Dear Martha Stewart: The World Needs You. Will You Answer?
Editor’s note: This post was originally published at Hemal’s blog The Eightfold.
Environmental awareness has arrived, but its focus on consuming our way to greener lifestyles comes with confusion around when and how to conserve using the 4R’s (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle and Remix). Part of the problem is that conservation is hard, stodgy and scary. Luckily, today more than ever a silver lining exists.
We are in the midst of a creative whirlwind where creation and doing-it-yourself are not only respected but even considered cool. “Geek chic” circles in areas like Austin, Boulder and Portland are even applying their talent to innovate hip and sustainable lifestyles based outside of traditional “green consumption.” If the mainstream can learn to reconnect with their creative energy, we can see a real shift in conservation to simple, fun and exciting.
To influence mass culture, the creative and entrepreneurial energy found within the niche creative class needs momentum. People need a prophet to educate them on how to translate awareness into inspiration and finally design. People need a platform to inspire and engage them to act. We here at The Eightfold believe there is only one individual in the world with the iconic status, passion, following and brand potential to be this cultural force: Martha Stewart.
This post is our plea to Martha Stewart: Can you harness your skill and passion for beautiful living to envision, create and educate us about living beautifully?
Martha, you may be wondering – why me? It’s not your operational or demographic reach. It’s not your cultural footprint. In reading your magazines and watching your show, you have a precision and energy that only comes from devotion to one’s art. It’s this unadulterated love of creation — not simply your aesthetic — which inspires people. It’s this love that can and should be harnessed to help the world.
Now we don’t expect or want you to do this altruisticly or as an addition to your everyday work. The Eightfold is about integrated, enduring brand strategy, and we see using sustainability to live beautifully and beautiful living to drive sustainability as critical territory for you.
Part of the reason is that while you have this potential to inspire cultural creatives (as exhibited by your Wired Magazine cover) , you are still constantly encumbered by negative criticism, be it from misunderstood teasing of young guests or of what for others would be an apolitical business decision to trademark Katonah, New York. Unfortunately, often this criticism is the result of people neither seeing nor hearing everything you have to offer.
But what if you followed in the footsteps of Al Gore and tapped into the energy of what makes you brilliant and iconic? You are the empitome of creativity, and though a love of nature and DIY already, to some extent, inspire Americans to reduce, reuse, recycle and remix their way to living beautifully, why not tap into this further? This would not only open you up to a younger market and boost your cool factor, but it would widen and revitalize your competitive territory for strategically growing and differentiating Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia.
To be fair, I know you already publish Body + Soul, have done shows and written other articles on this subject. What we are asking is that your vision for growth be an over arching holistic vision for personal, social and environmental progress — not a cause-marketing tactic or program. We are asking that you become a cultural guide for this progress. This means harvesting this living and breathing seed within your organization, engaging the right “tribes”, innovating new services, ideas and products that help conserve rather than consume and giving your audience the tools and creative guide to learn, explore and share sustainability in a cool, beautiful and engaging way.
Martha, we need more than awareness to change the world. We need your inspiration, we need your creativity, we need you as a real platform for change.
We are looking forward to hearing your thoughts on this subject.
The Eightfold
The Eightfold on Martha Stewart
Gossip column misunderstands Martha’s "fat comment"
Local protest over Marth Stewart’s attempted trademarking of Katonah New York
Image: Portfolio Magazine
Tags: Big Business, Brand Strategy, conservation, Geek Chic, Green Leadership, recycling
- Uncategorized

On Friday, Apple fans across the US were queuing up to get their hands on the new iPhone. In SOHO, the first through the doors wasn’t just any disciple of the Cult of Mac. It was indy film director Spike Lee followed by supporters of Keep a Child Alive, a charity devoted to providing anti-retroviral drugs to children in Africa.
Vanity Fair’s July issue is devoted to raising awareness in Africa. Guest edited by Bono, the magazine has 20 different covers featuring celebrities and cultural figures like Brad Pitt, Madonna, Maya Angelou, Oprah and President Bush involved in a game of telephone.
Whole Foods LondonThe Brits have never been known for their culinary instincts, but Whole Foods is putting this to the test. The mega retailer opened its doors last week to lots of eager consumers and a flood of press. Everyone has a point of view of Whole Foods’ impact on the ethical consumer, true level of sustainability and “Whole Paycheck” pricing. The big question is how Whole Foods will fare in a country where the standard dietary guidelines of meat and two veg translate to potatoes with potatoes on the side.
Sustainability is a work in progress, so it’s impossible to have all the information to know whether a company’s activities are green enough. However, you can learn whom to trust simply by testing whether a company will genuinely respond to you.
Before we kick off summer with Memorial Day barbeques this weekend, it’s important to remember Spring 2007 was when the incubating third wave of environmentalism finally hatched in pop culture.
Karma Capitalism 