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Why sustainable products fail—and what actually gets people to use them

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Here’s a story you’re probably familiar with: You buy the reusable coffee cup. It’s beautiful, ethical, made from recycled ocean plastic, and you feel good about your purchase. But then it leaks in your bag, ruins a notebook, and by week two it’s sitting in a cabinet while you’re back to disposable cups and a vague sense of guilt.

Or maybe it’s the “eco mode” on your washing machine that takes three hours instead of one. The sustainable packaging that requires scissors, sweat, and a YouTube tutorial. The electric vehicle charging app with six steps when a gas pump has one.

We’ve all been there. But here’s what’s interesting: The problem isn’t that you don’t care about sustainability. It’s that these products are designed as if caring should be enough.

And the problem for businesses with this approach is that it’s not.

The Big Misunderstanding: Care vs. Use

There’s a gap that kills sustainable products, and it’s not about values. It’s about friction.

In our research, we have examined hundreds of companies across many industries and found the same pattern: Products fail when they ask people to care more. They succeed when they ask people to do less.

The difference seems subtle but it’s not. Caring is an intention. Using is a behavior. And between intention and behavior sits everything that makes us human: cognitive load, time pressure, habits, trade-offs, the path of least resistance.

People don’t usually buy products to express values. They buy them first to solve problems with the least effort possible. When you add steps, costs, or complexity in the name of sustainability, you’re competing with convenience. And in this battle, convenience almost always wins.

The question shouldn’t be, How do we get people to care more? Rather, it should be How do we design sustainability that works because it’s easier, not despite being harder?

Three ways sustainability shows up in design

When you map how sustainability actually intersects with product experience, you see three outcomes.

  • Sustainability that’s neutral. It doesn’t help or hurt the core value proposition. Maybe it’s a recycled component the user never notices. It doesn’t drive adoption, but it doesn’t kill it either.
  • Sustainability that adds friction. Extra steps. Higher up-front cost. Performance trade-offs. Packaging that’s harder to open. This is where good intentions go to die.
  • Sustainability that improves the experience. Lower lifetime cost. Fewer decisions. Better performance. Less maintenance. This is where adoption happens, and it’s rarer than it should be.

That third category is where things get interesting.

What it looks like when sustainability makes things better

Take Electrolux. A few years ago, the company redesigned its washing machines with a specific goal: Make clothes last longer.

Not “wash greener” or “use less water,” but simply “make clothes last longer.”

The machines became gentler on fabrics. Garments held their shape, color, and overall integrity through more wash cycles. For consumers, that meant real money saved over time, and fewer worn clothes that needed replacing.

To be sure, energy and water use dropped too. Textile waste fell. Microplastic shedding from synthetic fabrics declined.

But here’s the key: Customers didn’t adopt a sustainability feature. They adopted a better washing machine—one that made their lives easier and saved them money. The environmental benefits were an extra.

Or consider John Deere, which shifted from selling machines to selling productivity. Using GPS, sensors, and software, farmers can now optimize exactly where and when to plant, spray, and harvest.

The result? They use significantly less fuel and fewer chemicals while improving yields. Operating costs fall. Regulatory compliance gets easier.

Farmers didn’t “go green.” Rather, they optimized their operations, and sustainability was the side effect of better data and smarter systems.

Even in heavy industrial markets, the same logic applies. Siemens embeds sustainability into automation and energy systems by making them more efficient, more reliable, and cheaper to operate over their life cycle. Customers adopt because the total cost of ownership drops and uptime improves. The emissions reductions are real, but they’re not what closes the sale.

In each case, sustainability doesn’t ask customers to sacrifice. It delivers something they already wanted, but better.

The pattern: Make it invisible

These examples have one thing in common: Sustainability works when users barely notice it.

The Nest thermostat learns your patterns instead of asking you to program schedules. Spotify optimizes streaming quality based on your connection instead of making you choose bit rates. Modern cars shift gears better than you can, and are more efficient on the engine, so we stopped asking people to shift manually.

The best sustainable products follow the same principle. They reduce waste by reducing steps. They save energy by making systems smarter. They cut environmental impact by cutting friction.

This is the opposite of how most sustainable products are marketed. Usually, sustainability is positioned as a feature you have to actively choose, understand, and commit to. That’s a recipe for low adoption.

If your product requires customers to believe in climate change, read the label carefully, or accept trade-offs, you’re building on shaky ground. Belief is fickle. Motivation is exhausting. Convenience is ruthless.

What this means for innovators and builders

If you’re designing products, leading innovation teams, or building sustainability into your road map, here’s what actually matters.

  • Stop designing for believers. Some customers are deeply committed to sustainability and will tolerate friction. They’re vocal, they’re influential, and they’re a minority. Most of your market sits somewhere between “I care when it’s easy” and “I don’t think about it.” Design for them.
  • Stop treating sustainability as something extra. If it’s a separate feature, an add-on cost, or a premium tier, it will struggle. Sustainability should be baked into how the product fundamentally works, not layered on top.
  • Ask different questions early. Don’t ask How do we make this greener? Instead as How do we make this better and greener? Can sustainability reduce operating costs? Cut complexity? Improve reliability? Make usage simpler? If the answer is no, rethink the approach.
  • Default matters more than choice. Every time you ask a customer to decide, you create friction. The most successful sustainable products make the right choice automatic. Eco mode isn’t a setting, it’s just how the product works.

The future is invisible sustainability

We’re living through a shift in how sustainability shows up in products. Sustainability 1.0 was about labels, pledges, and messaging. It asked customers to care, to choose consciously, to sacrifice a little for the greater good. Sometimes that worked. Mostly it didn’t.

Sustainability 2.0 is about defaults, systems, and design. It stops asking people to be better and starts building better products. It embeds sustainability so deeply that using the product is the sustainable choice.

The companies that win won’t be the ones with the best sustainability reports. They’ll be the ones that make sustainability disappear into products so good that people choose them for entirely selfish reasons.

We have documented this shift across dozens of industries. The pattern is clear: Sustainability wins when it stops competing with convenience and starts enabling it.

That’s not asking people to care less about the planet. It’s respecting how they actually make decisions—and designing accordingly.

The future won’t be won by making people care more. It will be won by making sustainability something they don’t have to think about at all.


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