3 Reasons Why Sustainability is Now Fundamental to B2B Marketing of Technology

David Smith
6 min readSep 21, 2021

--

Marketing deep tech is hard enough, with its incessant innovation, bulwark of buzzwords, and morphing markets.

Why should we make room for sustainability?

The Union of Concerned Scientists puts the case well: the climate crisis “is upon us, and it’s causing a wide range of impacts that will affect virtually every human on Earth in increasingly severe ways. The range of impacts makes it one of the most urgent issues facing humanity today.”

That is reason enough.

But I ask tech B2B marketers to see sustainability as not just a moral imperative, but also a practical one. Very simply, sustainability is now a fundamental consideration for the technology businesses we work for.

  • Companies with a combined revenue of over US$11.4 trillion are now pursuing net zero emissions by the end of the century.
  • Investor giant Blackrock has made sustainability its new standard for investing.
  • The four largest U.S. technology firms — Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook — all plan to reduce their emissions to net zero by 2050.

Many engineering and technology audiences are stepping up to the challenge. For example, Engineers Without Borders UK has adopted a strategy to put “global responsibility at the heart of engineering, ensuring a safe and just future for all.”

These entities share a commitment to reducing their impact on the environment. It’s how business will be done, from now on. In my work at Publitek, I am witnessing how sustainability helps technology companies not simply comply, but compete and grow. I am seeing how it contributes to long-term viability. This is good for us, our clients and for the planet.

Sustainability creates differentiation

As major market players gear up to meet their sustainability commitments, they are looking for goods, services, vendors and partners who can help them succeed, and to be partners in the journey.

Take energy storage. As it transforms transportation markets and the electric grid, a number of drivers are defining the competitive landscape: energy density, reliability, safety… and sustainability. Huge banks of batteries are rolling on the roads, making the grid more reliable, and backing up our data centers. Producing all those electro-chemical devices make an impact on our global environment.

In my work to promote ZincFIve’s nickel-zinc (NiZn) batteries, sustainability is one of the four pillars of messaging. You can see how it differentiates NiZn from competitors in our blog post The Hidden Sustainability Challenge in your Data Center and paper Better Backup to Power the Edge (registration required). In short, sourcing the raw materials in NiZn batteries does not have the impacts reported from mining lithium for lithium-ion batteries. NiZn batteries are cleaner to recycle than traditional lead-acid batteries. ZincFive went so far as to issue an independent Climate Impact Report to substantiate its environmental advantages.

ZincFive Climate Impact Profile

This matters to the major data center operators. They are already reducing their Scope 2 emissions (used to generate their electricity) by purchasing 100% renewable energy. They are now striving to reduce energy needs through innovative cooling and server architectures. ZincFive can tap into this interest by saying “hey, have you considered the sustainability of your battery backup systems?”

Sustainability is the differentiator to help get NiZn technology into the door.

Sustainability creates markets

A focus on sustainability can not only make a product more attractive, it can create new markets.

For example, much of the innovation in the data center industry is centered in edge computing. Placing compute resources closer to where data is generated and consumed can improve bandwidth and lower latency, making everything from Industrial IoT and AI to gaming and remote healthcare more effective. Some estimates the number of edge data centers will double between 2020 and 2024.

In the article I helped prepare for ITRenew, “Sustainability: Have you got the edge?”, ITRenew CEO Ali Fenn lays out the “next frontier in sustainability” to meet the demand at the edge: reusing IT hardware. ITRenew is building a new market for the millions of servers that the hyperscale data center operators retire every year as they upgrade their technology. By reusing the servers and their components for edge computing and other purposes, ITRenew creates a new “circular economy model” for IT equipment. As Ali explains, “The sourcing, manufacturing and transportation of IT equipment is a significantly greater contributor to net carbon emissions (as much as 75% of embodied carbon) than the ongoing data center operation.”

ITRenew’s circular economy model for data center hardware

This is a huge opportunity in the data center space. Consider the Climate Neutral Data Centre Pact, an industry association of European cloud and data center operators that includes Amazon, Google and Equinix as well as smaller and national providers. Ali tells us that “the members of the Pact are committed to innovating their operations for a circular economy model. To that end, they will assess 100% of their used server equipment for reuse, repair or recycling by 2030.”

By establishing the circular economy business model based on sustainability, ITRenew has created a substantial new market for its activities.

Sustainability creates lasting value

It’s becoming clear that sustainability is a fundamental aspect of marketing technology. Since sustainability is a priority for shareholders and customers, it deserves a large share of our communications to the market. It belongs to us, the tech B2B marketers. It should not be limited to reports issued by the office of Corporate Social Responsibility.

But it’s bigger than even that.

A focus on sustainability can create positive repercussions throughout a technology company and its ecosystem. To illustrate, look at the top of the Global 100, an index of the most sustainable corporations in the world, where you’ll find Schneider Electric. “Sustainability improves performance, innovation and our attractiveness as a place to work,” says Gilles Vermot Desroches, senior vice-president for sustainable development and strategy. “It creates value.”

When you consider that insight, you realize that sustainability is a mindset that leads to creating a culture and value for the long term. “To sustain” basically means “to have a future.” We need to sustain what makes our work valuable and our companies or clients viable.

“Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.” — UN World Commission on Environment and Development

This broader view of sustainability could be the fundamental measure of our success. Does our campaign promise live on, or is it just a one-off? Does our department grow, our company profit, and our market share expand for the long term? These are all measures of your work’s sustainability.

Some may decry expanding the meaning of sustainability to reflect a broader range of business practices that lead to long-term success. They think it waters down or obscures the critical need to reverse the climate crisis and reduce pollution. I propose that it shows that environmental action is a natural part of how every business should plan and behave in its market.

Sustainability (Merriam Webster)

capable of being sustained

of, relating to, or being a method of harvesting or using a resource so that the resource is not depleted or permanently damaged

of or relating to a lifestyle involving the use of sustainable methods

The question is not why sustainability? Instead, it’s can we afford NOT to be sustainable?

Sustainability is about making something that lasts. As tech B2B marketers, we can help our companies and clients build businesses, markets and a world that can last.

--

--

David Smith
David Smith

Written by David Smith

Creative director, writer and marketer for clean energy; husband, dad, skier, snowboarder, motorcyclist, runner, brewer, Portland fan

No responses yet