Unilever has revealed that its ‘Sustainable Living Brands’ grew 69% faster than the rest of its business in 2018 and delivered 75% of the company’s growth.
The consumer goods giant describes its Sustainable Living Brands as those that currently communicate a strong environmental or social purpose and contribute to achieving the company’s ambition of halving its environmental footprint and increasing its positive social impact.
Unilever now has 28 Sustainable Living Brands with the four newest entrants being Close Up (toothpaste), Wheel (laundry), and Calve and Bango (dressings). Seven of the company’s top ten brands – Dove, Knorr, Omo/Persil, Rexona/Sure, Lipton, Hellmann’s and Wall’s ice cream – are all Sustainable Living Brands.
The figures were revealed this week by Unilever’s CEO Alan Jope at the Deutsche Bank Global Consumer Conference in Paris. He told delegates: “Two-thirds of consumers around the world say they choose brands because of their stand on social issues, and over 90% of millennials say they would switch brands for one which champions a cause.
“We believe the evidence is clear and compelling that brands with purpose grow. Purpose creates relevance for a brand, it drives talkability, builds penetration and reduces price elasticity. In fact, we believe this so strongly that we are prepared to commit that in the future, every Unilever brand will be a brand with purpose.”
Jope added: “The fantastic work done by brands such as Dove, Vaseline, Seventh Generation, Ben & Jerry’s and Brooke Bond shows the huge impact that brands can have in addressing an environmental or social issue. But talking is not enough, it is critical that brands take action and demonstrate their commitment to making a difference.”
Unilever’s Sustainable Living Brands include Dove, which has helped over 35 million young people around the world with self-esteem education since 2005; Lifebuoy, which has reached one billion people with its handwashing campaigns; Vaseline, which has reached 3 million people living on the frontline of poverty and disaster with skin healing programmes; Ben & Jerry’s, which campaigns for social justice and climate change, and Rin whose Career Academy works with women across rural India, through mentoring and careers fairs.