Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
If it is true that in recent years the concern with climate change
has been growing (Bell, Poushter, Fagan & Huang, 2021), there
is still a long way to go to make our lifestyles more sustainable.
Several companies and brands have been thinking of strategies
that allow them to become more sustainable (Hodgson,
2021), albeit with very different levels of success.
The fashion industry is, in this context, a very paradigmatic
case since it is responsible for the emission of more than
“1.2 billion tons of greenhouse gases each year, accounting
for more than 10% of the world’s carbon footprint” (Motif,
2021). With such a large footprint, several brands and designers
have sought to transition to more sustainable fashion.
However, despite the efforts made, the truth is that the message
does not always reach consumers. Thus, if, in fact, consumers’
awareness of the environment and sustainability has
grown in recent years, if it is true that consumers have become
more demanding in relation to the processes used by
brands, we still continue to see a gap between the willingness
to buy more sustainable brands and the effective purchase of
these brands (Wong, 2021).
In this context, consumers are looking for more transparent
and sustainable processes and where brands are already
working in this direction. For a long time, it was believed that
the price prevented the effective purchase of more sustainable
products. Still, this idea has been removed in recent years,
which leads us to question whether the problem is not in the
communication strategies developed by brands to communicate
their processes and products. Are consumers aware
of what sustainable fashion really means? How have brands
been able to convey and explain the difference between concepts
such as Ethical Fashion, Circular Fashion, Slow Fashion
or Conscious Fashion?
Unsure about the effectiveness of this communication,
in this work, we seek precisely to analyse how some of the
leading brands that are assumed to be sustainable (Abbas
& Shipin, 2021; The Good Trade, 2021) have communicated,
particularly in social media, spaces that aggregate a
large number of consumers, but above all capable of defining
trends and habits. On the other hand, these are also the platforms
where the new generations are present, gaining even
more importance in conveying the message to those who are
the consumers of tomorrow and the guarantors of the planet’s
future.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
Notes:
Versão preliminar.
No. of pages:
5