Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Apple Watch on product box.

    Wearables are coming and ITAD isn’t ready

    Certification Scorecard — Week of April 13, 2026

    EV Battery Pack - Sergii Chernov-Shutterstock

    Redwood, Rivian deal fuels US infrastructure plans

    Bloom ESG and e-Stewards roll out critical metals metric

    Colorado regulators suggest mid-range EPR scenario

    Why collaboration on plastic waste still matters

    Battery recycler Ascend Elements files for bankruptcy

    Battery recycler Ascend Elements files for bankruptcy

    EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

    EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

    Wolframite ore, the primary ore of tungsten from Altai, Russia

    Tungsten scrap export controls draw industry attention

    Certification Scorecard — Week of April 6, 2026

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    Apple Watch on product box.

    Wearables are coming and ITAD isn’t ready

    Certification Scorecard — Week of April 13, 2026

    EV Battery Pack - Sergii Chernov-Shutterstock

    Redwood, Rivian deal fuels US infrastructure plans

    Bloom ESG and e-Stewards roll out critical metals metric

    Colorado regulators suggest mid-range EPR scenario

    Why collaboration on plastic waste still matters

    Battery recycler Ascend Elements files for bankruptcy

    Battery recycler Ascend Elements files for bankruptcy

    EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

    EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

    Wolframite ore, the primary ore of tungsten from Altai, Russia

    Tungsten scrap export controls draw industry attention

    Certification Scorecard — Week of April 6, 2026

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Analysis Opinion

In My Opinion: The untapped potential of digital outreach

byEmily Coven
May 9, 2017
in Opinion

Numerous studies in 2016 pointed to the need for better recycling outreach. And though some allege that flat recycling rates are a sign that outreach has reached its peak, I would argue that it’s simply time to change the way we play the outreach game.

More than 50 percent of residents say they turn to the internet when they need recycling information, according to a recent Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI) survey. It seems odd, then, that over half of the municipalities we’ve evaluated are not following basic best practices when it comes to providing information online.

The bulk of digital outreach that we have seen in the municipal recycling sphere is stuck in the 1990s – lengthy pages of text with no headings and few images, buried deep in city websites – or doesn’t exist all. Can we really say that outreach has peaked when the potential of digital outreach is only beginning to be realized?

The first outreach tool we launched at Recyclist is a Public Education Platform, a fully localizable website for recycling programs. It has a searchable guide with information on how to reduce, reuse and recycle over 250 items, as well as collection reminders, e-newsletters and pages for residents and businesses on topics such as composting, recycling at work and where you can donate goods in your community.

Now that our Public Education Platform has been live for a full year, our sites’ metrics are beginning to show us how people access online recycling information and what information they’re most interested in. Although some aspects of the data are bound to change over time, the analytics give us important insight into how digital outreach can be done correctly. Here is some of what we learned in our first year:

Mobile traffic is significant

All of the municipal recycling program websites on the Recyclist platform receive more visits from users on mobile devices (phones or tablets) than on desktop devices (computers or laptops). On some sites, we see up to 70 percent of visitors coming from mobile devices. On all sites, the vast majority of mobile users are on phones, not tablets.

If you have a website that looks fine on a computer, but requires mobile users to do the two-finger zoom to see anything, it’s simply not enough. You don’t need a mobile app, but the recycling information on your website must be mobile accessible. Otherwise, you are effectively closing the door on as many as 7 of every 10 members of your community.

Search results matter

Organic search traffic (i.e., visitors who arrive via Google, Yahoo or Bing) accounts for nearly 60 percent of traffic to Recyclist websites. If your information is not search-engine optimized, you’re again missing out on not just a handful of individuals but potentially more than half of your audience.

We frequently see two trends in outreach delivery that fly directly in the face of search engine best practices. One is publishing recycling information in PDFs. While search engines can technically index PDFs, actual web pages outperform PDFs in search results by a country mile (not to mention that the PDF is a wildly frustrating format for all those mobile users).

The other trend we see is publishing recycling program information on a page that’s buried many clicks down in a city website. When a page is hard to navigate to, search engines see that page as unimportant, and it accordingly ranks lower in search results. If you’re publishing information on a city website, the website structure may be beyond your control. This is one of the many reasons we are big proponents of standalone recycling outreach websites, such as StocktonRecycles.com.

Long-term commitment pays off

Established websites have a big advantage in terms of traffic, due to both brand recognition and higher ranking in search results. For instance, when we launched a municipal website at a web address that had already been in use for several years, that site received four page views per household in its first year. Your website and branding can serve as the foundation for all of your outreach efforts. By picking a brand and web address now and consistently promoting it on all of your marketing materials you will reap compounding benefits year after year.

Recycling guides are key

More than half of our aggregate traffic goes to our websites’ Recycling Guide pages. This is clearly the information that residents are looking for first and foremost, so we recommend that cities focus most of their energy on creating a quality recycling guide. Your guide can also act as a gateway to providing more education. That’s why in our guides, we offer not just the basic information on what goes in which bin, but also simple, actionable tips on how to reduce and reuse, and why source reduction matters.

We are seeing only the beginning of what digital outreach can do for recycling programs. If we say that the effectiveness of educating the public has maxed out, and we stop trying to do better, then that will become a self-fulfilling prophecy. But if we capitalize on the strengths of what current digital communications tools have to offer, I predict we will find that outreach still has a vast untapped potential to help us kickstart forward momentum and leave the current plateau behind. Effectively engaging the inhabitants of our digital world demands high-quality digital outreach. It’s time for the recycling and solid waste industry to step up to the challenge.

 

Emily Coven is the founder of Recyclist, a green technology company that builds cloud-based solutions to make solid waste program management easy. She can be reached at [email protected].

 

Call 2 Recycle

 

The views and opinions expressed are those of the author and do not imply endorsement by Resource Recycling, Inc. If you have a subject you wish to cover in an op-ed, please send a short proposal to [email protected] for consideration.

TweetShare
Emily Coven

Emily Coven

Related Posts

Data erasure firm expands wearable device capabilities

Apple hits 30% recycled content, debuts new recovery tech

byStefanie Valentic
April 17, 2026

Apple hit a record 30% recycled content across all 2025 products while debuting two new recovery technologies it's now sharing...

COM2 joins TERRA network as solar recycling expands 

byScott Snowden
April 17, 2026

TERRA has added COM2 Recycling Solutions to its certified network, widening its reach in solar panel, plastics, CRT glass and...

CPG Henkel raises PCR targets for 2030

byAntoinette Smith
April 16, 2026

Despite falling slightly short of 2025 goals, the Germany-based consumer brand aims to increase the share of recycled plastic in...

AI surge, dealmaking reshape  ITAD industry 

byScott Snowden
April 16, 2026

ITAD industry representatives spoke at the ReMA conference in Las Vegas about how AI tools, data center demand and consolidation...

Apple Watch on product box.

Wearables are coming and ITAD isn’t ready

byDavid Daoud
April 16, 2026

Wearable devices provide unique challenges at end of life.

Recycling Partnership CEO stepping down

byStefanie Valentic
April 15, 2026

Outgoing CEO Keefe Harrison will remain until August with the organization she built from the ground up.

Load More
Next Post

In other news: May 10, 2017

Leading the Charge in Safe Battery Recycling
Sponsored

Leading the Charge in Safe Battery Recycling

byThe Battery Network
April 13, 2026

We’re connecting people, brands, and communities through one nationwide network built to make battery recycling safer, simpler, and more accessible...

Read moreDetails

More Posts

Recycling Partnership CEO stepping down

April 15, 2026
Battery recycler Ascend Elements files for bankruptcy

Battery recycler Ascend Elements files for bankruptcy

April 13, 2026
EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

April 10, 2026
Industry group: Help us find the plastic bale volumes we need

PET bales sink further as other grades firm 

April 15, 2026

WM opens new $60m MRF in Indy

April 10, 2026

GFL acquires SECURE Waste for $6.4bn

April 13, 2026

Bloom ESG and e-Stewards roll out critical metals metric

April 15, 2026
Colorado regulators suggest mid-range EPR scenario

Why collaboration on plastic waste still matters

April 13, 2026
Solarcycle starts up Georgia recycling plant

S3399 signals a shift in how states are tackling solar panel waste

April 6, 2026

Matium raises $8m, adds buyer financing

April 14, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.