Sustainability communication in accommodation businesses tends to be factual and descriptive, as companies are concerned with product-based messages that focus on what they do; they appear not to understand the potential benefits of constructing messages that would influence consumers to behave more sustainably, which is effectively sustainability marketing myopia. An analysis of 1,835 sustainability messages from award-winning businesses shows that messages communicate facts not emotions, and benefits for society as a whole rather than for the individual customer. The messages are explicit, but passive and not experiential hence they positively affect the cognitive but not the affective image of the business. The lack of message normalization and customer focus reinforces the image of sustainability being a niche concern. We reflect on the reasons for these shortcomings and highlight opportunities to improve persuasive communication, which we have now applied commercially in more than 400 website analyses and 60 training courses.
Keywords content analysis, online, awards, responsibility, green, tourism for tomorrow
IntroductionSustainability marketing encompasses a philosophy and a range of activities. It aims to satisfy consumers' needs or wants and create a favourable position for the business in the marketplace by communicating how the business addresses environmental, social and economic concerns (Bridges and Wilhelm, 2008;Mitchell et al., 2010). Communicating sustainability has a dual focus: firstly, to make the target audience aware of how the products offered to them will meet their needs whilst also addressing economic, social and environmental issues, and secondly, to allow a dialogue between stakeholders about the company as a whole (Belz and Peattie, 2012). Yet the poor understanding by marketeers on how to communicate sustainability effectively, and by sustainability professionals on how to market it, has changed little over time