November 11, 2010

‘Hi natural world, I don’t think we’ve met’: reclaiming ‘urban jungle’

There seems little point banging on about biodiversity conservation when we live in such an high intensity consumer world. If we think we can wait for events like COP-10 to solve our issues on their own then we deserve to fry and be the only species left.

The world now lives in cities: water (if you are lucky) comes out of a tap, materials are mined and refined (with lots of heat) into shiny objects and food comes out of the factory, not farm, gates. How is anyone going to care or understand the value of natural capital when the view out of their window not the onset of autumn but a wall, motorway or advertising hoarding? We live in a world where a resident of Manaus is less likely to have visited the Amazon jungle on his doorstep (or be bothered about its existence) than the suburbanite 5130 odd miles away in London’s commuter belt. read more »

November 8, 2010

Location-based loyalty: Beyond an extra shot for the mayor

Loyalty programmes have been given a boost by location-based services and social media. Companies like Groupon can use twitter and the like to pump out masses of offers to huge groups, taking advantage of ridiculously fast scaling to become HUGE. Location-based applications like Foursquare, Gowalla and the rest have created a bridge between peoples movement, their custom and the chance to personalise services, deals and offers based on their habits and a GPS signal. Real-time, customised retailing is not that far away (shudder).

This is all great if a) you have a smartphone, b) you feel it’s worth it letting people know where you are 24/7 and c), all you do is shop. read more »

October 18, 2010

Resetting retail (saving our cities)

Think of the centre of a city and its shopping district. From Oxford Street to smaller high streets and shopping centres they are almost universally grim. The stock story goes that the combined forces of the internet and the recession have made high street retail more and more costly. The only way to win is to squeeze prices. So we have 3 quid jeans and two pence t-shirts. High volume retail is the only route left.  read more »

August 29, 2010

Your data is no longer just for analysts

Speeding up understanding of social and environmental issues is going to be pretty hard if all the good info is imprisoned in tables. The three trends of data being more open, everything being more visual and life being on-demand/always-on should mean that numbers are no longer just for the analysts and ratings agencies. read more »

August 27, 2010

Brazil is burning: audio report #chegadequeimadas

fires underway all over this vast country

Here is an audio report I’ve put together looking at the fires that are happening all over Brazil at the moment.

read more »

August 23, 2010

Reaching out with sustainability and EpicWin

How to realign  behaviour to tackle big challenges in a world that is on the edge of a nervous breakdown?

In an age of fluid information flows and ridiculous interconnectivity, I’m on the look out for neat, smart things that can have a big impact, fast, taking the sustainability message out into the wild and engaging with the seemingly unreachable. read more »

August 15, 2010

Buy less, get more: sustainable consumption goes social

Collaborative consumption has a huge role to play in shifting attitudes to owning more ‘stuff’ and showing up those who talk about sustainable consumption and shifting more units in the same breath.

Corporate efforts so far have mainly dealt with work around reducing waste, reducing resource use in production, raising labour standards, promoting certification standards and adding socioeconomic benefits to products and services. All good but, at its heart sustainable consumption must mean buy/use less stuff. read more »

August 13, 2010

From thought leadership to mass collaboration

Leaders say the funniest things – these days it’s only worth listening if it’s funny.

Before the internet went social and we still lived in an age of push, companies that wanted to engage with big issues through their CR programme would pump out mega treatises on their approach to dealing with their social, economic and environmental issues. read more »

August 6, 2010

Rebuilding blocks: sustainability, economics, design

There is no contest in a footrace between a well-oiled, just-in-time-schooled car maker, looking to shift as many units as possible in a new market, and a decision-by-committee megacity administration trying to put in place an urban infrastructure fit for the 21st century. Handily, the auto maker also gets to socialise the losses (more gridlocked roads, fuel dependency, air pollution, deterioration of public space etc) and move on. read more »

July 4, 2010

Happiness footprinting to help a pre-crisis relic

Have you seen the app which takes your photo and makes it look like you’re really fat? Yes. And the game where you land all the planes on the runway? Yes, that too. Hey, how about this thing with the funny red monster that repeats everything you say? Please leave me. Please just leave me here to die. (C Brooker)

The above clip from Futurama and the article by Charlie Brooker in today’s Guardian, add a dimension to the e-waste/toxic mineral/assembly line debate which I think points to a smarter future for the consumer electronics industry. If you add together conflict minerals, e-waste, toxic chemicals used in production, and the now well-documented unrest among Chinese assembly line workers, the satisfaction footprint of our gadgets is miniscule. read more »

July 1, 2010

This is not normal: (Isso não é normal), nor is Bhutan

The wonderful site from this Sao Paulo group combines good storytelling with loads of info and a simple idea to inspire people to make (mega)city life more liveable. read more »

June 28, 2010

Clay Shirky: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age (for everyone?)

Off to see Clay Shirky talk tonight about his new book Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age. Lots of ideas about human potential in the 21st Century and living in a world that is moving to being less about consuming and more about doing.

I’ll be intrigued to find out how far down this road he thinks we are. Does the Foxxcon assembly line worker in Shenzen or the Mcjobber in the suburbs of Sao Paulo get to be part of this creative rebalancing? Or are they just allowed to be the last targets for growth hungry legacy companies of the 20th Century and an easily forgotten part of our own personal supply chains? read more »

June 25, 2010

Sweat the small stuff: No more generic sustainability branding

Why at a corporate level is the C-suite so hot on sustainability while at a consumer level green/ethical marketing is seen as false / unbelievable? read more »

June 7, 2010

RSA: Animate -What motivates us

Tags:
March 10, 2010

my version of rebalancing

Here are a few slides i’ve taken out of a longer set exploring the way i see it

Full version goes into more detail on things like: read more »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.