Sustainability is More Than a Movement: Where’s Behavior?
All the efforts aimed at being green, sustainability, carbon-neutral and climate neutrality depend on the behavior of many people. Global conservation ultimately requires changing the behavior of several billion people. If you don’t know how to change the behavior of one person, how can you expect to change billions? On the other hand, if you know how to reliably change the behavior of a single person, changing billions just requires that process to be replicated many times over.
Most green initiatives (or any strategic initiative for that matter) lack a scientific plan to identify and create the discretionary effort required to achieve their goals. Sustainability plans of any kind that base their implementation on common-sense notions of human behavior are not sustainable. In order to succeed in any initiative in the most effective manner requires an understanding of how to reliably create an organization that brings out the best in every person. This can only be accomplished by using the knowledge proven by over 100 years of behavioral research.
Human behavior IS one of our renewable resources; one that is most often overlooked and one that can be wasted like any other. Properly cared for it has unlimited potential and is the only resource that can save the planet. Isn’t it time we get serious about behavior?