Posts Tagged ‘ cleantech ’

Sustainability: Bike Simple

May 8, 2012
Ipswich River Media

Bike lights, big city

Get to know the Slow Bike movement if you care about livable cities and sustainability. Clean-tech innovation is exciting and important. But the beauty of this movement is its elegant simplicity.  Like an iceberg, there’s more to it than you think.

Sure, biking is healthy.  You’ve seen cyclists on open roads with precision touring bikes and flashy outfits. They’re usually in great shape. But city bikers are commuters, shoppers and explorers. They come in all shapes and sizes.  They reduce traffic and noise, cut carbon emissions, spur greater interest in cityscapes and buy locally. A bike is cheap to operate and burns fat; a car costs lots of money to run and creates fat.

Employers are responding with storage areas for bikes. It’s a competitive advantage and keeps healthcare costs in check.

I just got back from the NYC Bike Expo and I’m here to report that New York is gaining on Copenhagen and Amsterdam when it comes to this powerful new movement. It has big political implications; Mayor Bloomberg is firmly committed. There are separate bike lanes on streets and avenues, not to mention paths that circle Manhattan.

There’s further anticipation surrounding the NYC bike-share program. It’s not for tourists, there are rental services for that. Privately funded, it’s a self-service system that offers 10,000 bikes in 600 stations for quick, easy transportation.

One simple definition of sustainability is “improving the quality of human life while living within the carrying capacity of supporting eco-systems.” That’s reflected in a city of bike-riders. But sustainability is also a call to action, a task in progress or “journey” and therefore a political process.  This requires the reconciliation of environmental, social and economic demands – the “three pillars” of sustainability.

The Slow Bike Movement may seem as simple as an upright bike. But it means big things for livable cities.

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How To Be a Know-It-All

June 9, 2011

Good, sweet informationThere is a torrential downpour in my office and I’m soaked in wonderful information. I’ve got insights into South Korea’s cleantech industry;  Oprah stats; breaking news, overviews, and wrap-ups.   I stumble into Boston.com and… wheeee I’m shopping (there’s that $31B online advertising market MediaPost Tweeted).  It’s Ferris Beuller’s anniversary, #Weinergate’s still trending and I’ve got Gene Kelly on the brain.

If information is power – then we are The Incredibles!

Meanwhile, my marketing colleagues are churning out lush, bountiful lists of handy tips.  How to Perdy Up Yer FacebookFive Things You Can Do with Twitter in the ShowerWhat Your Brand is Doing Behind Your Back…and What You Don’t Know About SEO This Morning!

I’m watching a webinar at 3 with Hubspot on how to get people to watch webinars.

Content is King, ladies and gentlemen.  Just wait til that iCloud releases its cleansing Monsoon of tropical exabytes.

But before you dash off, I just wanted to suggest you download my podcast on “I’m Viral, You’re Not.”  Just kidding.  Don’t click that.

Seriously, wait til you get the good news about Comcast’s secret Xcaliber – TV anywhere and everywhere, even in your underwear.  Ok, ok, I’ll stop. Don’t go.

I want to say that there is hope.  There is a ray of sunshine out there.  If you have any intention of capturing at least a smidgen of market share, or publicizing the excellent work you do, or just reaching some good ol’ fashioned customers…all you have you to do is scan this secret QR code:

Secret to Happiness HereOr click here.

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Practical Clean-Tech

June 6, 2011

solar bikiniThe snow finally melted this spring but last night it was about 40°.  That comes with the territory though.  Mark Twain said “I reverently believe that the Maker who made us all makes everything in New England but the weather. I don’t know who makes that, but I think it must be raw apprentices in the weather-clerk’s factory who experiment and learn how…”

So, New England weather leaves a lot to talk about.  But that could be said for just about everywhere these days.  Most scientists think that weather patterns are changing.  They call that global climate change.  The bigger debate surrounds the influence of all our CO² production.

Regardless of the climate change argument, we know that our current energy situation is untenable.  We need clean-tech innovation. That much is clear.  If it turns out that all our billowing CO² has nothing to do with it, then at least we’ll have a better environment, physically and geopolitically.

Nevertheless, it remains a big challenge to build a clean-tech industry.  There are new ideas and technologies.  But investors remain allured by other shiny things (see LinkedIn’s big IPO).

Ipswich River Media is working with a new tech incubator designed to foster development and attract investment.  We’re also serving as the co-chair of the Sustainability Forum to attract and educate the broader publics necessary to support this burgeoning new industry.  We’re looking for practical solutions.

Today, for example, there’s news from a team of researchers down the road at M.I.T. They’ve succeeded inFast Re-charge reinventing the rechargeable battery by creating a liquid-flow design, suitable for electric vehicles that can be recharged as quickly as simply pumping gas.  The new batteries involve a semi-solid, liquid electrolyte material which holds suspended positive and negative electrodes that provide needed electricity. When all the energy has been released simply replace it with fully charged “goo”  – as quickly as you fill up at the pump.

And if that’s not enough to get you excited, consider this breakthrough idea in solar technology:  a sun-powered bikini capable of charging all your remote devices.

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Navigating Communications

January 3, 2011

Ipswich River Media is about sustainable communications.  That’s pragmatic communications, comprised of smart elements, that collectively form the impression that you’re trying to give people.  Regardless of whether you’re selling quantum computers or umbrellas, it’s about reaching people – individuals — with their own preferences and influences.

Sustainable communications is based on the fact that information is more accessible – and more overwhelming – than ever before.  It embraces new technology and applications but applies them with a clear understanding of the fundamentals, like clear writing, dynamic imagery and compelling ideas.  It may be Twitter or Tout, social networked or the front page of the Boston Globe.

Communications is a means to an end.  If it’s sustainable, it will ensure you reach your primary business objectives.

About JC

John Coulbourn is managing partner of IRM.  He has a 16’ ocean kayak and, with the exception of Eskimo rolls, he knows how to use it.  “Skimming over changing currents toward an objective, is like communications,” he says.  However, he concedes that long stretches of paddling can lead to odd analogies.

Ashore, John helps companies with their marketing communications.  His expertise is in technology, spanning digital media, broadband applications and clean-tech.  He’s directed worldwide communications for a $300M media company and worked at some of the biggest PR tech agencies.  He has been at the center of the swirling media evolution and recognized by the cable industry (CTAM) for his efforts in on-demand TV.  He is co-chair of the Sustainability Forum, supporting clean-tech development in the Boston region.  He is also an adjunct professor at Endicott College, teaching and studying about the changing currents in communications.

John has lived in various parts of the world but is a huge fan of the North Shore of Boston.  He lives near the banks of the Ipswich River with kids and dogs and lovely wife.

Visit on: Facebook

Twitter:@ipswichmedia

LinkedIn:  http://www.linkedin.com/in/jcoulbourn

 

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What’s Your Brand Personality?

August 30, 2010

One concept I developed for Yankee Magazine was “Faces of New England.” The idea is simple and easy to execute with a few key skills.  It’s a malleable concept that can be modified by all sorts of companies in their efforts to engage audiences and enhance their social networking. 

One of the most interesting people I sat down with was Bill McKibben.  Bill is an American environmentalist and writer who writes about global warming and alternative energy and pushes for more localized economies.  As I do more work in Clean-Tech, I’m frequently reminded of Bill and the clear, patient way he explains some pretty alarming things going on with our planet today.  He makes you THINK.  Although that might hurt a little, it’s pretty good exercise, regardless of your politics. 

Bill has a new book out: “Eaarth.”  Here’s an excerpt that’s getting a lot of play in light of the massive flooding in Pakistan:

 One of the key facts of the 21st century turns out to be that warm air holds more water vapor than cold: in arid areas this means increased evaporation and hence drought. And once that water is in the atmosphere, it will come down, which in moist areas like Vermont means increased deluge and flood. Total rainfall across our continent is up 7 percent, and that huge change is accelerating. Worse, more and more of it comes in downpours. Not gentle rain but damaging gully washers: across the planet, flood damage is increasing by 5 percent a year.

 Bill is of course referring to global warming, which is part of the growing trend toward sustainability.  Although global warming has become a political hot-button, it’s hard to refute the benefits of sustainability – conserving our precious resources, taking care of our planet and making the world better for succeeding generations.  It’s an issue of growing importance to consumers.

The point is that in this new world of communications, every successful business is working harder to reach and engage their customers.  The growing dominance of social media compels marketers to abandon their old hard sell in favor of a content-driven marketing conversation that can facilitate meaningful brand relationships with customers and prospects.  Increasingly, socially conscious businesses are creating a positive effect on consumers and differentiating themselves from their competitors.

Social networking is a pervasive trend that is even affecting B2B companies with sophisticated audiences. Creating a blog, launching a Twitter feed or Facebook fan page is just the beginning of a strategic social networking campaign.  It’s the content that you deliver that is key to fostering relationships. 

Sustainability may be important to you.  Or, perhaps you have an outstanding team of engineers, unparalleled customer service, or bamboo packaging.  Whatever.  Businesses today require a smart, strategic communications program that brings their brand to life and connects with their customers. 

Develop your brand personality.  It’s the multi-dimensional brands that have the potential to inspire, to make customers take a closer look, and ultimately – hopefully — happy to give you their business.

While you’re thinking, here’s that interview I did with Bill McKibben.

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