One Suggestion For Us To Try
Be honest about your impact—and act accordingly.
One of the key takeaways from making The Announcement was this: there’s a lot of well-intentioned but ultimately ineffective ‘activism’ in the outdoor industry, especially when it comes to sustainability and climate action.
That goes for individuals, but also for brands—many of whom, I think, could benefit from thinking more deeply and honestly about what they’re actually trying to achieve.
It’s a point made powerfully by Erinch Sahan of the Doughnut Economics Action Lab in episode three, when he criticised what he called “the purpose industry” that’s sprung up around the B Corp movement:
“There’s now a whole industry of people earning a livelihood by promoting B Corps and helping companies become B Corps. Their livelihoods depend on maintaining a positive marketing image.
The process also requires companies to market the B Corp idea itself—creating a kind of euphoria, a positive story that makes it really hard to then be honest about what the tool is, what it isn’t, and what it actually reveals about a company’s values at its core.”
This really resonates with me.
When I’m not making podcasts, I run a marketing agency called All Conditions Media. And the most common thing I hear from new clients is: “We want to be like Patagonia.”
But here’s the thing about Patagonia: they’ve never tried to be like anyone else.
Instead, they’ve consistently challenged themselves to make a real, measurable impact. That’s led them to do genuinely progressive things: founding 1% for the Planet, becoming one of the first B Corps, and most recently, setting up a non-profit to channel the majority of their profits.
That’s what sets them apart. Not the messaging—the action.
And that, to me, is the real lesson from both Patagonia’s decision and the series as a whole:
We all need to ask ourselves a more forthright question:
What action can I take that will actually make a difference to the issues I claim to care about?
Not what sounds good. Not what ticks the boxes.
What actually helps.
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