Piers Fawkes Says Change World or Go Home!

piers_fawkes.jpg

In a less threatening take on the “–or die!” manifesto marketers have become so fond of, Piers Fawkes suggests that if you’re not going to go out there and change the world, you ought to just go home.

At the IIR Future Triends ’07 conference on Monday, Fawkes gave this presentation — pointing to Kashi, and that Omnivore’s Dilemma guy, as well as other examples — to illustrate what trendy forms our social assumptions about “going green” take.

“Green is not a trend, it’s an issue,” he stressed, adding that ours is the best job in the world because we can inspire companies to do good.

Easy to talk, Piers. But the majority of brands that did green right factored ecological salvation into their core ethos, or pursued it later on with some semblance of sincerity (Jones Soda, New Belgium, Google with its insane solar-powered campus endeavour).

Most of the brands seeking the “green effect” at the doorsteps of agencies are probably not tree-huggers at heart, making it difficult for both agencies and clients to build successful long-term world-changing strategies. They all just want to push microsites, project ( RED ) and free trade coffee.

Where does that leave ad agencies, most of which feel the need to wink-wink with clients to keep their business? Who’s really going to take the pulpit and shout, “We need to do this right! On your dime!”…?

But what do we know, we can’t even play the recycling game.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says the behaviors that make older people exhausting to be around aren’t personality flaws — they’re the long-term result of a generation that was never given a language for what they were actually feeling

Psychology says the behaviors that make older people exhausting to be around aren’t personality flaws — they’re the long-term result of a generation that was never given a language for what they were actually feeling

Global English Editing

I’m 65 and i can tell you the exact moment retirement stopped feeling like freedom: it was the third Tuesday morning when i realized nobody actually needs me to do anything anymore and I’d structured my entire identity around being needed

I’m 65 and i can tell you the exact moment retirement stopped feeling like freedom: it was the third Tuesday morning when i realized nobody actually needs me to do anything anymore and I’d structured my entire identity around being needed

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who become deeply unhappy in their 60s aren’t suffering from age itself — they’re finally confronting the thirty-year gap between the life they performed for others and the one they actually wanted to live

Psychology says people who become deeply unhappy in their 60s aren’t suffering from age itself — they’re finally confronting the thirty-year gap between the life they performed for others and the one they actually wanted to live

Global English Editing

The quietest crisis in modern retirement isn’t financial. It’s the thousands of men who had exactly one friend, and that friend was their wife, and now every social need they have runs through a single person who is also trying to figure out who she is without a schedule.

The quietest crisis in modern retirement isn’t financial. It’s the thousands of men who had exactly one friend, and that friend was their wife, and now every social need they have runs through a single person who is also trying to figure out who she is without a schedule.

Global English Editing

Psychology says if a man loves you genuinely, he won’t always make it obvious — he’ll show it through a specific set of small, consistent behaviors that only become visible when you stop looking for the grand gestures

Psychology says if a man loves you genuinely, he won’t always make it obvious — he’ll show it through a specific set of small, consistent behaviors that only become visible when you stop looking for the grand gestures

Global English Editing

Research suggests that women who stop being endlessly accommodating aren’t becoming selfish — they’re reclaiming the psychological energy they’ve been spending on managing other people’s comfort at the expense of their own needs

Research suggests that women who stop being endlessly accommodating aren’t becoming selfish — they’re reclaiming the psychological energy they’ve been spending on managing other people’s comfort at the expense of their own needs

Global English Editing