The Water Conservation Collaboration Project (WCCP) aims to investigate how advertising and technology can shift perceptions of water scarcity and change short- and long-term water usage behavior.
Over the past three years, prolonged drought has become a serious threat to California. Although there have been some substantial short-run reductions in residential water consumption, maintaining those reductions for the long-term and convincing those who have not yet reduced consumption remain a priority. PhD student Kristina Brecko and Professor Wes Hartmann are conducting a research project to address this challenge.
We aim to:
- Measure changing beliefs about water scarcity
- Introduce and encourage adoption of environmentally friendly products
- Change long-run water usage behavior
To achieve these, we will:
- Use a sequence of messages delivered by social media to educate individuals about the severity and persistence of drought in California
- Employ a recently marketed water management tool to drive them to act in line with water conservation efforts
- Use social media tracking and post-advertisement surveys to track their reported beliefs and intentions over time
Public–Private Partnerships Addressing Water Conservation
Our experiment will also serve as a pilot study to illustrate the positive benefits of collaboration between water agencies, both public and private, and the use of water management tools.
In the long term, we hope to:
- Establish a platform where all companies can benefit from water conservation campaigns
- Find the campaign most effective at changing opinions, an insight that will help water conservation agencies plan future media campaigns
Interested in Participating?
We invite participation from both public and private companies and agencies involved in water conservation and management.
Collaboration between water conservation agencies and companies developing water saving technologies has the potential to:
- More effectively promote water conservation
- Elicit greater positive behavioral changes in water consumption
If you are interested in participating in the study, please fill out our contact form.