Perry Goldschein - Sustainability Strategy, Communications & Marketing

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CONSCIOUS CLICKS - The Blog

News and analysis on sustainability, corporate social responsibility, stakeholder engagement, and Internet and other digital marketing and communications. You'll even get some very practical tips on these topics that you can put to immediate use!

July 1st, 2010

Greenest Building in America?

Omega Center for Sustainable Living

Every six months or so SDialogue comes together for a retreat where we can brainstorm our efforts for the next six months. On June 18th, 2010 we met up at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, NY to discuss our plans for the second half of 2010. It was a wonderful experience and a first time visit for both Beth Bengtson and me, our new intern! The Omega Institute is a 195 acre campus that promotes holistic living through workshops, conferences, and retreats.

During our time at Omega we were able to visit the Omega Center for Sustainable Living (OCSL) which won the 2007 “On the Boards” award for the ‘Best Green Design in America.’ It is expected to be certified Leed Platinum, and is on track to become the first building in America to meet all six requirements for the “Living Building Challenge”.

Read the rest of this entry »

October 22nd, 2009

Social Media for Sustainability

I attended the Social Media for Sustainability conference organized by Justmeans in San Francisco on Monday. Along with hundreds of others who attended, I was excited to see a conference so laser-like in its focus on the intersection of two topics our firm seems to be addressing on a daily basis now.

The conference was designed to help answer such questions as: How should your company using social media to engage your customers, employees, activists, and other stakeholders online?  What are the best tools and platforms? How do you develop the right incentives for building community and keeping your community engaged? What is the ROI of social media and what metrics should your company be using?

While the conference didn’t answer all of these questions, many great insights were provided by both panelists and audience members from companies like Intel, Cisco, Nike and Disney, as well as Seventh Generation, Treehugger.com and TriplePundit.com.

Some major takeaways included:

  • Empowered by social media, customers, employees, activists, and other stakeholders are demanding far more from companies than ever before — with the power to affect and even define brands (e.g., United Breaks Guitars is closing in on 6 million views)
  • Social media helps co-create great ideas (e.g., MyStarbucks Idea)
  • Your brand is being discussed, whether or not you are part of the conversation — Google it, YouTube it, Twitter it and see for yourself (we’ve tried to stress this with clients ourselves — at the least, you should be “listening” in on the conversation with basic tools)
  • Sustainable brand leaders like Seventh Generation and Timberland are moving away from annual sustainability reports and towards more real-time storytelling and data — they’re looking for meaningful conversations (we’ve been helping clients with this type of activity for a while)
  • Leading brands are starting to crowd-source their efforts around sustainability
  • “‘Open companies are already performing some 30% more profitably than closed companies” (Dwayne Spradin, Innocentive) — “we” are smarter than “me”; but this requires a different mindset and culture than traditional or closed innovation — “culture eats strategy for lunch”
  • @katbaloo A good overview of Social Media Listening and Monitoring Tools as you think about tracking ROI: http://bit.ly/VBlmY

What’s been your experience with social media and sustainability?  Let us know!  More commentary at Twitter, of course (#justmeans).

June 20th, 2008

Green Homes for All?

My family and I are nearing the end of the process of building a new home in New Paltz, NY, in the Hudson Valley area. This has been a great opportunity to live and have a home in a region we love that’s “us” and that, of course, incorporates a large number of green elements. We didn’t realize it was the type of home some, especially among the Hollywood set, now consider the “new trophy home” as the NY Times recently put it — small and ecological. It’s simply what we’ve wanted for a while now, for our health and environmental reasons, and have had the good fortune to pursue.

The process has been jaw-droppingly time-consuming, though – I’ve spent hundreds of hours on it over the last year and a half, and my wife dozens or hundreds more. We understand from other friends that have had homes built that the process is de facto a time-consuming one; but I know our desire for numerous green elements added to that significantly as well.

It didn’t help that the process started around the time the credit crisis accelerated — the large national lender we started with for the home construction loan (HCL) took dozens of hours of my time alone, approving our application but then deciding to close their HCL department. I had to start the whole HCL application process over with a new lender.

That’s why, when I saw this recently-posted video below, I had to share it. It shows a much simpler way to have a new green home. Hopefully new ideas and economies of scale will continue to make the process easier for both existing and new home owners — I’m not sure we’d go through the process again if given the choice, unless it was something like the modular home in the video. The Hollywood people probably have teams of architects and designers to help them with green homes constructed on site from scratch!



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