Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Green Media Explosion

Earth Week has everyone buzzing nowadays. Remember when it was just you that planted a tree or changed a light bulb in celebration? Iron Horse Vineyards even had a shindig; nothing like some bubbly carbon dioxide to celebrate. Glad everyone's making hay of the day, but it's a bit overwhelming. It'll take me another month to get through all the good writing on my favorite topic. I'm posting them here so I don't forget...

Robert Redford chats about the new green programming on the Sundance Channel | By Amanda Griscom Little | Grist | Main Dish | 16 Apr 2007

Lime Launches Eco-friendly Ad Network · MarketingVOX

Grist reviews the spring crop of green glossy mags | By Sarah van Schagen | Grist | Arts and Minds | 27 Mar 2007

Vanity Fair's Green Issue


New York Time Sunday Edition, April 22, 2007 had some good stuff. But they require registration and payment, so they'll have thousands of less reader of it.

And GreenBiz's GreenBuzz newsletter, which is always on the job.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Bite Me

About six weeks into my efforts to build the the cleantech business, THUNDER FACTORY sputtered. Its business cycle hit a predictable trough. By my calculations, any upside, both financially and professionally, was far in the distance for those that stayed.

So, on March 16, I sent the agents out and starting turning over rocks. I had a couple of strategies: 1) join an agency that had/was building a cleantech practice; 2) go to the corporate side for either an established player with green designs or one of the startups that had secured a Series B or C round and were ready to ramp up marketing or 3) do my own marketing/communications consulting thing.

Group 1: these are folks I've listed previously, including A&R Edelman, Bite, Blanc & Otus, Antenna and Text 100. I had an in with Bite through Kristina Skierka, previously at McGuire & Co., which handles most of the Flex Your Power programs (uber resource efficiency program in California). I also found out about 463 Communications, which does tech policy and has some interesting partners. I also looked at Ecos Consulting and Resource Solutions Group (which broke off from a previous employer, D&R International), both of which are hybrid agencies/energy efficiency consultants.

Group 2: I checked out SolarCity, ecoAmerica (a non-profit where my old boss is the Executive Director), Business for Social Responsibility, Fat Spaniel, Organic Bouquet, and a handful of anonymous Craigslist postings. Surprisingly, all the previous networking didn't turn up many cleantech companies that were actively hiring.

Group 3: Building a book of business looked like it would need to be ad hoc clients, not just cleantech. Nevertheless, I started piecing together project options for a variety of sources.

Shortly into this sifting and sorting options, Bite Communications came back with a solid offer. The culture (flat, comfortable), reputation (friends of friends work there), clients (big brands and startups too), overall package (inc. 5 weeks vacation), and, very importantly, burgeoning cleantech and green products practice hooked me. I start on April 30, 2007.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Turning on the Cleantech Biz Dev Spigot

About six months into my year stint at THUNDER FACTORY, I started actively building a cleantech practice. While working on the future of healthcare (McKesson) was very rewarding, and anything can hold my interest for a half-year (like Magliner hand trucks and the dynamic world of self storage through Extra Space Storage), my long-held passion for cleantech needed to be fed.

Seems everyone in communications was setting up shop. Those that I came across included A&R Edelman, Antenna Group, Big Think Studios, Bite, Blanc and Otus, Blue Practice, Clean Agency, Digital Hive EcoLogical Design, Matter Communications (www.matternow.com), Straus Communications, Text 100, and Weber Shandwick. Plus, the traditional agencies with big accounts that were diving into green/cleantech (e.g. Hoffman/Lewis with Toyota) were soaking up the new work as well. Our work was cut out for us.

I started going to all the events. Commonwealth Club had a cleantech event down at AMD HQ with the winners of the Cleantech Open, which included Adura Technologies, KiteShip and others. The Cleantech Forum was a couple weeks later. Then an Alliance of CEOs cleantech event, which included Fat Spaniel Technologies, Sun Light and Power, SolarCity, and CleanFish. Heading out to Green Drinks. Haunting Craigslist for any postings to see who was looking for marketing help.