green business

How New Leaf Changed the Paper Industry

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(This blog post is a wrap up of the San Francisco event on May 24th featuring Jeff Mendelsohn, CEO and Co-Founder of New Leaf Paper)

 

"The paper industry is one of the most resource intensive industries in the world, and one of the slowest to change."

From NewLeafpaper.com

 

"The paper industry is one of the most polluting and resource intensive industries in the world. It is responsible for over a third of worldwide timber harvest and over 40% of all landfill waste in the U.S. When New Leaf Paper was founded in 1998, the paper industry had demonstrated a high resistance to change. With low margins, a commoditized international market, and huge capital investment in the status quo, paper companies resisted efforts to integrate sustainable principles into their business practices," said Jeff Mendelsohn, founder of New Leaf Paper.

 

It was inspiring to hear Jeff Mendelsohn talk about the process of changing the 'stuck-in-its-ways' paper industry into a more sustainable system.  How did New Leaf accomplish this? How did New Leaf survive in a challenging industry and succeed in making positive change.

 

Prior to New Leaf, Jeff started New York Recycled Paper Company in 1991 and is a pioneer of this industry. Around the same time various other recycled paper companies popped up around the US but all of them disappeared - except for New Leaf. 

 

What did New Leaf do differently to be successful as a mission driven company within a challenging industry and actually drive change with in it? 

 

How do you change an industry? 

Jeff says, "There's a lot of barriers and it's challenging. The paper industry is very resistant to change. Paper mills were designed to make paper a certain way for a quarter of a century, non-stop, to make money. To overcome these challenges, New Leaf created a strategic brand strategy. To change an industry, Jeff mentions you have to first present a positive vision for it. Despite the unsustainable ways of the paper industry, New Leaf never pointed fingers at anyone or pointed out how bad they are.  Instead they approached the industry with a "Think and Smile" approach. 

 

"Think and Smile" came to New Leaf due to the understanding that they would never win on a "commodity tunnel vision scenario." "We need people to think about what they're buying and we need them to smile, due to good design, and good products. A lot of environmental messaging before was 'think and frown', which doesn't get you very far."

 

Four principles New Leaf used to change the industry

  • Positive vision
  • Partnership up and down the supply chain
  • Transparency
  • Quantifying benefits 

Jeff says that a company has to start with a Vision and ask questions, such as "What would a sustainable paper industry look like?" 

 

It all boils down to a sustainable design. Designing an industry, designing a process.

 

What is sustainable design?

Wiki: Sustainable design (also called environmental design, environmentally sustainable design, environmentally conscious design, etc.) is the philosophy of designing physical objects, the built environment, and services to comply with the principles of economicsocial, and ecological sustainability.

 

New Leaf created a vision for a perfect sustainable mill and identified existing mills that met this vision. At this time, there where only about 3 or 4 in North America; New Leaf wanted to increase this number. 

 

New Leaf's goal became to make the mills even greener. "In changing the paper industry, no one is just going to invest in a green mill without researching the markets. Our role was to "seed" markets and create new products in all these different product categories where nothing existed beyond 20 or 30% recycled paper." To do this, New Leaf bumped up the recycled content to 100% and gave it a clean bleaching process. The goal: "Attract demand, attract competitors and then eventually shift mill design."

 

Jeff discussed, "attracting competitors," which sounded counter-intuitive to me at first. However, it makes sense when your goal is not just for your own personal gain, but for the betterment of humanity and the planet at large. It would be quite difficult for one company to change an entire industry alone. In this instance, attracting "competitors" is also attracts a more sustainable future. New Leaf was then able to sell their vision to their customers and leverage the demand of these huge companies to drive change up through the supply line. 

 

Bank of America approached New Leaf

B of A wanted to change their letter head to 100% recycled post-consumer paper. New Leaf created their first 100% post consumer letterhead for Bank of America, inspiring most mills in this arena to create competing grades of paper, creating a permanent shift in the market for high-end corporate collateral. 

 

Book publishing - Harry Potter

In 2001, New Leaf created book paper. In 2003, the company provided the paper for the viral book, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," catching the attention of the entire book publishing industry. New Leaf decided not to pursue using book paper in its product line, but is proud of the impact it had on getting larger publishing companies to start using 100% post-consumer paper.

 

The event last month went well, and we were very lucky to hear about such an inspiring, dynamic company that truly cares about creating change in their industry.

- - -

Prior to meeting Jeff I already owned a New Leaf notebook which I keep on me as an alternative to taking notes on my tiny-keyboard smart phone. When I open the 'made from old milk carton' notebook, on the first page of the notebook are cool facts on the amount of post-consumer waste New Leaf has saved (greenhouse gases, fully grown trees, gallons of water, etc.) A live updated version of these stats are found at the top of their website.

 

West Coast Green; Van Jones and the Power of Love

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As William Gibson said “ The future is here, it’s just not widely distributed yet”. That quote gets at the feeling one has while attending a conference like West Coast Green. Dozens of passionate and charismatic speakers describing extraordinary efforts to create a sustainable world and helping everyone else imagine what that actually looks like. This is all taking place next door to an expo trade-show that’s showcasing 300+ of the most advanced green building, renewable energy, smart transportation, and clean energy technologies on the planet. The suits standing next to the hippies, a synergistic combo of visionary ideal and corporate execution.

 

The opening keynote was given by Van Jones. If you’ve never seen Van Jones speak before, he’s my generation's Bobby Kennedy or Martin Luther King. He uses his charisma and humor to relax your cynicism then delivers a powerful message of personal empowerment and action. As Paul Hawken said “If you look at the facts, you can’t help but feel depressed, but if you look at the people creating solutions, you can’t help but feel hopeful”. Van Jones and the other WCG speakers are those people.

 

Van shared that he’s watched our country elect a president on a message of hope and quickly move into despair and cynicism after seeing just how little has changed. He calls for a new kind of hope, a Hope 2.0 that isn’t about Washington creating change, but about “user-generated change”, change coming from you and me. He encourages us that our despair is actually an opportunity to do the “Inside-Out” work of digging deep within ourselves and listening to that small voice that’s been quietly whispering in our ear, pushing us forward, telling us we have a gift to give to the world. It’s listening to and acting upon this voice, of discovering what we truly love and want to contribute to the world that will not only overcome that despair, but lead to an extraordinary and meaningful life. “Your dream isn’t just a dream for yourself. For some reason you have the dream to be prosperous by helping others thrive”.

 

How many of us believe that we are actually capable of changing the world? How many of us are told that we’re more powerful than we ever realized? On the other side, we usually don’t think about how much harm one small act of greed can cause. One of the main causes for the Deep Water Horizon oil volcano was a bean counter in BP choosing to save some money by not installing the proper seal on the rig. That one small act of greed led to the greatest environmental catastrophe in history. On the contrary “That means that one small act of love can have non-linear, good results. I would ask you to keep that in mind and to act in love. You have no idea how much power you have to change the country and the world. In the context of your enterprise, you have to keep stretching out that heart, just like in yoga. When it gets harder to love, love harder” Have you stretched your heart out today? Have you found the gift you have to give to the world? If not, get busy searching. If yes, get busy sharing.

Successful Debut of EcoTuesday Portland Kicks Off 2010 With “Green Meeting” Initiative

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EcoTuesday Portland premiered its 2010 inaugural Sustainable Business Leaders Networking Forum on January 26th at SOUK in Old town Portland. With over 25 sustainable business leaders in attendance, and a diverse variety of industry representatives; this event was a huge success for an inaugural throw. Thank you to Cooper Mountain Vineyards for supplying the local organic wine….that always helps.

Understanding The "Green" Provides Opportunity For Business and Individuals!

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Forewarning!  If you are an Entrepreneur, Existing Business, Career Transitional, or Job Seeker; read on. If you understand, and follow the guiding principles of the “Green,” aka Sustainability Movement; you have unlimited opportunity.

 

Traditional demographic marketing models are proving to be less and less useful in understanding the green audience, and psychographic marketing is the new trend. Psychographic is a focus on “thought” as opposed to demographics such as age, gender, geographic location, occupation, etc. Unlike many studies that only focus on the “green” or “environmental” aspects of the sustainability movement, the Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability (LOHAS), highlights the Rise of Ethical Consumerism within psychographic segmentations of sustainability based on environmental, societal values, social values, health (mind, body, and soul), fiscally, and apprehensively.

 

Due to the difficulty in understanding market psychographics, it will take economic historians over the course of the next 100 years or more too scholarly define the sustainable economic transformation we are about to adhere. This will be defined based on the efforts of today and tomorrow’s leaders, and how creatively ingenuitive these leaders strive to be while promoting their understanding of corporate sustainability.  And this is where the door of opportunity opens…Knock Knock!  

 

In 1992 I read the United Nations Agenda 21; a call to action for all governments and industry for sustainable development.  Drawing on these 17 years of sustainable development research, my personal involvement with the Solar Living Institute, years of ecopreneurial trials and tribulations, and my recent Ecotrain Green Career Guide publication; I enjoy vocalizing my holistic understanding of “sustainability,” and the economic opportunities on the horizon. 

 

Please join EcoTuesday Portland on February 23rd, when I share my understanding of sustainability while providing ecopreneurs, existing business, and job seekers with a greater “green” opportunity moving forward!

RSVP For Our Portland, Oregon Event Here!

Dallas Kicks Off EcoTuesday

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EcoTuesday kicks off this month in Dallas. What better way to convene the green community than to showcase a corporation that was green before green became cool?

 

Shaklee Corporation was the first company in the world to obtain Climate Neutral certification and completely offset its CO2 emissions, resulting in a net zero impact on the environment.  This 50-year-old company, founded on the principles of social responsibility and sustainable business practices, is a standout in the green business world.  Shaklee has sponsored three North Pole expeditions to measure the impact of global warming. Their campaign to plant a million trees across North America came to fruition on Earth Day 2009. The millionth tree was planted at the Shaklee World Headquarters in Pleasanton, California, with Dr Wangari Maathai, 2004 Nobel Prize Laureate, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and CEO Roger Barnett in attendance.

 

We are excited to have Pam Hoffmann, a Shaklee business owner, with 15 years of experience in selling green products, open a window on how this global company continues to enjoy record-setting success year after year. What does Shaklee teach its sales representatives about how to sell green?  What can we learn from this winning business model that we can apply to our own companies?

 

We are eager to share Pam's insights with our community and find out how success goes hand in hand with a committment to do what's right, simply because it is.

 

Please RSVP and let us know you'll be joining us!