
Author: Moh Al-Haifi
Co-Author: Isabelle Drury
Contributors: Odette Bester, Lee Fitzpatrick, Zac Schaap

Marketing is facing a crisis. The conventional extractive methods, obsessive growth metrics, aggressive campaigns, manufactured urgency, are burning out marketers and audiences alike. Many of us feel caught in cycles that drain more than they give back, wondering if there’s another way to connect with customers without perpetuating systems that harm people and the planet.
The good news? There absolutely is. Regenerative marketing is fundamentally shifting how we think about the entire purpose and practice of marketing.
Unlike passing marketing fads, regenerative principles are grounded in patterns that have sustained life for billions of years. It’s less about following the latest industry buzz and more about realigning our work with the fundamental dynamics of living systems.
Here are ten practical steps you can take right now to embed this philosophy into your everyday efforts:
1. Embrace holistic thinking in your strategy
Conventional marketing often fragments our work into isolated metric: conversion rates, click-through percentages, cost per acquisition. But you can’t create meaningful change by focusing solely on these numbers.
Holistic thinking means recognising that every marketing decision creates effects through an interconnected web of relationships. Let’s consider a social media campaign planning, a conventional approach might only measure engagement rates and follower growth, but a holistic view reveals how that campaign affects your customer service team’s workload, influences your environmental impact through digital energy consumption, shapes community discussions, impacts your team’s creative wellbeing, and how it either strengthens or weakens trust with your audience.
“That sounds nice and all, but how do I actually implement this?” Start by mapping your marketing ecosystem, including all stakeholders, touchpoints, and relationships affected by your work. Before launching any campaign, gather perspectives from diverse team members and ask yourself: How might this impact our various stakeholders? This simple practice begins to shift decision-making from isolated metrics toward whole-system health.
Another powerful application of holistic thinking is reducing digital waste by using existing content more effectively. Rather than constantly chasing fleeting trends and creating disposable content, focus on repurposing high-impact messages across different channels and formats. Cultivate an evergreen content garden that provides sustained value, instead of relying on short-lived promotional cycles that deplete creative energy and digital resources. This approach not only reduces your environmental footprint but also builds deeper connections with your audience through consistent, meaningful engagement rather than constant novelty.
2. Practice authentic, non-violent and culture-aware communications
At the heart of regenerative marketing lies communication that honours truth, connection, and cultural context. Conventional marketing often manipulates through artificial urgency or manufactured scarcity, depleting trust and relationship potential.
Before writing any piece of content, ask yourself: Would you say this to someone sitting across from you at a coffee shop? If it feels manipulative or inauthentic in a face-to-face conversation, it doesn’t belong in your marketing.
This means abandoning manipulative tactics that have become normalised in digital marketing. You wouldn’t tell a friend “You only have 24 hours to decide before this opportunity disappears forever!” or “Only three spots left in my program–better act fast!” when neither claim is actually true. You wouldn’t deliberately make someone feel inadequate to sell them a solution. These approaches might drive short-term conversions, but they erode trust and deplete the energy of your relationship with your audience.
Instead, focus on creating genuine value in all interactions. What challenges are you authentically addressing? What transformation are you truthfully facilitating? Communicate with clarity and honesty, trusting that the right connections will naturally emerge from this fertile ground of authenticity.
Truly regenerative marketing also embraces inclusion and accessibility. This means designing your communications,from messaging and visuals to platforms and formats,to welcome diverse audiences. Consider how your content serves people with different abilities, cultural backgrounds, and life experiences. Are your videos captioned? Is your website accessible to screen readers? Does your imagery reflect the beautiful diversity of humanity?
You can also try different communication practices, and see how they feel to you, such as non-violent communication, a method that prioritises empathy, honest expression, and needs-based connection. Remember that your words create worlds, choose ones that cultivate resilience, connection, and possibility rather than extraction and scarcity.
3. Cultivate diverse partnerships

Just as a forest thrives through countless species working in symbiotic relationships, your marketing ecosystem grows stronger through diverse partnerships.
This goes beyond conventional networking or transactional relationships. Instead, it’s about creating genuine value exchanges that benefit all participants. Look beyond your immediate industry to find unexpected collaborators who share your values, even if they serve different audiences.
You might be thinking: “Interesting… but what kinds of partnerships should I actually be looking for?” The possibilities are endless, but consider:
- Community organisations that align with your values
- Complementary businesses (not competitors) serving similar audiences
- Thought leaders and educators in adjacent spaces
- Local environmental or social justice initiatives
- Artists and creatives whose work resonates with your brand
The key is ensuring these partnerships create mutual benefit and shared value. Each relationship should strengthen the entire ecosystem rather than extracting value from one party for another’s gain.
4. Adopt a continuous learning mindset
Regenerative marketers replace perfectionism with a commitment to evolution.
When a campaign doesn’t meet expectations, they don’t see failure: they see valuable information that guides their next steps. This shift is crucial because you can’t be both regenerative and perfect. Perfectionism often stems from colonial and industrial mindsets that no longer serve us.
This approach resonates deeply with Carol Dweck’s Growth Mindset Theory, which distinguishes between fixed mindsets (believing abilities are static) and growth mindsets (believing abilities develop through dedication and learning). Regenerative marketing embodies this growth mindset by viewing challenges as opportunities for development rather than evidence of limitation. Just as Dweck’s research shows that students with growth mindsets achieve more, marketing teams that embrace this perspective create more innovative, resilient, and ultimately successful campaigns.
Create safe spaces for experimentation by celebrating learning rather than just outcomes. When reviewing campaign results, start with: “What did we learn?” rather than “Did we succeed or fail?” Document these insights and let them inform future strategies.
What if your manager is expecting results, not just ‘learnings’? This is where communication becomes important. Help stakeholders understand that this approach actually improves results over time by allowing your strategies to evolve naturally, just as living systems do in nature. Short-term metrics still matter, but they’re viewed as feedback for evolution rather than final judgments of success or failure.
5. Integrate different communication practices
Conventional marketing often exploits pain points, triggers insecurities, and manufactures problems to sell solutions. Regenerative marketing rejects these tactics, and instead honours the diverse life experiences of your audience and creates communications that respect their wholeness.
In practice, this looks like:
- Leading with empathy rather than pain points
- Creating safe, consent-based audience relationships
- Using language that empowers rather than diminishes
- Focusing on genuine needs rather than manufactured desires
- Regularly auditing content for accessibility and cultural awareness
- Inviting feedback from communities you aim to serve, especially those historically marginalised
“But doesn’t marketing need to address pain points to be effective?” There’s a crucial difference between acknowledging real challenges your audience faces and manufacturing or exploiting pain to manipulate behaviour. Regenerative marketing recognises genuine needs while approaching them with empathy and respect.
By communicating in this way, you build audiences who trust you deeply because they know you see their full humanity, not just their potential as customers or conversion statistics.
6. Market in a way that feeds energy, not drains it
Fast-paced marketing tactics–constant product launches, short term growth hacks, urgency-driven ad campaigns–have become the norm in today’s business environment. But there’s a hidden cost: these approaches burn out teams and audiences alike.
“Isn’t that just how marketing works these days?” Not necessarily. While conventional marketing often creates frenetic energy that leaves everyone feeling drained, regenerative marketing respects natural rhythms and focuses on restoring energy rather than depleting it.
This means consciously stepping away from:
- Always-on campaign schedules that exhaust your creative team
- Manufactured scarcity that creates anxiety for customers
- Pressure-based sales tactics that feel energetically depleting
- Content calendars that prioritise frequency over quality
Instead, consider:
- Creating campaigns that follow seasonal or natural cycles
- Building in proper recovery time between major marketing pushes
- Designing customer journeys that feel spacious rather than rushed
- Prioritising depth over frequency in your content
When ethical clothing brand Patagonia famously ran their iconic “Don’t Buy This Jacket” campaign, they weren’t just making a statement about consumerism, they were also creating space for both their team and their audience to breathe, reflect, and engage more deeply rather than just react to another sales push.
Remember: energy is the currency of life. When your marketing consistently drains energy from your team or your audience, it cannot be considered regenerative, no matter how sustainable your product might be.
7. Practice radical transparency

Transparency has become a buzzword in marketing, but regenerative transparency goes beyond simply sharing your sustainability credentials. It means being radically honest about both your successes and your struggles in your regenerative journey.
“I’m worried that admitting our shortcomings will damage our brand!” This is an understandable fear, but the average citizen is sophisticated enough to recognise and appreciate genuine efforts at change, even when they’re imperfect. What damages reputation isn’t the acknowledgment of challenges, it’s the discovery of hidden contradictions between claims and actions.
Radical transparency includes:
- Openly discussing where you are in your regenerative journey
- Acknowledging mistakes when they happen (and they will!)
- Being honest about the tensions between current business models and regenerative ideals
- Creating feedback loops with stakeholders that invite them to hold you accountable
Companies like Dr Bronner’s demonstrate this principle by publishing comprehensive ‘All One’ impact reports that discuss both their achievements and their challenges. This transparency builds deeper trust with their communities while creating accountability mechanisms that drive internal improvement.
Start small if needed, perhaps with an honest blog post about your company’s sustainability journey or an email to your customers explaining a change you’re making to become more regenerative. The key is authenticity, your audience can tell the difference between transparency as a marketing tactic and genuine openness rooted in integrity.
8. Monitoring ecosystem health
“How do we know if our regenerative marketing is actually working?” This question reveals one of the most fundamental changes in shifting to regenerative approaches: our measurement systems often remain rooted in extractive thinking.
While conventional marketing focuses almost exclusively on conversion metrics and quarterly ROI, regenerative marketing embraces financial health as just one indicator within a holistic measurement approach–one that evaluates success through the wellbeing of your entire business ecosystem.
This doesn’t mean abandoning financial metrics completely, they still remain essential. Financial prosperity is a vital sign of health for your team members, organisation, community, and broader ecosystem. However, it’s merely one element in a more complete view of success.
We strongly believe this approach is ultimately more profitable and ROI-friendly; the key difference is that we measure returns across generations rather than quarters. Try expanding your definition of success to include indicators such as:
- Team wellbeing and creative vitality
- Depth and quality of customer relationships
- Community impact and stakeholder health
- Environmental regeneration metrics
- Long-term resilience indicators
Start by asking different questions: Instead of just “How many sales did this campaign generate?” ask “How did this campaign affect our relationship with our community?” or “Did this marketing approach leave our team energised or depleted?”
Consider implementing tools like stakeholder surveys, wellbeing assessments for your marketing team, or community impact evaluations. These measurement systems take time to develop, but they provide a much richer understanding of your true impact than conversion rates alone.
9. Join regenerative communities of practice

No one can build a regenerative marketing practice in isolation. Your regenerative journey will be strengthened by the relationships you build with others on the same path.
From established networks like the Regenerative Marketing Movement and Conscious Marketing Movement to emerging spaces like the With Life Community (where a dedicated marketing community of practice is forming), opportunities for connection abound. Resources like ReStoried Earth offer valuable workshops and learning spaces where marketers can deepen their regenerative practices together.
Our own Regenerative Marketing Playgrounds provide informal gathering spaces where marketers and business leaders can share their learning, challenges, and successes in an environment that nurtures both personal and collective growth.
Don’t worry about being “regenerative enough” to join these spaces. Most welcome participants at all stages of their journey, from curious beginners to experienced practitioners. The key is approaching with openness and a genuine desire to learn and contribute.
Remember that asking for help isn’t a sign of weakness,it’s a crucial part of regenerative practice. Systems thinking experts, regenerative consultants, and fellow marketers can help you navigate the complexity of this work with more confidence and clarity.
10. Align your entire organisation
Perhaps the most crucial understanding in regenerative marketing is this: marketing cannot function regeneratively in isolation. If your marketing team embraces regenerative principles but your business model remains extractive, how authentic can your message really be?
Start by mapping the gaps between your marketing promises and organisational realities. Perhaps you’re promoting sustainability while your packaging isn’t actually recyclable, or emphasising community while maintaining extractive supply chains.
Once you’ve identified these areas, find allies throughout your organisation who share your vision. These regenerative comrades exist in every company–often feeling just as isolated as you might. Informal conversations, shared articles, or lunch-and-learns can spark interest across departments.
Remember that marketing often serves as a powerful catalyst for wider organisational change. By championing regenerative principles in your work, you create opportunities for your entire business to evolve toward more life-giving practices.
Regenerative marketing is a journey
The shift to regenerative marketing isn’t about perfection or purity. It’s about progression: taking consistent steps toward practices that regenerate rather than deplete the systems we’re part of.
Whether you’ve spent years in aggressive growth marketing or you’re just starting to question conventional practices, your perspective and experience are valuable here. There’s no perfect starting point, and there’s no blame in recognising where we’ve been. What matters is our willingness to explore, learn, and evolve together.
But new stories are taking shape, and there are plenty of examples:
- Kiss The Ground and Climate Farmers are championing regenerative agriculture that sequesters carbon while rebuilding soil health. Community-Supported Agriculture models directly connect consumers with local farmers, creating resilient food systems that benefit both land and community.
- Cradle to Cradle Products Innovation Institute is transforming how companies design products to eliminate the concept of waste entirely. Their certification process ensures materials remain in continuous, safe cycles.
- Ecosia revolutionised the search engine model by directing the majority of their ad revenue to reforestation projects, having planted over 200 million trees across biodiversity hotspots while providing complete financial transparency.
- Capital Institute is developing new frameworks like Regenerative Economics and their “8 Principles of Regenerative Vitality” to shift financial systems from extraction to regeneration.
At Zebra Growth, we’re creating spaces for this exploration through our Regenerative Marketing Playgrounds, which are informal fireside chats where we gather to share insights and practices. If these principles resonate with you, we also invite you to join our mailing list to be notified when our next course becomes available, where we’ll help you apply these principles and create marketing that feels aligned, effective, and regenerative.
