Monday, 29 April 2013

On The Ethics Of Ethical Fashion

The recent launch of H&M’s Conscious collection is the latest in a series of high street brands putting social and environmental responsibility at the core of their campaigns. For example, last year we saw Marks & Spencer and Puma launch Shwopping and Bring Me Back initiatives that encouraged consumers to recycle their used clothing rather than send it to the landfill. A personal favorite of mine is the Diesel+Edun Spring 2013 collaboration, which focuses on developing sustainable trade relationships with Africa. If ethical fashion ever was the remit of hippies and frumpy housewives, that era is clearly over
There is a good business case for CEOs to turn their heads in this direction. In 2009 The Carbon Trust estimated that large UK businesses could save £1.6bn a year by improving the efficiency of their supply chains. Clearly, it pays to be nice to the environment – and in more ways than one. Outdoor clothing brand Patagonia recently ran a campaign asking consumers NOT to buy their products due to their environmental impact. To illustrate the point, Patagonia even outlined how much waste the product produces in each stage of the supply chain through their Footprint Chronicles site. Despite economic downturn, Patagonia’s sales hit an all-time record. In the words of their Director of Environmental Strategy, Jill Dumain, “If I wanted to make the most money possible, I would invest in environmentally responsible supply chains … these are the best years in our company’s history.
Patagonia’s transparency reinforces customers’ trust in its brand; it illustrates that their actions abide by the values the company was built on. The case is quite different with a brand like H&M, which has historically been more associated with sweatshops than CSR. On top of that, while Patagonia markets its premium products based on brand values, H&M’s customers tend to be driven more by the low prices of its fashion goods than the ideals that sit behind them. And yet H&M is clearly putting social and environmental responsibility at the forefront of their marketing efforts by sponsoring ethical fashion forums, claiming the title of the world’s largest organic cotton buyer and offering vouchers in return for recycled clothing from any brands

Not everyone is convinced though. Clean Clothes Campaign (a Netherlands-based group dedicated to improving the lives of garment industry workers) launched a spoof Unconscious campaign to highlight the fact that the workers who made the ‘Conscious’ clothes are chronically overworked and undernourished. In Cambodia alone, more than 2900 workers have collapsed since 2010, several hundred of them at H&M suppliers
The H&M website proudly lists its achievements in improving supply chain transparency and workers’ livelihoods, such as the recent publishing of all its factories and H&M’s role in negotiating higher wages for Cambodian workers. Yet it does not tell us that this came after a scandalous 2-day hunger strike at the Kingsland factory in Phnom Penhm, where women were paid $60 a month to produce underwear for H&M and Walmart. The minimum wage in the country is $75, although according to the Asia Floor Wage Alliance a worker and her family need a monthly income of $274 to cover basic needs. And it wasn’t even this appalling pay that caused the strike, but the fact that the factory closed and its owner had fled without paying the workers the wages they were owed. 

Whatever the backstory, it is clear that H&M know they need to be addressing these issues. Ultimately it is they who are responsible for ensuring that supply chains stand up to ethical scrutiny. Such problems cannot be resolved overnight and we can see their steps in the right direction, so it’s not entirely fair to see them as hypocritical the way the Unconscious Campaign does. And yet, we need the likes Clean Clothes Campaign to keep tabs on the likes of H&M to ensure that this transformation – which they claim to be putting at the forefront of their agenda – is indeed underway. Shaming big brands might annoy the C-suite and embarrass their advertising execs, but this pressure is a productive one. It acts as the conscience to some of the most powerful organizations in the world, and helps change it for the better.

Sunday, 10 March 2013

The Talking Shoe by Adidas and Google: Inanimate Objects Entering Social Media


Breakthrough technological innovation is always mildly unnerving. It challenges our habits and held assumptions, pushing us to adopt new behaviors. But occasionally technology outdoes itself: welcome The Talking Shoe.



This collaboration between Adidas, Google and a couple of smaller creative partners has just been presented at a tech and culture event SXSW in Austin, USA. The shoe is filled with all kinds of motion sensors that detect the user’s activity and communicate with him or her through 250 cheeky phrases as well as being integrated with social media like Google+.

So what is it exactly? Some suggest it is a motivation tool, encouraging wearers to exercise more. As far as customer benefits go, an inanimate voice with an attitude constantly nagging you is unlikely to help at the gym. Anyhow, the product is not currently destined for the market. The Nike+ FuelBand team can breath a sigh of relief.

More important seems to be The Shoe’s integration with social media. The makers have described it as ‘an experiment in how you can use connected objects to tell the stories on the web’ and ‘an experiment… of bringing advertising to multiple creative platforms, including everyday objects.’ A scary thought, but so was television and Facebook once upon a time.

By pushing the boundaries of technology’s reach this brilliantly wacky experiment helps us imagine an entirely new universe; one in which inanimate objects actively participate in our social lives. Is this where the future of technological innovation lies? Turning objects into real social agents with a personality to interact with us would be a sci-fi worthy breakthrough.  [The Shoe] has your own social network feed so all of your friends can see… what your shoe says about you’ the makers proudly tell us.

As far as mass-market commercialization (and the broad cultural change that needs to precede it) goes, my gut feeling is that there is no inherent human need for socializing with pre-programmed machines. Unless there is a specific reason to communicate with a computer – like asking for directions while driving – infusing inanimate objects with a personality is not likely to add any value to consumers.

Telling stories online through inanimate objects could have great potential – but they will always be the wearer’s stories, not The Shoe’s.