4 Green Business Trends for 2013

Kelly Spors

Thursday, January 10th, 2013

It used to be enough to adopt a highway, recycle in the break room and install a few energy-efficient light bulbs. But businesses now must take ambitious steps if they want to be seen as sustainability leaders and join the big leagues. Consider that about two-thirds of all Fortune 500 companies now publish corporate sustainability reports.

The past year has been a tough one for green businesses, though. With some financial incentives for sustainability drying up, the U.S. economy still treading water and many environmental issues getting little airtime from politicians, it’s gotten harder to justify spending on sustainability.

That said, smart businesses are continuing to invest in environmental sustainability. Because when you take a long-term view, these issues are just going to continue to become more critical to business success in the future.

With that in mind, here are four emerging trends in sustainability likely to gain more steam in 2013:

Smarter Marketing

The days of broadcasting your environmental benefits to the world are pretty much over. “Green consumers” are a varied bunch in terms of the reasons they buy environmentally friendly products – and eco-friendliness usually comes second to other factors. Companies are thus getting better at tying sustainability into their brand to make it just as much about the products as the green. And they’re making it more fun.

Take Unilever’s Axe line of body products for men. The brand, which often uses suggestive marketing, recently launched its “Showerpooling” water conservation campaign. Besides encouraging college-age men to utilize low-flow showerheads, it also encourages fewer showers by telling them to:

“. . .enjoy the company of a like-minded acquaintance.”

More Sharing

The “sharing economy,” is continuing to grow. People are realizing they can save money and help the environment by borrowing or renting anything from power tools to spare bedrooms to baby clothes to bicycles. Some industries might suffer. Why book a hotel room when someone with an amazing house is willing to rent it to you while they’re away?

In the long run, some of the actual sharing websites that are enabling this practice to grow could become powerful companies of their own, helping to promote a more sustainable future in the process.. Check out websites including YerdleUniiverse, and Skillshare.  More businesses will try to break into the sharing business and more will share themselves as a way to reduce their footprint and costs.

Keeping a Closer Eye on Financial Payback

Early adopters of many sustainability practices and technologies jumped in because they believed in the cause. But sometimes those investments weren’t the soundest from a financial perspective. They might have taken years to pay back in savings.  But more companies are involving their CFOs in sustainability endeavors and doing elaborate payback and ROI analyses before investing in an upgrade.

Sustainability is no longer a fringe activity in corporate operations; it is part of how they turn profits.

Getting Serious About Data and Benchmarking

Companies are tracking their sustainability progress like never before. And government officials are becoming increasingly interested in tracking businesses’ sustainability practices as a way to tout achievements, as well as spurring the laggards to do more.

The Institute for Market Transformation reports that cities including San Francisco, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle, Washington, D.C., and Austin, Texas have all created programs in recent years that require commercial building owners in some form to disclose energy efficiency.

What do you think will be the green business trends next year? Are you planning any green initiatives at your business?

Courtesy: Small Biz Trends

About Kelly Spors

Kelly Spors is a former small-business reporter and blogger for The Wall Street Journal and has also freelanced for Yahoo! and The New York Times. She is now communications and outreach coordinator for Energy Smart, a Minnesota nonprofit helping businesses save money through energy efficiency.