Not only is ADP misleading its stakeholders, its marketing strategy to paper industry customers is somewhat confusing!
A few months ago, we started highlighting the “Top Five Greenwashers” in North America — corporations that are misleading their customers on the environmental profile of paper and print, while failing to consider the impacts of their own electronic infrastructure, and ignoring the sustainability of paper products from well-managed North American forests.
All of the companies chosen for our Top Five list have received at least two letters from Two Sides, and have either not responded or refused to address our concerns. Our letters detail which of the company’s claims may be misleading, providing extensive independent sourcing and substantiation for our case, and inviting the company to make necessary changes.
Today’s Case:
ADP is a well-established global provider of payroll and other human resource services with operations in over 10 countries. Many companies in the paper, print and packaging sectors, including Two Sides member companies, use ADP’s services.
We sent ADP a first letter in February 2016 with clear and reasonable requests for modifications to their message. We asked that the company focus its messaging on the convenience and practicality of online transactions rather than rely on vague and unsubstantiated environmental claims that fall short of the Green Guides published by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
In May 2016, ADP replied to our initial letter, holding to flawed claims while failing to provide any substantiating facts, or any evidence that they had ever examined the relative environmental impacts of paper versus electronic life cycles. Have a look at their letter here.
In October 2016, we sent them a second letter with additional problematic claims reported to us by members who rely on print and paper for their livelihood (see below). Again we asked ADP in good faith to make empirically grounded modifications. They refused, and failed to respond to our letter or return follow-up calls. ADP’s false claims are especially concerning since they sell their services to the paper industry.
Our Requests
Remove all references to “go green.”
Remove the images of leaves suggesting environmental benefits.
Modify the message to refer to e-billing, online statements, online payroll instead of “paperless.”
Remove the following text:
- “raise awareness about conserving natural resources”
- “the opportunity to go green”
- “Environmentally-friendly: help protect the environment and sustain natural resources”.
Two Sides is committed to ensuring North American companies adhere to reasonable, empirical standards when making environmental claims about print and digital services.
- Green claims need to be backed by specific evidence and studies, and cannot be vague.
- U.S. forests are growing and North America is a leader in sustainable forest management.
- Paper supports sustainable forestry and millions of landowners, family businesses and communities that rely on forestry and paper products.
- Not using forest products increases the risk of private forests being lost due to conversion to non-forest uses.
- The majority of people prefer reading on paper versus screens, and many question the environmental claims used by corporations.
For a detailed explanation of why claims like this are false and mislead customers, see our Fact Sheet on this topic.
Leading Fortune 100 companies have been collaborating with us for the past five years, and over 75 corporations have now removed misleading claims related to print and paper. Chief marketing officers and chief sustainability officers from Starbucks, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Citibank, US Bank, Macy’s and many others are making changes. Why isn’t ADP?
Related story: Top Five Greenwashers: Company #1 – American Water
- Categories:
- Business Management - Sustainability
Phil has over 28 years of international experience related to sustainability and the forest products industry. He currently leads Two Sides North America, a non-profit that promotes the unique sustainable features of print and paper, as well as their responsible production and use. Two Sides operates globally in five continents with members that span the entire graphic communication value chain. Phil has written extensively on sustainability and environmental topics related to the forest products sector. He received his Bachelor and Master's of Science degrees from McGill University in Montreal. He is a private forest owner and sustainably manages over 200 acres of forestland for both recreational and economic benefits.