' Normal weather variations are far more extreme than the slow, gradual changes in climate due to global warming. We are talking a change of less than 1 degree C over the next century. Secondly, it is far from obvious that global warming will be deleterious, or that an increase in carbon dioxide will result in anything more than more luxurious vegetation.

» Tom at May 4, 2005 11:21 PM

i will have to agree to tom,along with that U.S. not joining the band wagon against global warning makes it difficult for developing countries, if U.S. decides to take this seriously many will follow with a queation but U.S. is not doin which adds to courage.

» pradeep at May 5, 2005 2:44 AM

There are several reasons why global warming is not that big of an issue in this country. It is easy to ignore for most Americans (excepting many Alaskans!) right now, a complete lack of leadership from our 'leaders', and the worst of global warmings effects aren't expected to come about for another 100-200 years. I also agree that the term "global warming" lacks pizazz. Maybe every fossil fuel burning device should come with a Surgeon General's warning sticker "Ignoring climate change now could be hazardous to your health" Or "Quitting fossil fuels now greatly reduces your risks of floods, droughts, famine, disease, and Armageddon" If all else fails, just call it 'Free Beer', at least that will grab people's attention!

» Ed Sharron at May 5, 2005 8:08 AM

The whole idea of 'marketing' a fear of global warming sounds like a chapter out of Michael Crichton's "State of Fear".

» Jmofwiw at May 6, 2005 7:49 AM

Hmm... that's a good point. I think the original post was deliberately trying to evoke that Chrichton-esque notion. I would like to think that "marketing" anything like this is unneeded, but maybe it is, in a certain way?

» Nick at May 6, 2005 9:55 AM

I think that someone needs to ban the use of fossil fuels, I think there is some other source of fuel that needs to be used. Fossil fuels are dangerous to your health and the environment so I think they should not be used

» bg at November 3, 2005 3:16 PM

Not meaning to sound stupid but has anyone thought about the animals and what will happen to them?....as many animals die each day from pollution.

» Beth at December 15, 2005 9:15 AM

If you want to stop using fossil fuels bg, then i hope you don't own a car. You people are so smug about your own lives and lifestyles. Get a brain!

The average temperature has only increased by one degree in the past 200 years. If the world is going to end from "global warming" it won't happen for millons of years.

» Truth Man at June 17, 2006 11:26 PM

You are absolutely right, Global Warming's brand is very weak in comparison to the "product" itself (a serious and imminent danger).

Think it suffers from conflation with other "environmentalist" movements that people generally care less about -- organic food, save the whales, preserve the rainforest etc. It should drop all imagery associated with Planet Earth and focus solely on the human aspect (economics collapse/drought/flooding).My more detailed below:


http://invisiblehandinyourpants.wordpress.com/2008/05/14/conflationary-effects/

» Phil at May 15, 2008 12:43 PM

Join the Discussion

Be patient. You only need to click once to post your comment, which will appear soon afterwards.

(you may use HTML tags for style)

 

Remember Me?

Related stories by keyword:

From Delicious » del.icio.us / sustainability / globalwarming
From Technorati » / /

Search 3p

Latest Posts

Dated Archives


SBI_GIF_160x140_01.gif

mojo-cover-nov08.jpg

live-neutral-logo.gif

PWC_logo.gif

ecosa.gif