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July 9, 2008
Buycott for Change (and Non-Zero Activism)
A few weeks back I profiled a new effort called Carrotmob for WorldChanging, the gist of which was here was a new effort to rework capitalism to reward businesses for taking positive environmental steps -- the idea being that the best way to motivate a profit-seeking business is to make there be significant monetary rewards for the behavior we'd like to see. Some commenters, though, have suggested that there's some amount of cognitive dissonance involved when you're helping out a corner bodega with installing more energy-efficient lights by stocking up on bourbon and Lucky Charms. If that's your feeling, then you'll be interested in Buycott for Change. A buycott works by rewarding businesses who are already "doing something positive for their employees, their community, and/or the environment" -- in the hopes that they might serve as a model for other businesses to start doing some good. Their first target was Brooklyn's own Habana Outpost -- home of the margarita bike -- and I'm hearing that it went well.
I think about things like Carrotmob and Buycott for Change when I read something like Sally Kohn's recent piece in the Christian Science Monitor on the need for millennials to embrace face-to-face activism. It scares me to think that we're going to find ourselves stuck in this culture war driven by the '60s that isn't hippie vs. conservative or whatever, but liberal/progressive who still sees the world through a 1960s lens rooted in conflict and younger folks who embrace the more non-zero world view that Robert Wright writes about. There's a distinct possibility that there are younger people (in both age and spirit) who are going about changing the world in a way that just doesn't look much more than buying a fruity beverage. Of course, whether you can indeed change the world through non-adversarial actions like this is very much an open question, but it's certainly worth a try.
Buycott for Change, Carrotmob, social business, social organizing
June 16, 2008
Green Shopping Goes Social
Over on the excellent WorldChanging I have a short piece up on Carrotmob, a concept recently launched out in San Francisco where a group of green-minded buyers coordinate their shopping to incentivize a certain business into making concrete earth-friendly changes. The mob shopping concept is about you and your friends playing along with capitalism to move the market in a direction of your liking.
What ran on WorldChanging was a shortened version of my take on the topic, so I'm taking the liberty of running some of the omitted sections -- on the "carrots" that might make businesses participate in such a scheme -- below. It probably makes sense to read the post over there first and then hop on back here if you're still interested.
The natural question becomes whether the success of the Carrotmob targeted-consumption approach at K&D can be replicated and grown. The answer might lay in the answer to a different question: what's in it for business? What carrots might really make them to go green(er)?
Looking at the Carrotmob experiment from the spring, the most obvious answer is cash. When Brent says with a smirk in a video on carrotmob.org that "corporations will do anything for money," he means that in a good way. With their interests on the table, what remains is aligning them with those of the green-minded buyer. What's so important about Carrotmob is the coordination, because it reduces an inefficiency in other, uncoordinated socially-conscious shopping: "mobbing" lets a business know exactly why the gods of good fortune have smiled upon it.
A second, less obvious carrot came up in the Carrotmob planning process -- reputation, and in particular the growing power we all have to use the social Internet to shape the reputations of businesses we like. One of the downsides to the "stick" approach to collectively addressing (like, say, me prodding my social circle into boycotting Shell over its poor environmental record in Nigeria) is that going negative (a) takes sustained effort and (b) isn't that much fun. But buying a six pack of Brooklyn Lager on a Carrotmob-appointed day, and then blogging about how much I looove my energy-efficient corner bodega on a social site like Outside.in? That's easy. And fun. It's casual, occasional, proactive activism.
Using online social cred as a carrot took something of a backseat to cold hard cash as Carrotmob rushed to launch. That's something of a shame, because those combined carrots can be powerful. K&D Market's participation in Carrotmob was rewarded with a sharp jump in business, at least for a day, but visit K&D's page on the hyperlocal review hub Yelp and you quickly see the opportunity for more. (The page is easy to find -- Google "K&D Market" and it's the first result.) Among the nicest reviews about K&D is one calling the market "the museum of expired cereal. (Many reviews complain about poor service.) For some businesses, a boost in their online rep that going green might provide might be even more valuable than a few hours of targeted sales. (Photo thx meganpru)
capitalism, consumerism, green, networks, social organizing, social technologies
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I'm a Brooklyn-based writer obsessed with technology, networks, social organizing, and the politics of food. This is my online home where I talk about those things and whatever else strikes my fancy. Learn More |
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