http://www.japanfs.org

"Toward A Sustainable Japan - Corporations At Work"
Article Series Article No. 4
"Product: The Earth - Treat With Care" (Catalog House) 
http://www.cataloghouse.co.jp/co/corporation1.html

By Staff writer Kazunori Kobayashi

In the past 20 years, the mail-order business in Japan has emerged 
and grown rapidly, to reach total annual sales of 2.63 trillion yen 
(about US$ 22 billion) in 2002. When we think of a sustainable 
society, what do we see in the conventional and all-too-familiar 
shopping catalogs? Massive loads of catalogs, sent for free, but soon 
to be thrown away as garbage. Glossy pictures of products that try to 
lure more and more consumption. It seems far from sustainable 
consumption.

Yet, it could also be true that, unlike manufacturers, mail-order 
businesses may have little to do when it comes to improving products 
and consumption patterns for the environment. In addition to making 
the catalog out of 100% recycled newspapers and magazines, or making 
it tree-free and using plant-based inks, what can a mail-order 
company can do to promote sustainable society?

A Japanese company, Catalog House is working aggressively to answer 
the question, with its unique slogan: "Product: The Earth ? Treat 
with Care" In this month's JFS Newsletter, we would like to introduce 
its corporate philosophies and actions.

Established in 1976, Catalog House is a mail order and publishing 
company of about 390 employees, with annual sales of 34.4 billion yen 
(about U.S.$280 million) in fiscal 2002. Its catalogs are "Tsuhan 
Seikatsu," (priced at about $1.50, issued quarterly) and "Pikaichi 
Jiten"(about $5, issued annually). Despite the fact that, unlike 
other catalogs, you must pay for them, they have a remarkable 
circulation per issue of about 1.5 million and 1.95 million, 
respectively. You can see how remarkable this number is from the fact 
that, for monthly general magazines in Japan, even the largest 
circulation is only about 650,000.

With half of its space filled with original articles having a 
spirited attitude, this catalog has from time to time ignited heated 
debate by dealing with the pros and cons of issues such as the ninth 
article of the Japanese Constitution (which renounces war as a means 
of solving international conflicts), Japanese corporations' 
involvement in dam development projects in Southeast Asian countries, 
and a food assistance program for North Korea. It is a retail catalog 
filled with journalistic articles that are interesting to read in 
themselves. Catalog House calls this "retail journalism" and this 
approach led them to build a unique brand image that is not 
constrained by the mail-order industry.

In the context of environmental issues, they looked at the problems 
of mass-consumption society and their company's role in it, and 
searched for ways to improve the situation. In their corporate 
philosophy, they write this:

"The mail-order industry, which has been functioning as a 
consumption-stimulating system, is at a turning point." "Do not think 
of yourself as just a consumer of products. You are consumer of the 
Earth? turning the environment and resources of the Earth into 
products and consuming them." "Achieving a balance between the 
environment and business is the largest challenge of today's 
consumption-oriented society, and the industry that embodies this 
challenge most directly is the mail-order industry."

And it continues, "The time has come for us to stand firmly on the 
pursuit of both 'business satisfaction' and 'earth satisfaction'." 
"Yet, as we think about it, we can see that having a catalog, which 
is effectively a store, directly delivering information to a large 
number of "Earth consumers" at once, the mail-order industry is in a 
better position than other retailers to make the case for "Earth 
satisfaction," and we recognize our responsibility for this."

Based on the above thinking, they have made the "Constitution of 
Catalog House Environmental Policy" their guiding principles in 
dealing the challenge.
[Article 1] We shall do our best to sell products that will not harm 
the earth, its plant life or animals.
[Article 2] We shall do our best to sell products designed to last, 
that can be fixed instead of being thrown away. [Article 3] We shall 
do our best to extend the life of our products as long as possible by 
finding second users for them after the original owners have no 
further use for them.
[Article 4] We shall do our best to recycle products that are no longer useful.
[Article 5] The company shall do its utmost to limit its own 
production of waste and CO2.
[Article 9] We shall not sell nuclear weapons, smart bombs, fighter 
aircraft, aircraft carriers, artillery or armaments of any kind.

Based on the above principles, what actions are they taking? Now 
let's see at the "product standard" part referred to in Article 1 and 
"extending product life" part from Article 2 to 4.

In relation to article 1, they show their commitment to cautionary 
principle, which means to say that "we don't sell products if there 
is any doubt." Specifically, they describe detailed standards of 
product selection and make it clear that they will NOT sell products 
that use or emit dioxins, endocrine-disrupters, alternative CFCs, 
timber from an unknown country of origin, and genetically modified 
organisms.

Especially noteworthy here is their willingness to set their own 
rules and work with suppliers. They claim that they will not wait for 
laws and regulations, but make their own set of standards and seek 
cooperation with suppliers, that is, manufacturers and trading 
companies. In fact, Catalog House has been working aggressively with 
suppliers, long before being affected by legislation, to take on such 
measures as prohibiting the use of timber from tropical forests, 
collection and reuse/recycling of home appliances after first-users 
are finished with them, collection and recycling of CFC-type 
refrigerators, limiting the emissions of formaldehyde, etc. At the 
same time, they are aware of areas where improvement is needed, 
including products that emit electromagnetic waves, products using 
lead solder, and also completely making sure that none of their 
imported products and parts are made with any connection to illegal 
child-labor in developing countries.

In relation to Article 2 to 4, they promote the selling of products 
designed to last, making products longer, and reuse and recycling. In 
order to link this thinking to customer satisfaction after purchase, 
they conduct the following measures:

- Ask each customer to respond to a customer satisfaction survey, and 
try to keep selling products that attain high customer satisfaction 
levels. They don't change models just for the sake of change.

- In order to encourage longer use of products, deliver "maintenance 
news," with information on maintenance and repair, to customers a 
year after purchase.

- They offer a repair service for products even after the 
manufacturer's free repair warranty has expired. And they request 
manufacturers to keep spare parts for repair as long as possible.

Here is what they say: "Owners of unwanted, re-usable, Catalog House 
products may return them to our used-products store. We will purchase 
them at a modest price, check and re-condition them as necessary and 
sell them to second users at a modest price, with a full year's free 
warranty."

It is not too difficult to see that setting their own high standards 
ahead of legislation could, if the information is not communicated 
well, lead to opposition from industry, suppliers, and in certain 
cases, even the customers themselves. One of the measures Catalog 
House takes to prevent problems is by offering thorough information 
disclosure. From 2003, they decided that if subscribers of the 
catalog request more environmental information (including main 
materials, additives, CO2 emissions from manufacturing and during 
use, and product origin, etc.) than the digest information listed for 
each product, they will disclose all the relevant information and 
documents they have.

For instance, a subscriber may want to know the test method and data 
for formaldehyde, data on the name and frequency of agricultural 
chemicals used, or inspection documents (or the manager's submitted 
documentation) of wastewater from a factory. Upon request, the 
company will disclose such information, with the exception of data 
such as the ratio of ingredients in soaps or additives for plastics 
that the manufacturer does not disclose for fear of product copying. 
And if they cannot disclose the information they will explain the 
reason.

Catalog House's "The Constitution of Environmental Policy," along 
with information on the results and the future of environmental 
activities they are taking, is issued annually as their 
"environmental report." This report is distributed to 1.5 million 
subscribers along with the spring issue of the quarterly catalog 
"Tsuhan Seikatsu." Unlike many conventional environmental reports, it 
is written in an excellent style that attracts and keeps the readers' 
interest to the end. With their philosophy summarized in the phrase, 
"Product: The Earth ? Treat with Care," pioneering their own high 
standards well before legislation, and excellence in communication, 
Catalog House is certainly becoming one of the leaders in "bringing 
information to consumers of the Earth."


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