We all know how a sustainable brand should prioritize its pinrciples – not by demanding perfection of itself by day one, but by developing a competent, focused plan to improve its environmental impact, and even offset it completely if possible. Moreover, with good marketing, you can continually sell your approach as just another reason to choose this brand over others.
However, it’s also fair to say that if you want to be sustainable, you have to look it. Does this mean your branding is going to be cloaked in green, designed with tree aestetics, and other on-the-nose branding redesigns? Not at all. But it does mean that without words, you have to demonstrate that your approach to sustainability (if this is to become a core tenet of your brand), is something customers can rely on.
That’s why in this post, we hope to discuss how to perfect the aestehtics of a sustainable brand, how to curate that naturally, and why sometimes, you have to look the part before it convinces people.
Avoiding Heavy-Handed Green Imagery
Most sustainable brands make the mistake of thinking they need to plaster leaves, trees, and earth tones all over everything to communicate their environmental commitment, but this approach often seems a bit rote, because it looks forced and inauthentic. Customers can easily tell when sustainability messaging feels like an afterthought or marketing ploy, and heavy-handed green imagery is one of the quickest ways to trigger that skepticism. The most successful sustainable brands should understand that subtlety and authenticity work better especially if it helps optimize your branding, instead of overriding your identity..
A good subtle way is to use clean, minimalist design with earth-conscious materials that speak for themselves. Professional paper bag printing using recycled materials, for instance, can suggest sustainability through texture and quality without needing green colors or leaf patterns to make the point obvious.
Materials Matter
Materials that contradict your environmental messaging can easily take away from the whole illusion because customers can immediately sense the disconnect between what you say and what they’re holding in their hands. You can talk about sustainability all you want, but if your packaging feels cheap, plasticky, or obviously non-recyclable, customers will assume your environmental commitment is just surface-level marketing.
This comes with a requirement, namely investing in genuinely sustainable materials that also feel premium and thoughtfully chosen. Recycled paper, biodegradable inks, and compostable packaging options all exist now, and they can actually enhance as opposed to undermine, the perceived quality of your brand. You have to make this a company-wide commitment, though, which does have some upfront cost.
Be Consistent Internally Too
Sustainable brands often succeed with their main packaging but then completely drop the ball on materials like invoices, business cards, or promotional items, which unfortunately does cement a disconnect that makes their sustainability efforts look performative. Customers notice when your beautifully crafted recyclable product packaging arrives in a plastic mailer or when your eco-conscious brand hands out cheap promotional items that obviously aren’t made with the same environmental standards.
If a band wants the credit for a new change in direction, it has to be fully committed. Customers don’t expect you to work outside of reality or what’s ultimately necessary, but they do want to see your reports on systemic changes, so be vocal about that.
With this advice, we hope you can more easily manage the aesthetics of a sustainable brand. UtdPlug
Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko: https://www.pexels.com/photo/man-and-woman-sitting-at-table-5439396/