AI Article Synopsis

  • The common approach for encouraging businesses to engage in climate actions focuses on financial gains, framing sustainability as a way to boost profits.
  • A research experiment revealed that narratives emphasizing social responsibility or personal achievement were 55% more effective in prompting businesses to act compared to those highlighting monetary benefits.
  • The results indicate that sustainability communications for business leaders should include a mix of financial, prosocial, and achievement motivations to be more effective.

Article Abstract

The dominant narrative to motivate business actors to take climate actions emphasizes opportunities to increase monetary gains, linking sustainability to the financial goals of these organizations. The prevalence of monetary motivations in sustainability communication among businesses, consultancies, academics and international organizations has made this narrative a truism in the private sector. We conducted an online, real-world, large- experiment to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of different motivations using narrative communication. We show that non-monetary narratives highlighting prosocial or achievement motivations are 55% more effective in creating responses from businesses than narratives emphasizing monetary gains. These findings are robust across most narrative and audience characteristics, including age and language. Our findings suggest that communication towards business leaders around sustainability can be multi-pronged and should incorporate prosocial and achievement motivations aside from articulating potential financial benefits.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10611645PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11625-023-01386-1DOI Listing

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