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Sticky NotesAn interview with author Chip Heath about making environmental messages sticky12 Mar 2007
Quick, what's the last political campaign slogan you remember? Is it the Democrats' recent zinger, "Together, we can do better"? Probably not. You probably forgot that one before they got to "better."
Chip Heath and Dan Heath.
Photo: Amy Surdacki
Dan and Chip Heath ponder sticky messages professionally -- Dan does corporate training, Chip's a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford -- and they've come up with a simple way to identify and craft them. It's described in their new book Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die. Environmentalists are notoriously self-critical about their failure to effectively communicate on, among other things, the subject of global warming. When I heard Chip was coming through town, I figured I'd elicit some free consulting in the guise of an interview. All of us are kind of like that IT person in domains we care about. So if you're passionate about the environment, you have spent years understanding the nuances and the implications and the theories and applications. If you're trying to get your message across to somebody who doesn't have that background, you've got to overcome that curse of knowledge.
That's a really difficult task. It's what keeps there from being more brilliant messages. There are lots of people with brilliant ideas, but there are many fewer brilliant messages than brilliant ideas.
Made to Stick, by Chip Heath and Dan Heath.
Now, talk about demoralizing. Historically, the way they made their name was by buying land and taking it off the market -- this bucks-an-acre strategy. It's concrete, it's easy for people to understand, it's easy to talk about to your employees, it's easy to talk about to donors. Now that strategy's gone out the window, because you can't do bucks-an-acre for 40 percent of the state of California. There's just not enough money.
So they're going to have to get involved in affecting policy. They're going to have to get involved in being a broker that could get information to other groups. But they were spinning with how to talk about this complex issue. The first reaction is to break that goal down. You do this for 20 years, so that's 2 percent of the state per year. Well, that's not helping. Maybe translate that into acres. Well, two percent is 2 million acres. That's a step more concrete ... but nobody can picture 2 million acres.
What they finally started doing is talking about landscapes. They would take a blob on the map and give it a name; they would start talking to people, for example, about the "Mount Hamilton Wilderness." It's an area around Silicon Valley -- it's got round hills, some oak trees. It's called oak savanna. It's not very exciting, like the redwoods. But it turns out it's the largest intact area of land in Northern California outside of Yosemite, and it's being systematically chopped up by urban sprawl from Silicon Valley. It also acts as the watershed for the Bay Area.
It turns out, once they started talking about the Mount Hamilton Wilderness, local environmental groups started writing that into their plans and their lobbying. The Packard Foundation, which is located in Silicon Valley, gave a donation to save the Mount Hamilton Wilderness.
Here's a mistake people have made for years in talking about global warming. Scientists know the statistical significance of seven-tenths of a degree. But 0.7 degrees -- if it does mean anything to people, it's kind of trivial. I mean, I live in California, and the temperature in the morning starts in the 40s, and by the middle of the day it's 70 degrees. What's 0.7 degrees in a 30-degree swing in one day?
But I had a student in my class from the Woods Institute [for the Environment] at Stanford. She wrote this brilliant paper where she said, you know what 1 degree means? One degree means that this kind of bird species in Arkansas on average is going to have 10 fewer days to breed; the whole breeding season is 35 days. Or 1 degree over time translates into a 100-mile northern shift in the birch forests in New England.
But the biggest advantage is, I walk into workshops -- we do a lot of workshops at the Stanford Center for Social Innovation, bringing together nonprofit groups in the arts, humanities, and social science -- and ask these organizations, "OK, tell me why as a donor I should give to your organization." And people are extraordinarily inarticulate about this stuff!
The biggest impact we make on these organizations is just by being dumb outsiders -- by forcing them to keep saying something, to keep asking the question, until they come out with something concrete. They always have it. They have the knowledge about how to articulate a compelling case buried somewhere inside the organization. It's just a question of holding up all the things you know and putting them against this checklist and saying, oh, it's not concrete enough, or, do we have a story to talk about this?
I love the Bill McDonough story about the Rohner Textile factory. Because of the chemicals used in the dying operations, the Swiss government had declared the trimmings from the fabric hazardous waste. By the end of that story, he's turned around that plant so it's a water purification plant. That's a story we don't have enough of -- organizations aren't trying to pick the successes we do have and talk about them.
There's a danger whenever you get a big, scary issue. Say you're a smoker and I tell you about lung cancer. There are two things you can do. You can change -- but it turns out empirically the other, more common pattern of behavior is you tune me out. The commercial shows you blackened lungs -- well, you can either change your behavior or stop listening to those commercials. We're in danger in the environmental area because the awareness battle has been won, but what's still up in the air is whether people think there is anything we can do about the problem. You want to be giving people a sense of empowerment.
When people talk about climate change, there are stories in their minds. Scientists know the stories. When ice sheets melt, what animals does that disenfranchise? What does that do to the landscape? Unpacking those implicit mental images is something Al Gore did well in his movie, and that most conversations about climate change absolutely don't. Yeah, it's misleading to say that global warming caused Hurricane Katrina, but it is entirely valid to say that you're increasing the probability of events like Hurricane Katrina because of climate change. It's just like any probabilistic argument -- if you don't wear a seatbelt, you're more likely to die.
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