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Demonstrate Your Decision-Ready Information

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Where's the beef? Well...meeting value, that is.

Architect Scott Simpson described a concept KlingStubbins called a team structure and the industry now calls Integrated Project Delivery (IPD). The concept is key for a collaborative project approach, but its importance is more universal. The phrase that stuck with me was "decision-ready information".

Decision-ready information consists of the key facts required for a meaningful, final decision about a subject to be decided.
In an IPD project, major decision-makers are expected to attend every meeting, so that decisions made in the meeting have meaningful buy-in and closure. These meetings can be intense, not to mention very expensive.
 
It's the responsibility, therefore, of each team member to bring decision-ready information for the decisions on the agenda.
Wouldn't this information design approach make meetings more valuable...and engaging!

The green marketing opportunity here is to demonstrate the sustainability, incentives, and cost saving attributes of your green solution.  Manufacturers can arm their representatives with decision-ready information.

Think about what information -- what key metrics and performance demonstration --  about your product might drive project decisions, and make sure it's available in an easy format for your representatives to bring to the table.

Read more at BuildingProductMarketing.com
This site deserves its "7" page rank! Check out the clear design, comprehensive information and quality links. Who says that Internet data has to be less reliable than print?

The Art's Butterfly World website describes over 34 years of data collected by Dr. Arthur Shapiro, professor of Evolution and Ecology at the University of California, Davis, in his continuing effort to regularly monitor butterfly population trends on a transect across central California. Ranging from the Sacramento River delta, through the Sacramento Valley and Sierra Nevada mountains, to the high desert of the western Great Basin, fixed routes at ten sites have been surveyed at approximately two-week intervals since as early as 1972.

The sites represent the great biological, geological, and climatological diversity of central California. As of the end of 2006, Dr. Shapiro has logged 5476 site-visits and tallied approximately 83,000 individual records of 159 butterfly species and subspecies.

This major effort is continuing and represents the world's largest dataset of intensive site-specific data on butterfly populations collected by one person under a strict protocol. We have also collated monthly climate records for the entire study period from weather stations along the transect.

This website was built as a portal for Dr. Shapiro's data and observations, supported by National Science Foundation.

It helps to have significant funding and partnering arrangements!
This site deserves its "7" page rank! Check out the clear design, comprehensive information and quality links. Who says that Internet data has to be less reliable than print?

The Art's Butterfly World website describes over 34 years of data collected by Dr. Arthur Shapiro, professor of Evolution and Ecology at the University of California, Davis, in his continuing effort to regularly monitor butterfly population trends on a transect across central California. Ranging from the Sacramento River delta, through the Sacramento Valley and Sierra Nevada mountains, to the high desert of the western Great Basin, fixed routes at ten sites have been surveyed at approximately two-week intervals since as early as 1972.

The sites represent the great biological, geological, and climatological diversity of central California. As of the end of 2006, Dr. Shapiro has logged 5476 site-visits and tallied approximately 83,000 individual records of 159 butterfly species and subspecies.

This major effort is continuing and represents the world's largest dataset of intensive site-specific data on butterfly populations collected by one person under a strict protocol. We have also collated monthly climate records for the entire study period from weather stations along the transect.

This website was built as a portal for Dr. Shapiro's data and observations, supported by National Science Foundation.

It helps to have significant funding and partnering arrangements!
USDA's proposed BioPreferred eco-labeling program that will identify "bio-based" (i.e., made out of agricultural, forestry, or marine-based ingredients) products and packages.

The USDA "BioPreferred" list includes "BioPreferred" list include PLA-based plastics, vegetable oil-based cleaning fluids, and soaps made from natural ingredients--but not food or fuel.

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is making it easier for consumers to identify biobased products through the release of its proposed BioPreferredSM labeling rule. USDA's BioPreferred labeling program, published today in the Federal Register, intends to create a product label that would appear on qualifying BioPreferred biobased products. When final, this regulation will allow biobased product manufacturers to participate in a voluntary labeling program to identify biobased products on retail store shelves. "Increasing the purchase and use of biobased products is a priority of the Obama Administration because it helps increase our nation's energy security and independence by using American agricultural products, while spurring economic development in rural areas," said Vilsack. "Consumers want to make more informed product choice decisions and BioPreferred will help them. This label will help consumers, businesses and Federal government purchasers easily identify biobased products." Manufacturers will be able to utilize the BioPreferred label, when finalized, to help customers identify their products as biobased. Currently, USDA has identified more than 15,000 commercially available biobased products across approximately 200 categories, from cleaning products to construction materials. Biobased products are available to consumers today and the new label will help make these sustainable products more accessible and serve as a valuable marketing tool for manufacturers and vendors of biobased products. Biobased products are products that are composed wholly or significantly of biological ingredients - renewable plant, animal, marine or forestry materials. A BioPreferred designated item is one that meets or exceeds USDA-established minimum biobased content requirements.

This Federal Register notice announces the program's intent to create and make available a voluntary product label for increased commercial and consumer promotion of biobased products. USDA, through the publication of this draft rule, seeks to notify and gather feedback from interested groups and the public-at-large on this process. More information about BioPreferred's proposed labeling rule can be found at www.biopreferred.gov or contact BioPreferred at biopreferred@usda.gov. BioPreferred encourages interested parties to submit comments on the proposed rule until Sept. 29, 2009. To submit comments go to http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2009/E9-17610.htm. The BioPreferred program was created by the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (2002 Farm Bill) as a preferred procurement program to increase the purchase and use of biobased products within the Federal government. The Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Farm Bill) expanded the program's scope to promote the sale of biobased products in other sectors.

BioPreferred is comprised of two programs: a preferred procurement program for Federal agencies and a voluntary labeling program for the broad scale marketing of biobased products. A complete list and detailed description of each BioPreferred designated item, and items for future designation, can be found at www.biopreferred.gov or follow BioPreferred at http://twitter.com/BioPreferred

Do you have (or know of someone who has) a company producing green, sustainable, or high performance solutions?

We are launching a "green directory with a difference" -- you get a real opportunity to tell your green solutions story in the listing!  Up to 600 WORDS...and your listing can be included in FIVE categories. 

We also include BOTH Business-to-Business and Business-to-Consumer categories.  IF we don't have the right category for your solution -- let us know and we'll seriously consider adding it.

The SolutionsforGreen.com site is highly "search engine optimized" and the listings will probably appear higher on Google searches than your own company's listings for key word phrases.  We work hard at building a robust platform of sites to help drive traffic to the directory.  We're serious about greening our world...and want to help others who are also serious about the challenge facing us.  And who have solutions!

We would  love to have your company, nonprofit organization...or even public agency list your green products, green services...and green programs.  You don't have to be in the commercial market.  You just need SOLUTIONS!  Employee programs.  Festivals. Innovator groups. The broader the variety of solutions, the better! 

"Necessity is the mother of invention"...my mother taught me.  And we have necessity.  Now it's time to implement some great, innovative solutions.

And then get the word out for replicating good results.  So add your listing, already :-)

SolutionsforGreen.com

The fourth annual Industrial Marketing Trends Survey conducted by GlobalSpec shows that 48% of industrial marketers are shifting a greater percentage of their budget online, but less than one-third of industrial marketers are allocating more than 50% of their budget online.

Based on GlobalSpec research, here is a look at today's top trends in online marketing:

The economy is impacting marketing approaches and objectives.
In light of the current economic climate, customer acquisition, lead generation and customer retention have become more important than ever before.

  • 44% of respondents to a recent survey stated that customer acquisition is their primary marketing goal,
  • 29% indicating that lead generation is most important.
  • 13% indicated that customer retention is their primary goal in 2009, up from just five percent in 2008.

Companies are still focused on gaining new customers, while maintaining their current client base.

Measurement is key.
The demand for marketing accountability is stronger than ever, with smart marketers devoting resources to programs that can be measured.

  • 69% stated that they will closely evaluate the performance of marketing options and reduce or eliminate non-performing programs,
  • 53% are choosing marketing programs that are measurable.

Online programs naturally lend themselves to measurement, as they allow you to track exposure, clicks and conversions -- demonstrating the performance of your marketing.

Lead quality trumps lead quantity.
Respondents to our survey stated that the quality of leads is the most important factor when deciding where to allocate their marketing budget.

Lead quality scored 9 out of 10 in importance, while lead quantity scored 7.3.

Sales would rather have a handful of highly qualified leads than a long list of anonymous Web clicks. Target online programs where prospects are searching for information, products and services, delivering quality leads with contact information -- offering your company sales opportunities instead of anonymous clicks.

Meeting Your Goals with Online Marketing
It's important to continue to market to and stay in front of customers and prospects, despite the realities of the current economy.

Ask media partners how they can specifically help you meet your marketing objectives, whether they are lead generation, brand visibility, penetration of new markets or all of the above.

 

Gap Analysis for Business...and Nature

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I was working with my marketing advisor this morning about refining our green marketing strategy and the term "gap analysis" came up as a description of what I wanted to work on.  I did what most people these do in the information gathering phase...I visited Google.

Resource one that caught my eye:

Canada Geese (Branta canadensis) The GAP Analysis Program
"Keeping Common Species Common"


The goal of the GAP Analysis Program is to keep common species common by identifying those species and plant communities that are not adequately represented in existing conservation lands. Common species are those not currently threatened with extinction. By identifying their habitats, GAP Analysis gives land managers and policy makers the information they need to make better-informed decisions when identifying priority areas for conservation.

I always learn from natural systems...so this was interesting.  Community matters! Survival matters!

Resource two:

gap analysis definition  -  from BusinessDictionary.com
Technique for determining the steps to be taken in moving from a current state to a desired future-state. It begins with (1) listing of characteristic factors (such as attributes, competencies, performance levels) of the present situation ("what is"), (2) cross-lists factors required to achieve the future objectives ("what should be"), and then (3) highlights the 'gaps' that exist and need to be 'filled.' Also called need-gap analysis, needs analysis, and needs assessment. www.businessdictionary.com/definition/gap-analysis.html

Change...yes!  List factors.  Cross factors, and objectives.  Highlight gaps.  Fill them!  An updated needs assessment.  That makes sense.

Resource three: ... this was a synthesis of what I was looking for!

Image results for gap analysis

 http://www.marketingteacher.com/Lessons/lesson_gap_analysis.htmhttp://www.9001resource.com/gap-analysis-checklist.htmlhttp://www.npd-solutions.com/gap_analysis.htmlhttp://uk.cbs.dk/research/departments_centres/institutter/xx_reserve_centre_og_institutter/reserve3/menu/the_corporate_branding_tool_kit/menu/gap_analysis

Gap analysis is a very useful tool for helping marketing managers to decide upon marketing strategies and tactics. Again, the simple tools are the most effective. There's a straightforward structure to follow. The first step is to decide upon how you are going to judge the gap over time. For example, by market share, by profit, by sales and so on.

This will help you to write SMART objectives. Then you simply ask two questions - where are we now? and where do we want to be?

What is Gap Analysis?

Your next step is to close the gap. Firstly decide whether you view from a strategic or an operational/tactical perspective. If you are writing strategy, you will go on to write tactics - see the lesson on marketing plans. The diagram below uses Ansoff's matrix to bridge the gap using strategies:

Strategic Gap Analysis.

You can close the gap by using tactical approaches. The marketing mix is ideal for this. So effectively, you modify the mix so that you get to where you want to be. That is to say you change price, or promotion to move from where you are today (or in fact any or all of the elements of the marketing mix).

Tactical Gap Analysis.

This is how you close the gap by deciding upon strategies and tactics - and that's gap analysis.

Thank you Marketing Teacher!

... the only problem is... these are not traditional times!  Traditional marketing methods don't necessarily apply. Do they?

With social media, and YouTube and Google and Ebay and the Obama Stimulus Plan... do the old rules apply?

Having been around for a few decades, my husband and I have been through this recessionary cycle before.  And we've seen long recoveries and deep drops...like this one.  And the latest fads in marketing all came tumbling down.  Just like now. 

I hope Google survives.  I hope YouTube survives.  I hope...well, I'm not so sure about Twitter.

But good companies need to survive.  Good products are needed to put food on the table and connect us to our loved ones and get us to our jobs ... if we still have them.   What we've observed is that during down times, fluffy marketing strategies fall away and we get back to basics.  Product, price, promotion and place. 

PRODUCT: Product adjustments are in order:  people and companies are buying ESSENTIALS. Things to fill definite NEEDS.  As in "find a need and fill it," kind of business.

PRICE: Prices are adjusting.  Banks are once again trying to gouge their best customers to bail out their mistakes,... but for the rest of us, we are adjusting our prices to balance between what we need to survive and what our customers can afford to pay during these stressful times.  We respect our customers' needs as much as our own.

PROMOTION:  It still starts with the people we already know.  I know...the giant blogosphere is tempting...but strangers use us and throw us away because their best bud or their cousin drops by and offers them a deal they can't refuse!  Internal promotion to your own customers and the folks who know you will work best during these lean times.

PLACE:  Distribution is still rather local, rather bricks and mortar.  We know that shop owner down the street.  Local is back.  When times get tough we band together and distribution becomes a matter of supporting one another because we care as much as because it's the best price.  That is, IF we have any of those relationships! 

So the four P's of marketing still matter.  They still can shore up a business during tough times.  They still make sense, even in the era of YouTube and Twitter.

People are asking themselves the ageold question...who will take care of me when I'm down and out?  That's who will get their business after they come to their senses.  And if we're smart, we'll come to our senses before we burn all our bridges -- our relationships with the people who make our food, make our cars run, educate our children, manufacture our clothes and pass the word along to readers like you :-)

That's gap analysis and gap solutions! 

Carolyn, your steadfast friend, right?
Sustainable Brands Conference
May 31 - June 4, 2009
Monterey Conference Center
Monterey, CA
SPONSOR:  Sustainable Life Media

Sustainable Brands '09 is an international event discussing the rapid rise of sustainability as a driver for revenue growth and brand equity in the 21st Century.

Despite negative world news, the climate is more ready than ever for smart, sustainable brands to pick up steam and take the lead into the future. 

Hear from some of the deepest thinkers who are paving the way for sustainable brands - from futurist and economics iconoclast Hazel Henderson on Building a Win/Win World, to Mathis Wackernagel (2007 Skoll Award Winner for Social Entrepreneurship) on ecological overshoot. From Dacher Keltner (PhD, Stanford, and author of "Born to Be Good") on the evolutionary sensibility of altruism, to Tom Szaky (CEO, TerraCycle) on creating profit from trash. And, of course, that's just the beginning. Get a sneak peek at some of the over 60 faculty we're in the process of bringing together.

SB'09 is where the most forward looking business thinkers, brand strategists, designers, sustainability executives and communications experts gather to craft new strategies, solutions and stories that will better serve the needs of today's - and tomorrow's - global marketplace. Whether we are discussing sustainable bonfire brands like Seventh Generation, Living Homes, New Belgium Brewery and Nau, or large global innovators like Wal-Mart, Coke-a-Cola, Steelcase, Clorox, HP and Unilever.

KoAnn Vikoren Skrzyniarz
President and CEO
Sustainable Life Media
650-344-9693.
Event website: http://www.sustainablelifemedia.com/events/sb09

Energy Theme for Obama Years

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President Elect Obama has made it clear that job creation in rebuilding the US infrastructure will be high on his agenda.  This slideshow synthesizes his energy plans from his campaign platform and recent transition activities.

Government policy and support with funding opens jobs in some areas...and closes them in other areas.  It is anticipated that military jobs could decrease and domestic infrastructure jobs could increase under the Obama administration.  This slideshow summarizes Obama's energy policies from his campaign...and points out some of the chnages due to today's economic situation.

Obama Energy
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own.

Over 100 sustainable innovators

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Need to know some companies to check out for what they're doing with sustainability?  How about this list of innovators...

1-800-GotJunk
Amway Corporation
Best Buy
Brandia Central
CarbonPass, gConscious
Cohn & Wolfe
Coca-Cola
Connectivity Consulting
Desert Glory Limited
DOMANI
EBay
Edun Apparel Ltd.
Enlightened Brand
Envirobrand
Evenson Design Group
FITCH
GlobeScan Incorporated
GOOD
Havas Media Intelligence
Heifer International
HOTEL SAFARI GATE
HP
Interface, Inc.
J. Ottman Consulting
J.D. Irving, Limited
Johnson & Johnson
Marks and Spencer
Massechusetts Convention Center Authority
MeadWestvaco
Mohawk Industries
Morrison & Foerster LLP
Moxie Design Group Limited
Natural Logic Inc.
NatureWorks LLC
NAU
New Leaf Paper
Office Depot
Pepsi-Cola North America
Proctor & Gamble
RecycleBank
Smith Design
SustainAbility
Sustainable Value Partners
The Centre for Sustainable Design
The Coca-Cola Company
The Right Environment
The TATA Group
Under the Canopy
Unilever
UPS
US Dept. of Agriculture
Valley Forge Fabrics
Wal-Mart
WWF

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