UNDERSTAND
Co-create your digital campaigns by integrating an eco-responsible approach, and transform your customers into allies in the ecological transition.
Eco-design of digital campaigns
Unravel the invisible impacts of your digital campaigns. A campaign's environmental footprint depends on the volume of distribution, the format, the region, the type of device, and the digital infrastructure used (networks, data centers). Together, these factors determine the impacts in CO₂, water, and land area.
It is estimated that there will be up to 7.9 billion people connected to the internet by 2029.
Pelchen, Lexie (2024). Internet usage statistics in 2024, Forbes. Retrieved April 22, 2024, from https://www.forbes.com/home-improvement/internet/internet-statistics/
Today, the average person is exposed daily to between four thousand (4,000) and ten thousand (10,000) advertisements.
Kirk, Emilia (2022). The attention economy: Standing out among the noise, Forbes. Retrieved April 22, 2024, from https://www.forbes.com/sites/orbesbusinessdevelopmentcouncil/2022/03/23/theattention-economy-standing-out-among-the-noise/
The three main pillars of responsible communication: Eco-design of production, restraint in distribution, and adjustments to targeting.
Contextualizing the Impacts
From Intensive Marketing to Sustainable Communication
Marketing performance can no longer be measured solely by click-through rates or traffic growth. Today, it must integrate sustainability: limiting unnecessary mailings, reducing media footprint, and questioning the relevance of each message. Digital sobriety is not a constraint, but an opportunity to create more consistent, respectful, and authentic experiences. It encourages brands to do less, but better.
Communication Aligned with Social Responsibility
In a context where consumers expect consistency and transparency, brands have everything to gain by embedding their communication within a framework of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and digital responsibility (DR). A company that aligns its message with its environmental and social values strengthens the trust and loyalty of its audience. Responsible digital communication then becomes a strategic lever: it embodies a sincere, measurable, and co-created commitment, where every choice—from design to distribution—reflects an intention of sustainability and ethics.

