Pitch Good Ideas & They Come About In Scattered Parts

I’ve been blogging for over a year about designing a gadget that tracks the unified environmental efforts of millions of people and allows everyone to celebrate their contribution. A few weeks ago it looks like Google released a gadget called ‘Energy Saver‘ that does just that.

It doesn’t allow people to track their contributions in as many ways as I’d like to see, but it does provide a beautiful/simple way for people to make a difference with hardly effort at all by “Enabling and optimizing your computer’s power management settings to help save the world energy.”

If I wasn’t already working on a different startup, I’d love to take this idea to the next level with my domain greenolution.com. Previous posts of mine detailing that business model & vision:

- The Greenolution Pitch
- Three Design Opportunities for a Brighter Future
- Anyone Join Me for $25 Million
- Count Down Your Carbon

If you combined CDYD and Google’s Energy Saver gadget and threw in a global goal, a gadget easier for people to paste on social networking sites than the Google Gadget, and some greentech product recommendations on the most cost-effective technologies currently available, you’d have my idea for greenolution.com.

Aside from possible ad revenue, you could add an e-commerce portion of the site to sell the greentech conveniently to consumers/businesses, or at least collect affiliate earnings.

WANTED: Sustainable Gifts

Giving an undesired gift used to be considered better than nothing. “At least it’s thoughtful, right?” Not anymore, at least not in my book.

The question is all over the place, “Is consumerism sustainable?” In its current form the answer is clearly no. Now, not only are you giving someone a random object that will take up space, you’re potentially giving them a guilt trip for wasting natural resources on their behalf. How thoughtful!

Here’s a suggestion: Give your friends and family a gift that will keep on giving. One that can be immediately converted to cash if they so choose, but that is more likely to give them a warm feeling inside for the next 8-12 months… at which point they can re-use it for the same warm feeling, or withdraw it for that cash if it turns out they need it… with the cycle continuing endlessly. Now there’s a great gift!

To those of you who insist on giving me gifts, the #1 thing on my wish list would be Kiva gift certificates to help grow my portfolio. Thanks & happy gift giving!

Kiva

Count Down Your Carbon

Anyone recall the Greenolution idea I pushed several times since last Dec? The site with a community-based goal for reducing CO2 emissions that would motivate millions to save $ while saving the environment? It’s finally here – www.CountDownYourCarbon.org

It’s funny how the universe works. I’ve been too busy to launch this side project myself, but wait a few months & a site comes out eerily similar to the one I described. They don’t seem to have a widget yet that would allow people to display their individual impact alongside the global impact & goal as described in my Greenolution pitch, but everything else is there and they’ve done a great job with it! I am thrilled to see this site looking so good.

Also notice on their fluorescent lighting page they have a small link to help you buy them, with an affiliate ID embedded in the link so they make a commission on those sales. That type of link was the primary revenue driver I had planned in phase 1 of the site as well. I’m excited to see this site flourish – they’ve already reduced over 35 million pounds of CO2 since their inception. I think I’ll make an account and register my energy saving stuff now. :)

All the Smart Cities are Doing It

Ann Arbor is replacing every street light in the city with LEDs, and reducing their energy usage 55% in the process. The project will cost $650,000 and achieve a return on investment in 4.2 years. The city already implemented LEDs on Washington St between 4th & 5th street and its citizens to submitted feedback via the web. With 98% approval, the city is moving forward.

LEDs: easier on the eyes than fluorescent bulbs and significantly more energy efficient as well. A fellow Googler recently replaced the lighting in her house with LEDs, and her entire upstairs runs on a total of 11 watts. She could leave a light on 24/7 for a year at a cost of about $4. I’m thinking of making the switch…

If you’re living in a city that hasn’t yet made the switch, I tagged this post as ‘business’ and ‘opportunities’ on your behalf. It’s a no-brainer once you’re informed. Good luck!

The Greenolution Pitch

A few people have e-mailed me asking for elaboration on the Greenolution idea. To save you the time, the pitch is pasted here:

The world should have a site like traineo.com – but rather than track calories burnt as a community, it tracks money saved and co2 emissions reduced through green-technology usage.

Traineo.com has a live readout of calories burnt by all their members – if we had a similar readout for $ saved and emissions reduced it’d be an exciting spectacle for individuals the world over.

With over $10 trillion currently invested in greentech R&D, more energy-efficient products will emerge in the thousands. Greenolution.com provides a quick-list of the most proven & effective products available at any given time, and gives users a simple interface to report their product adoption.

We’ll provide simple code for widgets to be embedded on private sites\social networking profiles that show our live results of $ saved and co2 emissions reduced alongside our global goal of 1B tons reduced & that’ll be an attention-grabber. People who click the link can see a quick flash demo on how the site works and how to get involved.

If such a site were in existence, it shouldn’t have any trouble getting picked up by NPR, The Economist, NY Times, etc. That’s the pitch. I don’t have the details worked out, but if we get enough intelligent people collaborating on it, success seems likely.

Anyone Join Me for $25 Million?

British billionaire entrepreneur, Richard Branson, put a $25 million reward on the table for a solution that will remove a billion tons of co2 per year from the Earth’s atmosphere.

Seems like a perfect opportunity to roll out my greenolution.com idea for tracking green-technology usage through a community-driven site with realtime tracking of money saved and co2 prevented alongside global goals for emissions reductions.

If only I had the web-programming knowledge necessary to design this database\user-interface for massive public adoption. Seems like such an connecting site would have the potential to drop 1B tons co2/yr easy.

update: if you’ve got the ability to roll this site out and are looking for a domain to do it on I’ll contribute greenolution.com – let’s just get this site rolled out. drop me a line if you want to collaborate.

Becoming a Sustainable Global Citizen – Part III

I hadn’t planned on a 3rd part to this series, but a team of U.N. researchers revealed an option within anyone’s power that has a bigger impact than switching to a hybrid Toyota Prius. Here are the highlights:

- the emissions generated by feeding, transporting, & slaughtering livestock exceeds that of all the world’s transportation combined
- animal agriculture takes up 70% of all agricultural land, 30% of the total land surface of the planet
- animal agriculture accounts for 37% of our methane emissions and a whopping 65% of our nitrous oxide, with 23 and 296 times more warming power than carbon dioxide, respectively

I quit red meat long ago, but with this I’m going the rest of the way. Thanks, Ted, for the article.

Becoming a Sustainable Global Citizen – Part II

Last month I committed to adopting a 1:1 sustainable lifestyle after learning it would take 2.3 planets to survive if everyone lived like me. I dug around for a while and am ready to share some findings with you.

I started with a book called “Worldchanging: A User’s Guide for the 21st Century“. Turns out this is one of those phenomenal books you wish everyone you know has read. (more on this in an upcoming post!)

Long story short, tracking your ecological footprint is harder than I expected, but I’ve come up with a few things that I’m pretty sure will put me at or below at 1:1 sustainability ratio.

First up, now that I’ve graduated it’s time to think about where to make a living. I used to think urban areas were rough on the environment, but it turns out their large infrastructures are way more efficient than suburbs on a per-person basis. Combine this with my fate to work at Google and my primary choices are San Francisco, Ann Arbor, and perhaps Dubai at some point in the future.

Second, living in an urban environment is possible without a car. In Ann Arbor it was natural to drive less than 10 minutes per week (only to shop at Trader Joe’s). I could walk anywhere. Back in the suburbs of Oakland County with my parents for a couple weeks, I drive at least 2-3 hours/week just from day-to-day activity, and I actually do less. Places are simply much farther apart. Put 2 and 2 together, & I’d like to live in a city where I can live without a car.

Third, I used to always gravitate towards the most foreign\exotic foods whenever I’d get groceries or eat out. If a fish was caught in Alaska, or a pomegranate imported from Europe, the sheer novelty of global commodities made them more desirable than local stuff. I never considered the energy required to ship that fruit overseas so I could eat it. Now, I choose local options whenever the opportunity presents itself.

It’d be fun to cut down on some massive need-more-stuff-mindset purchasing craze that I have, but I already buy pretty much nothing and am content with just my go board, Kung Fu, Tai Chi, a fat cat, and some internet access… Not much else to cut out.

Three Design Opportunities for a Brighter Future

Three entrepreneurial ideas have been churning in my head for a while now. Rather than hide them for some competitive advantage, I’d like to share them with you and possibly tackle them together. If sharing these ideas leads to direct competition, so be it. As my ideas are all triple bottom line business models at least the competition will move us forward.

Before reading the rest of this post, you’ll benefit greatly from watching William McDonough speak on the concept of design. As one example, McDonough puts you in the shoes of Thomas Jefferson charged with the task of designing the Bill of Rights. Feel ready to take on that one yourself? For better or for worse, we’re faced with similarly massive design problems today, and the solutions are far from clear. Together, however, I am optimistic we can design a better future.

My entrepreneurial opportunities follow. I estimate the solution to any of these challenges, taken to market properly, would be worth millions (if not billions) today.

Idea 1: Climate Crisis, Sustainability and Green Technology

The fact that we face consumption rates far beyond sustainability is no longer controversial within the scientific community. We need a massive change and we need it now.

Many people take the political route to elicit change. Frankly, I have no faith that government alone can move fast enough to save us. What’s the alternative? Empower individuals.

In the next few years several green technologies will emerge that will save you money to use while saving the environment. One problem will be adopting them fast enough. It takes time for information to spread, and we can’t implement solutions we don’t know exist.

Background out of the way, here’s my idea: Create a website aimed at serving the the simplest, most effective means for maximizing sustainability at any given time. At the top corner of the site, put a panel that tracks how much money all the site’s visitors have saved in real time (think Traineo) by allowing users to report product usage & calculating their savings from the database.

Use that panel to set community-driven goals. Imagine a value of “$27,014,210.XY saved by our members!” XY is flying upwards. Right below that it reads “Goal: $38 million saved by the end of 2008!”

This site would gather some interest. People would be excited to check back and see the progress made. Teens would help their grandparents install new things to report it on the site & together the world would be motivated by measurable progress towards sustainability.

I’m actually already working on this very project. It’s at greenolution.com – as of this time of writing the site is only a placeholder until I finish the back-end. Competitors & collaborators welcome – my wish is just to see such a site in existence sooner than later. Let’s go!

Idea 2: Our current models for educational content suck.

I’ve already talked about this extensively so I won’t go into detail here. Take McDonough’s approach to design and combine it with a better model for educational content and you’ve got the potential to make millions. Whether you’re interested in designing the first prototype for a particular subject, or laying out a site where others contribute their expertise through a superior content framework, a solution here will be huge.

Idea 3: Establish ratings for educational content.

The internet presents an opportunity to advance education like never before. Companies like Microsoft and Google are building massive databases of educational content. At the same time, innovative organizations like Connexions are striving to create a global repository of educational curriculum by enabling anyone to contribute. With these sites offering increasingly massive amounts of educational information, we have no shortage of options to choose from. Given the choice between the hundreds of Geometry lessons available, the question we naturally must ask is which shall we use? Certainly one of these lessons is better designed and easier to understand than the others, the data we are missing tells us which.

Lessons designed by a better teacher likely outperform those of an inferior teacher. Lessons that leverage objectively superior learning methods from cognitive psychology likely outperform material that doesn’t. Lessons that are interactive and fun likely outperform those that are dry and passive. Yet the back of our textbooks don’t provide any bar graphs or otherwise persuasive evidence of their refined effectiveness over alternatives.

Information on the effectiveness of educational content is measurable, yet we lack a framework through which to interpret it. The design problem: create that framework.

As people’s awareness of objectively superior educational curriculum grows, so too will the monetary incentive, pace, and vigor in which cognitive psychology is studied. The increased emphasis on cognitive psychology will lead to further enhanced educational content, and an accelerating upward spiral for human education will emerge.

For my final thesis prior to graduating I reviewed current research in the learning sciences to identify the objective metrics for learning people are using. Several confounds emerge when you dig deeper into this problem, but in the end there is reason to believe we could create an effective solution. I won’t paste my whole assessment here; but if you’re interested let me know & I’d be happy to share the findings. Let’s make it happen!

Becoming a Sustainable Global Citizen

If everyone lived like me, we would need 2.3 planets. This is according to myfootprint.org, a site that estimates the sustainability of your lifestyle. Requiring 10 acres of biologically productive land to sustain my lifestyle, I come in under the U.S. average of 24. Worldwide, however, there are only 4.5 acres of biologically productive land available per person.

Whenever I discover vital information I wish the whole world would know I post it on my blog. As individuals we have two primary ways to make a difference 1) through our own actions 2) through empowering others with information we’ve acquired. I don’t know about you, but I find this knowledge difficult to ignore. I’ve committed to reducing my footprint to a 1:1 sustainable ratio by the end of the year. I haven’t yet figured out the details, but I will be sure to share what I learn. I hope someone will join me. For those interested, I’ve found a promising place to start…

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