In this insightful and energising episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow sits down with Crista Buznea, Head of Sustainability Marketing at Ecology, to explore how effective communication can transform sustainability from a worthy burden into an engaging, dopamine-filled journey that drives real business action.
With a background spanning tourism marketing at Heathrow and TUI before transitioning into sustainability leadership, Crista brings unique perspective on what actually works when trying to bring sustainability to the masses through authentic storytelling, strategic listening, and remarkably, the occasional use of negative messaging.
Crista's career transformation began during travels through Thailand and Cambodia, where she witnessed the dark side of tourism that her university degree had glamorised: child exploitation, fake orphanages, environmental pollution, and animal welfare issues.
This awakening led her back to university for another degree, then into roles at Heathrow and TUI where she applied marketing skills to sustainability challenges, successfully integrating sustainability into every in-flight entertainment magazine, on-screen content, in travel agencies, and through video campaigns.
Her mission has always been bringing sustainability to the masses, making it accessible rather than corporate, engaging rather than jargon-filled.
When the pandemic eliminated tourism jobs including Crista's, she showed up on LinkedIn every day telling sustainability stories, filming content, and building consistency that ultimately attracted Ecology.
They offered her a platform doing sustainability "very differently to anything I'd ever seen," using gamification and creating what Crista describes as "an environment full of dopamine" that makes sustainability genuinely engaging.
This philosophy challenges the traditional worthy, anxiety-inducing, difficult journey narrative that dominates much sustainability communication, suggesting instead that positive energy and accessible entry points drive far more participation than guilt and complexity.
The conversation centres on Ecology's latest campaign, "Sustainability Shouldn't Be Unsustainable," which emerged from Crista's social listening at climate conferences and events.
Working with over 24,000 businesses gave her extensive exposure to sustainability leaders' challenges, and she consistently heard paradoxical demands: integrate sustainability on the ground but also be a strategic thinker, speak up but not too loud, don't be afraid of greenwashing but don't be green-hushed either.
The campaign mirrors these tensions back to the industry, acknowledging that sustainability professionals are caught between business objectives and regulatory pressure, between optimistic targets and harsh reality, between spreadsheets and storytelling.
Crista reveals fascinating insights from Ecology's marketing experiments testing positive versus negative messaging, carrot versus stick approaches. Their weekly "Good News" series generates 20% of weekly engagement, proving positive content works.
However, when testing the same message framed as a barrier versus a motivation, barriers (the stick, the negative framing) perform marginally better.
This counterintuitive finding challenges the sustainability sector's growing emphasis on positivity-only approaches, suggesting that balanced communication acknowledging both challenges and opportunities resonates more authentically than relentless optimism or doom-focused messaging.
The episode explores critical sustainability marketing challenges including AI-generated content that lacks authenticity (easily spotted through overuse of dashes, lists of three, and algorithmic patterns), green-hushing driven by Western political changes and business caution, and the constant need to simplify jargon (carbon...