Home Articles Will brands without social purpose thrive?
Marketing Strategy - March 16, 2019

Will brands without social purpose thrive?

A new survey finds that two-thirds of consumers expect companies to create products and services that “take a stand” on issues that they also feel passionate about.

A couple of years ago, Bill Theofilou, a senior managing director at Accenture Strategy, met with a food manufacturer who’d just received bad news. Despite strong sales, its brand was being dropped by Target. He remembers the head of marketing and sales relaying the main reason with a sense of disbelief: The brand just didn’t stand for anything.

Instead of weighing product quality, the verdict hinged on social impact. “It was an eye-opener to the room,” says Theofilou. Yet that sort of thinking is now an industry trend. According to Accenture Strategy’s annual Global Consumer Pulse Research survey nearly two-thirds of consumers expect companies to create products and services that “take a stand” on issues that they also feel passionate about.

[Source Image: pressureUA/iStock]

That includes encouraging a healthy lifestyle, sustainable sourcing and manufacturing processes, and transparency on everything from ingredient sourcing to fair employment practices. The demand covers all generations of shoppers, from Gen-Z to Baby Boomers.  “We found that authenticity and transparency really matter,” he adds. “We thought we were approaching the tipping point, but the tipping point has come.”

Accenture documents this purpose-driven shift in a new report entitled “To Affinity and Beyond.” It compiles the Pulse survey responses from 30,000 consumers around the globe, including 2,000 in the United States. Turns out, the vast majority of people don’t think brands are transparent enough. They find companies designed toward making social progress to be more appealing than those that aren’t, and nearly half have changed their buying decisions when disappointed.

Companies that learn to how cater to that can definitely profit from it. As the report points out, Unilever’s more sustainability-branded units including Knorr, Dove, and Lipton are growing 50% faster than the rest of its offerings. They’re also more than half of the company’s total growth. The snack bar maker Kind has grown to become the third largest player in its category by focusing on literally transparent packaging and health-focused recipes and ingredient lists.

[Source Image: pressureUA/iStock]

Patagonia recently…

Read The Full Article

Leave a Reply