Ray Smith,
the Managing Director for AppliCad, asks the question: Why Green? And he makes
some very interesting points.
Here’s what
Ray Smith had to say:
Why Green?
This is becoming very tiresome.
I am starting to feel like I’m late for the St
Patrick’s Day parade in New York.
Why is everyone painting their websites and advertising material various shades
of green? This is all getting a bit silly with ‘Green’ becoming a euphemism for
what most good managers have been doing for years. What has changed? Isn’t
responsible, considerate, efficient, effective and sustainable use of materials
and resources good management at any time? Why do we have to invoke green
to succeed in business? Surely we have better messages to convey to our
customers?
I believe Green has become an anachronism in
today’s environment and used when you can’t think of anything else to
say! Marketers seem to have lost their way and in the absence of any other
creative campaign invoke ‘green.’ This has coincided with the recession
that resulted from the GFC and perhaps has taken the edge off their creative
skills. Can we focus on the real reasons why our products and services are
truly an effective solution and good for the future of our occupation of the
planet?
Yes, we wish to leave the planet in better
shape for our kids than what we have inherited and this should underscore
everything we do. So why can’t we focus on the technical things that
really matter, that happen to be efficient, effective, responsible and
sustainable?
In AppliCad’s case, our software doesn’t just
deliver tools for efficiently estimating roofing materials and generating job
management reports – we also reduce waste, optimise reuse of off-cut material,
plan for solar panels and rainfall capture and a bunch of other
things. And they’re not dependent upon any color! I believe that good
marketers sell benefits, not features. Green is not a benefit – it is a
result of good management practice and processes. Well, what
do you think? Does Ray Smith make his case? Is ‘green’ a benefit or a result of
good management practices?