Can Don Draper Save The Planet? Plus a GIVEAWAY!

There have been memorable social marketing campaigns over the years--Smokey the Bear, the sizzling egg that is your brain on drugs and the coining of “Obamacare” come to mind. Now Grist reports that Martin Glaser, the advertising genius that came up with the "I Heart New York" logo, has turned his communications brilliance to Climate Change.  

As I said in my earlier post on the importance of communications to public policy, Madison-avenue style marketing should not be reserved for toothpaste and cell phone plans.  Policy, like anything else, needs to be sold to the public in order to be accepted and effective.

The slogan is "It's not warming.  It's dying." You can see the campaign here.  I like the slogan, it captures the urgency.  But more than the slogan, I like the graphic of a green circle being overcome by a black shadow.  I think it is quite effective

If Madison Avenue can get Americans to believe that 4 out of 5 dentists agree that sugar free gum is good for you, then hopefully Martin Glaser can improve Yale's survey finding that "only one in three Americans thinks people in the U.S. are being harmed “right now” by global warming in the United States." 

I am giving away a "It's Not Warming, It's Dying" to the first 5 people that Tweet this post! 

 

Can Don Draper Save The Planet?

There have been memorable social marketing campaigns over the years--Smokey the Bear, the sizzling egg that is your brain on drugs and the coining of “Obamacare” come to mind. Now Grist reports that Martin Glaser, the advertising genius that came up with the "I Heart New York" logo, has turned his communications brilliance to Climate Change.  

As I said in my earlier post on the importance of communications to public policy, Madison-avenue style marketing should not be reserved for toothpaste and cell phone plans.  Policy, like anything else, needs to be sold to the public in order to be accepted and effective.

The slogan is "It's not warming.  It's dying." You can see the campaign here.  I like the slogan, it captures the urgency.  But more than the slogan, I like the graphic of a green circle being overcome by a black shadow.  I think it is quite effective

If Madison Avenue can get Americans to believe that 4 out of 5 dentists agree that sugar free gum is good for you, then hopefully Martin Glaser can improve Yale's survey finding that "only one in three Americans thinks people in the U.S. are being harmed “right now” by global warming in the United States." 

 

 

GBLB is Thankful

It is quiet around the office today, giving me time to reflect on the past year and give thanks to all of the GBLB readers, friends and colleagues who help to keep me motivated and inspired.  In no particular order:

The media leaders--Lloyd Alter at Treehugger, Leslie Guevarra at Greener Buildings, the editors at Green Source, and Jonathan Hiskes at Grist

The green law bloggers--Chris Cheatham at Green Building Law Update and Steve Del Percio at Green Real Estate Law Journal

The construction law gurus-- Doug Reiser at Reiser Legal, Chris Hill at Construction Law Musings, and Tim Hughes at Virginia Real Estate, Land Use and Construction Law Blog, Matt Devries at Best Practice Construction Law, Scott Wolfe at Construction Law Monitor

The newsmakers--Sustainable Cities Collective, Greener Buildings, Cleantechies, ENN, Green Source, Green Economy Post , Women of Green, Mother Nature Network, Planetizen

Other special people--James Bedell , Susan Dorn, Stuart Kaplow and many, many others.

And, of course, my loyal husband and urban designer extraordinaire, Seth Shapiro.

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!