Holistic
or sustainable marketing refers to the ability of the company to be able to
take into consideration the concept of inter-generational equity and work towards
it.
Today,
when global warming has becoming a serious issue and a growing movement,
marketers should develop a holistic approach and think about how their steps
affect the environment. They must ask themselves the question: What we are
doing, is it sustainable?Can this be continued over a number of generations to
come?
Thus,
marketers have started following the triple bottom line approach today:
1)Economic
growth
2)Society
and human community: Are we creating growth by exploiting other individuals?
3)The
living environment: Do our actions have damaging consequences for other living
species like plants and animals?
Companies
are shifting from the narrow approach of maximising bottom line(profits) to a
more holistic approach,either due to increasing pressure from government or as
an initiative by themselves.
HUL(Hindustan
Unilever Limited) has developed a Unilever Sustainable Living Plan with three
goals in mind: Improving health and well-being,reducing environmental
impact,enhancing livelihoods.
Concentrating
on their top 10 agricultural raw materials, they are on track in moving their
suppliers to sustainable agricultural practices.
- · 25% of fruit purchased sustainably by end 2013.
- · 76% of our top 13 vegetables and herbs purchased from sustainable sources by end 2013
- 49% of sugar sustainably sourced by end 2013.
- The total footprint from packaging waste to landfill has reduced by 11%. Efficient pack designs and innovative use of materials, as well as the disposal of sauce brands with large waste footprints, have been the main drivers.
·
Approximately
97,000† fewer tonnes of total waste disposed in 2013 than in 2008. This
represents a 66%† reduction per tonne of production.
Compared to 1995, this represents an 89%
reduction in absolute terms.
·
75% (186) of our manufacturing sites
achieved zero non-hazardous waste to landfill by end 2013, an increase of more
than 50 sites compared to 2012.
·
New
factories in India and Turkey started production in 2013. When fully
operational each aims to dispose of zero non-hazardous waste to landfill and
generate less than half the waste of those factories in a representative 2
99% of PVC removed from our portfolio by end
2012.