Monday, 23 April 2007

Week 17: Be real about fires...

It’s dark outside and cold but you’re curled up, just the two of you, a bottle of wine, in front of the cosy glow of a solid fuel fire… no, it’s not Mills & Boon, it’s unromantically very bad for the local environment.

Damp freshly cut wood in particular, I believe, is a very bad burner and releases high levels of fine particulates, which can cause breathing difficulties and drowsiness. So, if you have a real fire get hold of a paper log maker and turn your newspapers into a burnable log, invest in a more efficient wood stove or wood chip pellets.

This doesn’t really affect us but something else that may affect us all is not burning garden waste because it releases carbon monoxide, dioxins and particulates. So instead of burning, hire a small wood chipper through via www.yell.com – one of my most used website favourites – and turn it into compost to use as a ‘nice mulch to suppress weeds on your flowerbed’.

Tuesday, 17 April 2007

Week 16: Get turned on to green electricity...

This week I have been asked to buy green electricity.
Home energy use accounts for 25% of CO2 emissions in the UK, so anything we can do is a help.

I was amazed by
www.greenelectricity.org - a very easy to use site with clear and concise verdicts on each service. It gives a selection of tariffs based on your postcode, and the range of difference for mine was £33 quarterly from £77 to £110.

As Tony, who by the way has asked me to mention that he has broken his hand* and is in a lot of pain, is the one that sorts all of these bills out I am sending him the link and he can compare with what we currently are paying.

As the 52 weeks book says you need to weigh up the pros and cons of each one, so we will get back to you on this!



* Tony was drilling a circular hole to put some lights up for my mum and the drill snagged, the guide handle was lose and is spun around and hit him on his right hand, cleanly breaking a bone! So he is in plaster for a couple of weeks, finding it hard to do his job as a computer programmer typing with his left hand and pretty much feeling sorry for himself.

Wednesday, 11 April 2007

Week 15: A walk in the woods...

This week I have got to help maintain the UK's native woodland habitat, which is one of the lowest acreage in Europe.

I can do this by joining the Woodland Trust, enjoy their recommended walks or even buy my own patch of woodland!

I think the walk is my best bet -

www.woodland-trust.org.uk

Where I have just found about about the Direct Marketing Association's Ethical Marketing Event to plant trees in their grove - well done DMA!

But if you are interested in buying -

www.woodlands.co.uk

It is an education on how much this land is worth and also has superb tips on looking after your plot. This would be fantastic for people with children!

Sustainability and Marketing - a Happy Marriage in 2007?

With the help of CIM's North West PR Officer I have done what I set out to do with this blog and written an article -

There’s no doubting sustainable business development, or to put it in its official context; where a business uses natural resources in an efficient manner, so that the company’s operations do not compromise the ability of future generations to meet their own needs’ is one of the marketing’s most hotly debated topics - from the water cooler to the boardroom. Over the last few years, we’ve all become more aware of what sustainability actually is, how it impacts on our profitability and the impact we, as individuals and businesses, have on the environment…. Haven’t we?

In its Marketing Trends Survey, which was commissioned in winter 2006, The Chartered Institute of Marketing, found that whilst over three-quarters of marketers believed that a company’s sustainability practices will increasingly affect customers’ buying decisions, only a third felt that environmental and social practices were a major issue. If you think about it, there’s a slight conflict going on here!

The statistics clearly show that customers are influenced by sustainability and with the fundamentals of marketing being based on understanding and responding to target audiences, it’s essential for all companies, if they want to economically viable, to respond by implementing strong internal and external communication that convey its credentials.

To discuss and inform this issue, The Chartered Institute of Marketing has created two workshops to specifically give an overview of sustainability and to assess the implications for the profession.

‘Sustainability in Marketing’ is a one-day workshop aimed at all marketing personnel and agency advisors. It will give an understanding of the key issues that underpin sustainability and will help marketers create a framework for achieving it in practice. Whilst ‘Developing a Sustainable Marketing Strategy’ is a two-day workshop for marketing managers and strategic advisors who want the chance to assess the implications of sustainability for marketing and develop appropriate responses and initiatives. Further details of both workshops can be found by visiting www.cim.co.uk/training

Diane Earles, regional director for the Chartered Institute of Marketing in the North, said ‘The more I investigate the role of marketing in this arena, the more amazed I am at how much ground there is to cover. There are some real pioneers, at both end of the business spectrum, from Tesco with its ‘double green points’ initiative to www.recycleworks.co.uk. This website was set up to address the issue of recycling in the family and is inviting, easy to use and inspirational. From transparent costings to personalised emails and additional marketing literature – everything was geared to me as the customer and my drivers, whilst still being clearly commercially focused.’

Diane concluded; ‘I’ve set up a blog where I’m documenting my findings and I’d be keen to hear from other marketers at http://directorscut.cim-nw.org.uk/).’


Marketing doesn't have to be complicated to be effective, but marketers must think about what they are doing and how they treat their customers - after all marketing is all about building relationships.

Tuesday, 3 April 2007

Week 14: Make a packet from a racket...

Mmmm... this week I've got to make something else out of something around the house that I don't need anymore.

This is a tricky one because I am not a hoarder, unlike my other half - but would he let me get my hands on his stuff?! I think not.

They have given me some ideas - protective cloches for seedlings out of plastic bottles, home dyeing for old clothes (but that's nothing new in our house when I mix up the washing!), greetings cards...

Now, that is something I am already doing - making greetings cards out of old materials and it's great fun, so I can recommend that!

We have decided to have a clear out of stuff to raise some cash to buy the plants I referred to us buying for the front garden in week 7, which have already changed from heathers to small shrubs and conifers! so perhaps I could think of other uses for anything that's left over?


I'll keep you posted.