The recent publication of 2 new catalogues aimed at selling green gifts has highlighted the extremes some companies are willing to go to to try and jump on the green band wagon. Regular readers of my columns will be thinking not again Evan, we’ve heard this all before. You are right but it’s potentially serious on two fronts and it’s becoming more widespread.
Firstly it’s incredibly insulting to some marketers to try and pull the wool over their eyes so blatantly. Secondly if you are deemed to have miss sold a product the financial outcome could be very damaging.
Listing products as 20% recycled and partly recycled is one thing but continuing to list items because they are simply reusable or could be recycled is spurious in the extreme. The polypropylene non-woven shopper is the on-going culprit, along with the reusable coffee mug that could also be recycled. Some items in a recent catalogue do not state any environmental credentials at all. I have to ask myself why they got into the catalogue in the first place but more importantly there is an insinuation that these items are beneficial to the environment and that’s misleading. Distributors are being asked to pay for these catalogues and take them out to their clients. No doubt distributors assume the necessary checks were made by the publisher before such items were listed in the catalogues. I’m sorry to say they aren’t. Publishers of the catalogues and mailers simply expect the suppliers to only submit items that are eco-friendly or ethical and they make no checks beyond that.
Be aware that what you are selling is accurate as the comeback could be catastrophic. Ask the publishers of such collections and catalogues what they have done to safe guard your position. Don’t insult your clients with claims like “partly recycled”; they wouldn’t be able to make any claims on a product they chose with so little supporting information anyway. I can hear the conversation now and it could be very embarrassing. “But it’s in your eco catalogue, so what are you saying, it’s not actually recycled or eco-friendly at all?”