A magazine gets read, then it gets tossed. The campaign framing cites a blunt number: 77% of magazines, along with their ads, end up in the trash, which makes the medium itself feel like waste.
So when Volkswagen wants to promote the eco-conscious thinking behind its BlueMotion vehicles, Ogilvy develops a print insert that does not just talk about recycling. It makes recycling the default next step.
The insert is designed to get people in Cape Town to recycle their magazines via the city’s post boxes. Once you are done reading, you use the insert and drop the magazine into a post box, turning postal infrastructure into a recycling pathway instead of sending the paper to landfill.
When the medium becomes the message
The mechanism is a print ad that changes the fate of the print medium. Instead of adding more paper persuasion, it converts the entire magazine into something that can be routed to recycling, using a familiar behavior, posting, to remove the friction of “finding a recycling option”.
In consumer marketing, “sustainability” claims land best when the communication channel follows the same rules the product is asking people to adopt.
The strongest sustainability advertising makes the medium do part of the environmental work itself. The real question is whether the communication changes the waste behavior around the product, or just describes a greener intent.
Why it lands
This works because it removes hypocrisy. If you are going to sell eco-conscious thinking, your ad cannot behave like disposable clutter. By turning the magazine itself into the recyclable object, the campaign gives people a satisfying feeling of doing the right thing with almost no extra effort, and it makes the brand promise feel practical rather than moralizing.
Extractable takeaway: If your benefit is “less waste”, design the communication so it physically reduces waste, and let the proof be the experience, not the copy.
What to borrow from the BlueMotion Label
- Replace messaging with utility. If you can change behavior directly, you do not need to preach.
- Use existing infrastructure. People already know how to use post boxes, so adoption is friction-light.
- Make the action one-step. The closer the action is to the moment of disposal, the higher the follow-through.
- Make the proof visible. A physical insert is something people can show, talk about, and demonstrate.
A few fast answers before you act
What is “The BlueMotion Label”?
A Volkswagen BlueMotion print insert designed to make magazine recycling easy by letting readers use post boxes to route finished magazines into a recycling flow.
Why is this stronger than a standard eco-themed print ad?
Because it behaves like the promise. It reduces waste through the ad itself, instead of adding more disposable paper to argue about sustainability.
What behavior change does it target?
Moving magazines from “trash by default” to “recycle by default” at the exact moment people finish reading.
What is the key execution ingredient?
Friction removal. The action must be simple enough that people will do it immediately, without searching for a recycling option.
When should brands use this pattern?
When your claim depends on credibility, and you can redesign the medium or distribution so the communication itself demonstrates the value.
