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<h1>Whole Foods, Walmart, Target viewed as ‘most transparent’</h1>
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<div class="field field-name-field-penton-content-summary field-type-text-long field-label-hidden">Hartman Group sustainability research cites consumers’ desire for information</div>
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<p class="author-and-date"><a href="http://www.supermarketnews.com/author/Mark-Hamstra">Mark Hamstra 1</a> | <span class="date-display-single">Nov 07, 2017</span></p>
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<p>Whole Foods Market, Walmart and Target are among the companies that consumers consider to be the most transparent about their business practices, according to research from The Hartman Group.</p>
<p>The Bellevue, Wash.-based consulting firm found that nearly 70% of the 1,500 U.S. adult consumers surveyed expressed a desire for more transparency from companies about their sustainability practices. The results are included in the firm’s Sustainability 2017: Connecting Benefits With Values Through Purposeful Consumption report.</p>
<p>“Consumers associate transparency with how authentically committed a company is to ethical action,” said Laurie Demeritt, CEO of The Hartman Group. “Transparency … is a way for companies to reveal details about production and sourcing that enable consumers to find higher quality distinctions otherwise concealed in conventionally marketed branded commodities.”</p>
<p>Consumers evaluate a company’s transparency in terms of access to its values, policies and practices, and the openness of communication between a company and its customers, according to The Hartman Group.</p>
<p>In addition to Whole Foods and Walmart, other companies that consumers cited as being transparent included Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Chick-fil-A, Amazon, Apple, Google and Microsoft.</p>
<p>While transparency alone is rarely a primary driver of purchase, The Hartman Group said, it can “potentially settle a competitive draw” among otherwise similar products.</p>
<p>Among other findings in the report:</p>
<p>• 87% of adult consumers said that sustainability-related concerns impact their values, attitudes and actions in at least some measure;<br />
• Boomers link sustainability more strongly with environmentalism, while Millennials are more likely to see it through the lens of personal responsibility, and see attributes such as organic and all-natural as relating to both sustainability and quality;<br />
• More consumers seek out information about sustainability than in the past, and labor issues and environmental contamination have gained prominence; and<br />
• Consumers rely on retailers as arbiters of sustainability standards and curators of sustainable products.</p>
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