Index

Rishi Raj Sharma (Guru Nanak Dev University, India)
Tanveer Kaur (Guru Nanak Dev University, India)
Amanjot Singh Syan (Lovely Professional University, India)

Sustainability Marketing

ISBN: 978-1-80071-245-4, eISBN: 978-1-80071-244-7

Publication date: 5 May 2021

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Sharma, R.R., Kaur, T. and Syan, A.S. (2021), "Index", Sustainability Marketing, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 253-262. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-244-720211025

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021 by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Abstract services
, 150

Absurdly strong environmental sustainability
, 83

Absurdly strong sustainability
, 36

‘Acres of wetlands’
, 38

Adidas
, 13

Advertisements
, 154

Advertising
, 154

‘Agenda 21’
, 34

Alphabet
, 11

Amazon
, 231

Animal Lovers
, 121–122

Anthropocentric thinking
, 102

Apathetic consumers
, 124

Apple
, 11

Artificial intelligence
, 229–230

Audi
, 25

Autonomous systems
, 229

Balance Scorecards
, 5–6

Bargaining power of buyers
, 200–201

Bargaining power of suppliers
, 200

Basic Browns
, 135

Behavioural greens
, 133–134

Behaviouristic management
, 4–5

Benchmarking
, 5–6

Big Data
, 6

Biocentric approaches
, 102

Biodegradable plastic
, 88

Biodiversity, loss of
, 87

‘Blame it on the manager’
, 6

Blog posts
, 247

Blogging
, 140

Blue Ocean Strategy
, 6

BMW
, 13, 49

Bottom-up approach
, 97

Brand equity
, 165

Branding
, 163–164

Brands
, 245

Brundtland Commission
, 79–80

Brundtland Report
, 93

Bubble wrap
, 89

Bundling
, 58

Bunge
, 73

Business
, 3

business-level strategy
, 223–224

business-unit strategy
, 223

case
, 41

history of business management
, 4–6

importance of economic sustainability in
, 111–112

process reengineering
, 5–6

social responsibility of
, 51–52

sustainability
, 93–94

sustainability in
, 7, 9, 13–14

transformation
, 188

Business environment
, 193

macro environment
, 197–199

micro environment
, 196–197

Porter’s approach to sustainable industry analysis
, 200–203

sustainability and
, 193–196

‘Buy-one-get-one’ offer
, 154

Buyback program
, 41

C&A
, 180

Capacity to endure
, 80–81

Capital
, 81–82

Carbon tax
, 90

Cause marketing
, 22

Cause-related marketing
, 22

Celebrity influencers
, 245

Centralisation
, 4

Chevrolet
, 49

Chevy
, 49

chlorofluorocarbons emissions (CFCs emissions)
, 87–88

Co-integration of sustainability into marketing practices
, 64–67

process of integration
, 65–67

Co-opetiton
, 201–202

Coca-Cola
, 73, 124

Coercive drivers
, 9

Communication
, 68

Community engagement
, 98–99

Community relations
, 51–52

Community volunteering
, 22

Competitive advantages of sustainability marketing
, 203–204

Competitive rivalry
, 201–202

Competitors
, 197

Consequentialist approaches
, 101

Consumer engagement
, 98

Consumer-oriented marketing
, 69

‘Consumer’s interest
, 120–121

Consumerism
, 51

Consumers
, 147

Content marketing
, 140

Conventional marketing practices. See also Database marketing
, 17

capture value from customers
, 26–27

eras
, 19

evolution of marketing
, 20–25

history
, 18–20

Core, Co-operative, Credible, Consumer Benefits, Commitment, Conversational, Consistency, Continuity (8 Cs)
, 127–128

Corn-starch
, 88–89

Corporate communication
, 167

Corporate decision-makers
, 10–11

Corporate identity
, 166

Corporate image
, 166–167

Corporate implementation of sustainability
, 217–218

Corporate philanthropy
, 22

Corporate reputation
, 167–168

Corporate social marketing
, 22

Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
, 6–7, 9–10, 40, 94

Corporate stakeholders of sustainability
, 96–99

Corporate strategy
, 9–10

Corporate sustainability (CS)
, 40, 93–94

and responsibility
, 94

Corporate-level strategy
, 222–223

Costco
, 220–221

Cost focus
, 220–221

Cost leadership
, 220–221

Cost savings
, 203–204

Critical management
, 6

Cultivated natural capital
, 82

Customer acquisition
, 139–144

strategies
, 139, 141–143

Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
, 141–142

minimizing
, 142

Customer analysis
, 212–213

Customer attrition or turnover
, 143

Customer churn
, 143–144

Customer cost
, 71

Customer equity
, 27

Customer lifetime value (CLV)
, 26

Customer relationship management (CRM)
, 26

Customer solution, Customer cost, Convenience, and Communication (4Cs)
, 54

Customer(s)
, 196

customer value marketing
, 69

customer-driven marketing strategy
, 25–26

relations
, 26

retention
, 143–144

satisfying customers and promoters
, 144

Database marketing

benefits
, 242

challenges
, 243

and sustainability
, 242–243

Daysmarket segmentation
, 120

Decision-makers
, 211–212

Dedicated consumers
, 123

Degree of compromise
, 137

Degree of confidence
, 137

Dell
, 201–202

Deloitte
, 98–99

Democracy
, 103

Demographic environment
, 199

Demographic factors
, 120

Deontological approaches
, 102

Desertification
, 86–87

DHL
, 234–235

Die Hard Greens
, 121

Differentiation
, 221

focus
, 220–221

strategy
, 221

Digitalization-sustainability convergence
, 229–230

Direct mail advertising
, 154

Disney
, 17

Diversity
, 103

Division of labour
, 4

‘Doing good’
, 8

‘Doing well’
, 8

Door-to-door marketing
, 19–20

Dow Chemical
, 75

Dusty Knuckle Pizza Company
, 124

E-books
, 140

E-commerce

and economic sustainability
, 232

and environmental sustainability
, 231–232

and social sustainability
, 232

and sustainability
, 230–232

Early adopters
, 122

Eco-centrism approaches
, 102

Eco-influencers
, 244

Eco-labels
, 151

Ecological innovations in marketing
, 52–53

Ecological marketing
, 22–23

Ecological objectives
, 69–70

Ecological sustainability
, 6–7

Ecologically Concerned Consumer
, 22–23

Ecology
, 112–113

merging economics with ecology
, 113

Economic environment
, 198

Economic measures
, 39

Economic objectives
, 70

Economic pillar
, 109

Economic regeneration
, 110

Economic sustainability
, 97, 108

e-commerce and
, 232

importance of economic sustainability in business
, 111–112

and sustainable regeneration
, 109–110

Economy
, 112–113

merging economics with ecology
, 113

Eight Cs of sustainability branding
, 127–128

Email marketing
, 140–141

Employee engagement
, 98–99

Employees, attracting and retaining
, 204

Enterprise integration
, 9–10

Environmental, social, and governance metrics (ESG metrics)
, 8

Environmental affect
, 120

Environmental ethics
, 101

Environmental measures
, 39

Environmental orientation
, 80

Environmental scanning
, 193

Environmental sustainability. See also Social sustainability
, 80–81

degrees of
, 82–84

issues
, 86, 88, 90

Environmental sustainability
, 97

e-commerce and
, 231–232

Environmentalism
, 80

Equity
, 103

Ethical issues in sustainability marketing
, 99–103

Ethics
, 99

Explicit knowledge
, 183

Exposure to new markets
, 204

External business environment
, 195–196

ExxonKnew
, 67

ExxonMobil
, 67

Eye tracking
, 249

Facial coding
, 249

Fair Trade Coffee
, 57

Fair trade strategy
, 153

Ferrari
, 49

Fifth Ministerial Conference on Environment and Development (MCED)
, 41

Financial capability
, 194

Firms
, 42–43, 51–52, 96, 154, 177–178, 184, 193, 199

Fish farming
, 85

Focus
, 221–222

Food waste
, 87

Ford
, 49

Free products
, 247

Functional organisations
, 4–5

Functional resources and capabilities with sustainability
, 206–207

Functional strategy
, 224

Galvanic skin response
, 249

General Motors
, 11

Generation Z
, 67

Generic lists, instantiation of
, 97

Giordano
, 18

Globalization
, 44–45

GLS
, 234–235

‘Going on faith’
, 219

Gold mining industry
, 72

Governance
, 103

Governance pillar. See Economic pillar

Green brands
, 164

Green consumers
, 120–121, 133–135

Green economics
, 41

Green hype
, 155

Green marketing
, 23

Green materials
, 89

Green products
, 98

Greenback Greens
, 121

Greenbacks
, 134

Greener marketing
, 23

Greenhouse gases (GHGs)
, 79–80

Greenwashing
, 67–68, 155

Gross domestic product (GDP)
, 111

Grousers
, 134–135

Growth share matrix (BCG)
, 5

Guest posting
, 247

Guides
, 140

H&M
, 123, 235, 244–245

Health Fanatics
, 121–122

Heart rate
, 249

Heinz
, 65

Henkel
, 127

‘Higher order’ learning
, 185

Honda
, 49

HP
, 201–202

Human capital
, 81–82

Human Resource movement (HR movement)
, 4–5

Humanistic management
, 4–5

IKEA
, 38, 215

Impact Travel Alliance
, 245

Income
, 112–113

Indiana Business Research Center’s Innovation Index
, 38

Individual sustainability
, 97

Influencer marketing. See also Database marketing

benefits of
, 246

strategies
, 246–247

and sustainability
, 244–247

Information and communication technology (ICT)
, 232

Information management
, 187

Innovation
, 186–187

Innovative marketing
, 69

Intellectual assets
, 188

Intentional pricing
, 68

Internal business environment
, 195

Internet of things
, 229

Kansai Nerolac
, 53–54

Key performance indicators (KPIs)
, 10

Knowledge economy
, 184

Knowledge management (KM)
, 183–188

practices
, 183–184

and sustainable development
, 186–188

Knowledge-based system
, 187–188

Kurzemes Piens
, 7

Laissez-Faire Greens
, 121

LARQ
, 234

Leadership
, 204

Lean manufacturing
, 5–6

Learning organization
, 188

Lenovo
, 201–202

Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability consumers (LOHAS consumers)
, 10

Long-term collaborations with influencers
, 246–247

Lush
, 143

Macro business environment
, 197–199

Man-made capital
, 81–82

Market drivers
, 9

Market segmentation
, 120

Market transformation
, 10–11

Marketers
, 17, 20, 89, 147, 169

Marketing. See also Sustainability marketing
, 35, 63, 169, 178

capability
, 195

customer-driven marketing strategy
, 25–26

high customer value
, 26

intermediary
, 196–197

management
, 17

marketplace and customers
, 25

mix
, 70–72

mix
, 148–158

opportunities
, 67–68

profitable customer relations and delight customers
, 26

segmentation
, 120–121

social criticisms of
, 53–54

social sustainability in
, 95–96

socio-ecological innovation in
, 52–53

strategy
, 54

Maximum sustained yield (MSY)
, 83–84

McDonald
, 17

Meadowcroft
, 44–45

Mega influencers
, 245

Metrics to assess initiatives
, 42

Micro business environment
, 196–197

Micro-influencers
, 245

Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
, 34

Minimalist influencers
, 245–246

Modern marketing
, 20

Monadnock
, 202

Monetarism
, 5–6

Motive alliances
, 58

Multi-sustainability brands
, 128

Naive consumers
, 124

Nano influencers
, 245

National Research Council (NRC)
, 35

Natural capital
, 81–82

Natural environment
, 51

Negative labels
, 151

Nestle
, 13

Neurological tools and sustainability
, 248–249

Neuromarketing and sustainability
, 247–249

New Right
, 5–6

New sustainability brands
, 128

Nike
, 13, 17, 21, 74, 123

Nissan
, 49

Non-anthropocentric approaches
, 102

Non-governmental organizations (NGO)
, 98–99, 184

Ocean fishing
, 85

Olive
, 233

One-time use labels
, 151

Ooho
, 125

Operations capability
, 194–195

Organic search marketing
, 140

Organic social media
, 140

Organigrams, analysis of
, 97

Organisational goals
, 17

Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
, 41

Organizational learning
, 177–178

Organizations
, 18–19, 44, 80, 96, 239

‘Our Common Future’
, 6, 33, 79–80, 93

Packaging
, 89

Packhelp
, 231

Paid search marketing
, 140

Paid social media
, 140

Passive consumers
, 125

Passive group
, 125

Patagonia
, 12

Pay-per-click. See Paid search marketing

PWC Recycled Paper and cardboard
, 88

Pepsi
, 202

PepsiCo
, 199

Personal selling
, 155

Place/convenience
, 55–56

Planet passionates
, 120–122

Point of sale
, 155

Political, economic, social, technological, legal and environmental analysis (PESTLE analysis)
, 213–214

Political environment
, 197–198

Pollution
, 87–88

Pollution Prevention Pays
, 74

Popular and individualized management
, 5–6

Porsche
, 25

Porter’s approach to sustainable industry analysis
, 200–203

Porter’s competitive strategy
, 220–222

cost leadership
, 220–221

differentiation
, 221

focus
, 221–222

Porter’s Five Forces model
, 200, 203, 214

Post-Consumer Waste (PWC)
, 88

Potential Greens
, 134

Price
, 151

Price/customer cost
, 55

Prima facie duty
, 102

Primary stakeholders
, 96

Procter & Gamble (P&G)
, 17, 74, 123

Product, Price, Place and Promotion (4Ps)
, 54, 70, 148

Product positioning
, 125–128

Product-related services
, 150

Product/customer solution
, 55

Products
, 196

Profitability
, 108–109

Promotion/communication
, 56

Psychographic factors
, 120

Public relations
, 154–155

Puma
, 89

Quality of life
, 103

Rana Plaza disaster
, 96

Recycling
, 84

Reduced risk
, 204

Regulatory environment
, 198

Repurposed packaging
, 89

Reputation
, 204

Resource drivers
, 9

Resource loops
, 151

Responsible business practices
, 22

Resultative services
, 150

Return on Investment (ROI)
, 141

Revenues
, 70

Reverse logistics
, 156–157

Rhude
, 67

Right to be heard
, 51

Right to be informed
, 51

Right to choose
, 51

Right to safety
, 51

‘Rio Declaration on Environment and Development’
, 34

Robotics
, 229

Sainsbury
, 231

Sales promotion
, 154

SAP
, 244

Satisfaction of customer needs
, 70

Scepticism
, 169–170

Scientific Certification Systems
, 98

Scientific management
, 4

Search engine optimization (SEO)
, 140

Search engine results page (SERP)
, 140

Search marketing
, 140

Seat
, 25

Secondary stakeholders
, 96

Segmentation
, 120

Sense-of-mission marketing
, 69

Services substituting product
, 150

Shareholder value
, 5–6

Sharp
, 98–99

Sheyn
, 235

Situation analysis
, 212–216

factors
, 212

importance
, 215–216

steps
, 212–213

tools
, 213–215

Six Sigma
, 5–6

Smart
, 49

Social cohesion
, 103

Social criticisms of marketing
, 53–54

Social drivers
, 9

Social innovations in marketing
, 52

Social marketing
, 20–22

Social measures
, 39

Social media
, 98

Social media marketing
, 140

and sustainability
, 243–244

Social objectives
, 70

Social responsibility

of business
, 51–52

of businessmen
, 40

Social sustainability
, 94, 96–97

dimensions or issues
, 103

e-commerce and
, 232

in marketing
, 95–96

Societal marketing
, 20, 22, 69

Socio-cultural environment
, 197

Socio-ecological balance
, 50–51

Socio-ecological innovation in marketing
, 52–53

Soil exploitation and overbuilding
, 87

SPARK Neuro
, 248

Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and Time-bound (SMART)
, 12

Sponsorship
, 155

Sprint
, 41

Sprouts
, 134

Stakeholders
, 6, 96

approaches for stakeholder identification
, 96–99

engaging
, 97

theory
, 40

Standardization
, 4

Starbucks
, 157

‘Starting with plan’
, 219

Strategic management
, 5

Strategic planning
, 5

Strategic pricing strategies
, 152–153

Strategic promotion approach
, 154

Strategic sustainability marketing
, 178–182

Strategy content and sustainability
, 222–224

Strategy Maps
, 5–6

Strong environmental sustainability
, 83

Strong sustainability
, 36

Suppliers
, 197

Supply chain Sustainability
, 205–206

Sustainability
, 6–7, 10, 44–45, 63–64, 93, 99, 107, 119, 148, 158, 163

barriers in positioning sustainability products
, 128–129

barriers to
, 42–44

of biosphere
, 182

and brand equity
, 165

in business
, 7–9

and business environment
, 193–196

challenges in business
, 41–42

of community/society/ethno-sphere
, 181–182

and consumption
, 35

corporate communication
, 167

and corporate identity
, 166

and corporate image
, 166–167

and corporate reputation
, 167–168

corporate stakeholders of
, 96–99

dimensions
, 107–108

e-commerce and
, 230–232

of employees
, 180–181

engagement
, 98

functional resources and capabilities with
, 206–207

influencers
, 244

and influencers
, 245–247

integration of three pillars of
, 113–115

line extension
, 128

management
, 218

and marketing mix
, 70–72

and natural capital
, 81–82

in online shopping
, 234–235

operations
, 217

opportunities
, 67–68

of organization
, 180

phases
, 9–11

pricing
, 152

strategy
, 164

theories
, 40–41

tips for marketing to types of sustainable consumers
, 129–130

types
, 35–36

value chain
, 205–206

in value chains
, 206

Sustainability brand(ing)
, 164–165

development
, 128

extension
, 128

integration
, 164–165

and scepticism
, 169–170

strategy
, 168–169

Sustainability goal setting
, 218–219

audience
, 218–219

conduct extensive research
, 219

motivation
, 218

weigh options
, 219

Sustainability marketing
, 24–25, 54, 63–64, 120–121, 147, 217–218

advantages
, 72–76

avoiding
, 58

challenges for
, 240–241

co-integration of sustainability into marketing practices
, 64–67

competitive advantages of
, 203–204

corporate image-related challenges
, 241

environment and
, 80–84

evolution framework
, 21

integration of business strategy and sustainability goals
, 216–218

market-related challenges
, 240–241

mix strategies
, 147

myopia
, 56–58

operational challenges
, 241

Porter’s competitive strategy
, 220–222

principles of
, 69

and product positioning
, 125–128

profitability and
, 108–109

situation analysis
, 212–216

strategy content and sustainability
, 222–224

values and objectives
, 69–70

Sustainability SWOT analysis (sSWOT)
, 214–215

Sustainable brand(ing)
, 125, 164

positioning
, 125

strategy
, 168–169

Sustainable business practices
, 99

Sustainable business strategy
, 11–14

Sustainable communication
, 71, 153, 156

Sustainable consumer
, 133, 135–136

behaviour
, 136–139

customer acquisition
, 139–144

Sustainable consumption
, 133

Sustainable cost
, 71, 151, 153

Sustainable design
, 68

Sustainable development
, 6, 93, 109–110, 186, 188

developing period
, 34–35

embryonic period
, 32–33

molding period
, 33

phases of
, 32–35

to sustainability science
, 35

Sustainable E-commerce
, 232–234

communicating
, 235–236

Sustainable fashion influencers
, 245

Sustainable marketing
, 23–24

Sustainable markets

targeting audience in
, 121–125

targeting consumers on internet
, 122–125

ways to appeal to different consumer segments
, 121–122

Sustainable organization
, 183

Sustainable placement and distribution
, 71–72, 156, 158

Sustainable regeneration
, 109–110

Sustainable solution
, 71, 148, 151

Sustainable travel influencers
, 245

Sustainable web design
, 90

SWOT analysis
, 5, 213

Tacit knowledge
, 183

Tactical strategies
, 152

Takeovers
, 247

Target market
, 119–120

Technical sustainability
, 97

Technological environment
, 198–199

TerraCycle
, 123

Tesla
, 11, 13, 202–203

The Not So Green consumers
, 121

Think Green Consumers
, 134

Threat of new entry
, 202–203

Threat of substitution
, 202

3D farming
, 85

3M
, 74

Three pillars of sustainability
, 6–7

Three Ps of sustainability
, 37

Three Rs (Reduce, Reuse and E-cycle)
, 124

Tiffany
, 221

TOMS
, 231

Top-down using sustainability dimensions
, 97

Total quality management (TQM)
, 5–6

‘Towards Green Growth’
, 41

Toyota
, 13, 17

Traditional marketing
, 54

Transparency
, 14, 68

Triple bottom line approach (TBL)
, 36–37, 39, 163

calculating
, 37–39

framework
, 95

True Blues
, 134

True Browns
, 134

True-Blue Greens
, 121

Trust
, 232

Twitter
, 98

2degrees
, 42

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
, 38

Unilever
, 13, 38, 65, 123

Unique selling point (USP)
, 164

United Nation Environment Programme (UNEP)
, 41

United Nations (UN)
, 79–80

United Nations Millennium
, 34

Value chain

stages of
, 205

sustainability in
, 206

Value Innovation
, 6

Valuing Natural Capital initiative
, 42

Videos
, 140

Virtue ethics
, 102–103

Volkswagen
, 25

Walmart
, 220–221

Weak environmental sustainability
, 82–83

Weak sustainability
, 35–36

Whirlpool
, 10

World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED)
, 33, 79–80

Zara
, 245

Zero-waste influencers
, 245–246