NBS Article: How to Motivate People Toward Sustainability


How to Motivate People Toward Sustainability

People determine the success of a company’s sustainability initiatives. Seven strategies can motivate everyone from employees to communities.

“Alone we can do so little,” said educator and activist Helen Keller. “Together we can do so much.“

It’s easy to focus on the role of leaders, but the success of any initiative requires widespread support. Here are some of the groups that can be valuable allies:

  • Employees implement company initiatives and can contribute ideas based on their specific areas of expertise. Everyone from mid-level managers to operational staff to front-line employees can make a difference.

  • Customers can purchase green products and services and promote the company’s brand.

  • Communities are especially important if your company has a significant local footprint — for example, if you’re engaged in manufacturing or resource extraction. Keeping your social license to operate within the community reduces friction and costs and can even lead to collaborations on projects with local stakeholders.

How to Motivate People toward Sustainability

The field of conservation psychology studies people’s attitudes and behaviors toward the natural environment. Researchers have found seven ways to motivate greater environmental action. Because these draw on general psychological principles, they apply to most people you will encounter.

  1. Equip people with (the right) knowledge. People need to know both why action is important and how to do it. People are often hesitant to do something that’s unfamiliar, so being able to try new actions out in a small way can be reassuring. Pilot programs are a great low-risk strategy.

  2. Help people process information. People absorb ideas and make decisions in specific ways (see NBS’s report on Decision Making for Sustainability for a full review). For example, people are more affected by stories than by abstract statements. They’re more moved by positive messages than gloom and doom — no more images of drowning polar bears! And hearing a message multiple times, in multiple ways, is often necessary for it to sink in.

  3. Leverage the leaders. People look to leaders — formal and informal — as they’re deciding how to act. If others they respect are doing or endorsing behaviors, people are likely to follow them. Leaders might be nearby in the organization or more distant public figures. Peer action also sets a standard. Group activities can be a way to show that peers are engaged.

  4. Make actions easy and enjoyable. People can have wonderful intentions, but without practical support, the action often won’t happen. If a recycling bin is close by, people are more likely to use it. If a product’s not readily available, people may not seek it out. Positive messages, social norms, and group activities can make sustainability-related behaviors seem more fun.

  5. Allow participation. People want to be involved in issues that concern them. Participation can mean many things, including just having information, but people often want the opportunity to contribute ideas as well. Participation leads to positive attitudes and often innovative ideas.

  6. Take one step at a time. People can be overwhelmed by major changes; generally, they prefer to get comfortable with one behavior before they try another. Consider introducing a new initiative gradually and connecting it to things people are already familiar with. A simple example might be expanding community outreach efforts from philanthropy to volunteering, with the same organizations.

  7. Pause rewards. Rewards should be used carefully. They tend to be effective while they continue. But once they stop, the behavior usually drops off. Rewards are “extrinsic motivation,” motivation from outside the person. The motivation that people develop internally, rooted in their beliefs, is more long-lasting.

As You Work with Specific Groups….

You’ll need to apply these general principles to your specific context. Here are some priority strategies for different groups.

  • Employees. Key strategies: Equip people with knowledge; leverage the leaders.

Reframe the company’s general sustainability messages to make them applicable to individual work situations. But as you clarify the messages, leave people room to innovate and participate. Consider making activities a group effort, to draw on social norms and make a sustainability initiative more fun – Green Teams follow this approach. See NBS’s Organizational Culture guide for more ideas.

  • Customers. Key strategies: Take one step at a time; make it enjoyable; leverage the leaders.

Gradual changes in a product are often easier for customers to adapt to than a dramatic shift. Link new features to what’s already familiar. Green cleaning products are a good example: the products are packaged and used in familiar ways. Advertising best practices still apply: green products can be sold as enjoyable and as popular. See NBS’s Socially Conscious Consumerism guide for additional suggestions.

  • Communities. Key strategies: Allow participation; equip people with knowledge; leverage the leaders.

Public participation is vital if company actions affect communities. Connect with communities early on, when a project is just in the planning stages. Communities want to tell companies about their priorities and to understand what will happen. Communicating with communities can be challenging, but making an effort and working with respected leaders can help create positive outcomes. See NBS’s Community Engagement guide for specific guidance.

It Takes a Village to Build Sustainability

Too often, we look to a single leader to create change. Here’s a cautionary tale: When Bill Ford Jr. took over as CEO of Ford Motor Company, he was a self-described environmentalist committed to transforming the company. But his sustainability priorities got limited buy-in from Ford executives and the broader workforce, and the company continued to sell gas-guzzling vehicles.

Leaders need allies and supporters. Motivating others is easier when you build on people’s natural ways of processing information and making sense of the world.

Written by: Maya Fischoff    |    June 22, 2020


Fischhoff, Maya, et al. “How to Motivate People toward Sustainability.”
Network for Business Sustainability NBS, 22 June 2020, https://nbs.net/how-to-motivate-people-toward-sustainability/.

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