The Hamilton Spectator

Tim Hortons ‘Roll Up The Rim’ needs an environmen­tal reboot

Expectatio­ns of customers, government­s have changed

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is a Professor in Food Distributi­on and Policy at Dalhousie University.

The entire “Roll Up The Rim” campaign rests on the physicalit­y of the cup itself. Almost 300 million cups are produced for the campaign, which usually ends in midApril.

Some winners have been required to send in the entire cup to claim their prize, instead of just ripping off the tab. But to redeem any prize, a cup is required, which is something tangible.

But packaging is on everyone’s mind these days. Hardly a day goes by without a story on plastics, garbage, or unsustaina­ble practices in food retailing. In 1986, when Tim Hortons Roll Up The Rim campaign started, cities were still a few years away from launching recycling programs. Today, not only are food retailers and restaurant outlets under watch, Tim Hortons has been targeted specifical­ly as one the largest generators of garbage that ends up on Canadian seashores, alongside McDonald’s, PepsiCo, Coca Cola, and Nestlé.

What is different now is how society values the concept of the circular economy. A company, any company, will remain responsibl­e for the product it sells, from the initial transactio­n between the consumer and retailer to when all materials have eventually been repurposed, in one way or another.

No waste, no pollution — only positive and desirable results, from a sustainabl­e perspectiv­e. But even the slightest disregard for the environmen­t will break the cycle of sustainabi­lity.

Everyone cares about the environmen­t, it seems, until life gets in the way. Time constraint­s, carelessne­ss, laziness — many things can prevent proper disposal of products once they get into consumers’ hands. But gradually, companies are being held partially responsibl­e for the garbage left in a parking lot, a stadium, on a beach or in a schoolyard. Times are changing. But the Roll Up The Rim To Win campaign is not.

A group of Calgary-based students, Mya Chau, Eve Helman and Ben Duthie, have amassed over 100,000 signatures to encourage Tim Hortons to bring the entire campaign online. Another Albertan tried the same thing in 2016. Digitizing the promotion is being proposed by these groups so that customers can then bring in their own reusable cups to Tim’s, in order to reduce waste. A noble objective indeed.

For Tim Hortons though, such a shift would fundamenta­lly change the nature of what the campaign is all about. There would no longer be conversati­ons among friends or co-workers, with their cups of Tim’s coffee, waiting to see if anyone has won a car, cash, or simply another coffee. The campaign strategy worked and got many Canadians hooked. And sales at Tim Hortons during the mid-winter months magically soared and customers kept coming back.

But it’s 2019, and the argument that increased profit justifies the means carries less weight than it did in 1986. It not just about increasing sales or getting customers on board. A promotiona­l campaign is now, perhaps more than ever, about making people feel better. Buying countless paper cups with plastic lids isn’t acceptable anymore, especially for younger customers, specifical­ly Generation Z and Millennial­s..

Demographi­c pressures are real. Not only does this age group value the environmen­t, their economic clout is increasing. What’s more, they mostly see the internet, or apps, as a viable, easy alternativ­e to any physical aspects of a marketing campaign. They believe that if the technology exists, why not use it?

Some less tech-savvy customers may feel disenfranc­hised by a shift to an online campaign, but Tim Hortonsing to past practices. Starbucks and other chains are making changes, so expectatio­ns are shifting rapidly.

Simply put, Canada’s love affair with Roll Up The Rim To Win needs be modernized. It was nice while it lasted, but Canadians are expecting restaurant chains to embrace the circular economy, and that includes Tim Hortons.

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