Super powers are cool. They invoke the imagination of superhuman qualities capable of tacking any challenge and succeeding. In many ways, the call for sustainability invokes the better qualities of us as humans. If we were to have sustainability superpowers, what would they be? How would we use them? How could we invoke sustainability superpowers to not only change the world at large, but also our personal worlds?
Most of us recognize that change can be unsettling. It can be scary, and too often it is just easier to slip back into a traditional and comfortable way of doing things. However, implementing effective sustainable change does not have to be a laboring process. How so? All too often, we turn our attention to the barriers and roadblocks to the incorporating sustainability concepts into our businesses and personal lives. There is a tendency to take too broad of a view of the concept of sustainability and become overwhelmed by its magnitude and our ability to make change. Instead, we need to focus on the benefits we are individually trying to achieve from a specific change. What are the baby steps we can take that make change easier?
To help you do just that, following are ways to go green each day of the week. As a sustainability consultant, I suggest starting off with ideas in each area that are of most interest to you and build from there. Each week can be a new platform to launch new eco actions. Have fun with it and know that every eco action you take adds up and makes a difference.
Paperless Mondays: Within our business sustainability consulting, we explain that when it comes to paper, producing paper from virgin fiber is both energy and water intensive. It releases significant amounts of greenhouse gases into our atmosphere. By choosing to use less paper and paper with recycled content you are making the choice to save wood, water and energy, and cut pollution and solid waste. The costs savings add up and the environmental impact goes down. Need ideas? Check out 19 Tips to go Paperless at Home.
Turn Tuesdays Green at Work: Keep in mind, every job is a green job: it's all in how you do it. One approach is to increase your participation in the sustainability programs offered within your organization. This offers a broader perspective of potential green projects and areas of improvement. Another approach is to green your physical environment. If you work at home, check out Green your Home Office 101 for ideas or 10 Ways to Green Your Cubicle. Both offer ideas to embrace sustainability concepts in your work environment.
Water Wednesdays: Clean, fresh water is no longer just an issue for developing countries. It has become more and more a global issue. Water is linked to every facet of life on our planet and directly interacts with a myriad of other sustainability concepts. Learn water wise habits to Reduce your Water Footprint.
Adventurous Thursdays: Explore different modes of transportation . The benefits of alternative transportation include conserving energy, preserving resources, reduced commuter traffic, cost savings (gas and parking), and reduced carbon emissions. Fun ideas include: carpool, bus, train, cycling or telecommuting/ coworking options for work environments.
Friday Fun: Slay Energy Vampires with energy efficiency practices: The U.S. Department of Energy tells us that not only do appliances continue to draw electricity while the products are turned off, but in the average home nearly 75% of all electricity used to power electronics is consumed by products that are switched off. Explore energy efficiency eco actions to use less energy.
Saturday Waste Management/ Recycling: When you avoid making garbage in the first place, you eliminate the disposing of waste or recycling it later. It's the first component of the sustainability concept of the three R's: reduce, reuse, and recycle. Clues to how to reduce waste can be found by visiting what's in your garbage.
Sparkle Sunday with Green Cleaning: Conventional cleaning supplies contain ingredients that are toxic or hazardous. By replacing them with eco-friendly products, you're providing improved indoor air quality, as well as reducing the 5 billion pounds of chemicals consumed by cleaning industry each year. Get started using non toxic products and breathe easier.
Developing a comprehensive business sustainability plan includes incorporating sustainability concepts across the entire supply chain. A major part of this strategy is the need to
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“Many companies suffer from disproportionately high breakthrough project failure rates because they find it hard to balance execution discipline with flexibility to respond to changing technical and market realities. When executing on breakthrough projects, use detailed maturity checklists to establish flexible yet guard-railed execution paths.” -CEB Views
Do you fall prey to routine habits out of convenience or do you take extra steps to embrace sustainability concepts in your daily life? It seems in recent years being busy has become the rule rather than the exception. With busy comes conveniences and sometimes conveniences means having to compromise on values. Fortunately, that's no longer the case. With growing eco awareness sprouting more and more environmentally friendly options, those living a busy and sustainable lifestyle can take their green on the go.
The economic challenges over the past few years resulted in a ‘business detour’ from progressive corporate practices, particularly advancements in sustainable supply chain management. Moving beyond early post-recovery actions focused on cost control and business maintenance, today’s leading business sustainability efforts have their eyes on a much larger prize. Once again corporate attention is focused on the role strategic supplier relationships play in the immediate return to profitability and long-term business sustainability.
Creating a sustainable business involves more than defining a vision, building a consumer forecast, and bringing a green product or service to market.
“In today's economic environment, companies are continuously pressured to reduce costs in order to combat slower growth and offset commodity price increases, rising costs of energy and transportation, and various other pressures. Despite these issues and the economic instability worldwide, companies must continue to find growth opportunities to compete in the global marketplace. The question I keep returning to is, why don't more CFOs turn to indirect procurement as a significant source of savings to create a competitive advantage and fuel this growth?” - Robert Brust former CFO for Sprint
What is Karma?
The GreenBiz article,
Experience and recent business results demonstrate that innovation will be essential to success over the next decade as companies continue to recover from recent economic downturn. Our sustainability consulting has worked with companies who are seeking to seize new opportunities and improve competitive positions through refined evolved business plans and innovative solutions. But these
“The creation of a thousand forest in one acorn.”
In today’s global business environment, it is rare for a company to own an entire product or service value chain. Business operations rely heavily on external sources exposing the supply chain as a
As the world continuously adapts to shifting
“To maintain relevance, Procurement must expand its support of business growth strategies beyond standard cost reduction. Procurement organizations that mix sophistication, impact, and payoff horizon deliver more than three times the yearly savings and four times the annual innovation of their peers.” –Procurement Strategy Council
“People have evolved to become extremely good at dynamically adapting to our social environment. In teams, we constantly synchronize and modify our actions and expectations to keep them aligned with those of our collaborators…So managers of virtual teams should have dual, complementary objectives: structure and socialize.”
"If you can imagine it, you can achieve it; If you can dream it, you can become it." ~ William Arthur Ward
Much of the popular text and research reveals that a common characteristic among sustainable organizations is an ability to effectively manage the flow of information across key business

