Aspiration risks its reputation by not living up to its green marketing

OSTN Staff

  • A ProPublica investigation finds Aspiration’s legal disclosures don’t match its green marketing.
  • The gaps between Aspiration’s marketing and the reality should be a wakeup call for other banks. 
  • Insider Intelligence publishes hundreds of research reports, charts, and forecasts on the Banking industry. Learn more about becoming a client.

The news: Socially conscious neobank Aspiration’s environmental track record is not as sweeping as the company has presented it, according to an investigative story from ProPublica. The publication cites discrepancies between the US challenger’s marketing and its legal disclosures.

US Neobank Account Holders by Company

An overview of the mismatches: Aspiration’s disclosed metrics fall short of how it’s described in its marketing materials:

  • It has a planting program called Plant Your Change, which lets credit and debit-card customers round purchases up to the closest dollar, with funds set aside for tree plantings.
  • The neobank has said that it planted 35 million trees over a 12-month period. But a footnote in a company document shows that this number includes commitments to plant trees in the future.
  • Aspiration told ProPublica that the actual figure for existing plantings is 12 million, while an organization it partners with, Eden Reforestation Projects, pegged it at 16 million.
  • The company keeps some of the proceeds from its program to fund marketing and third-party vendor fees.
  • A disclaimer at the bottom of the program’s website shows that it entails a service fee ranging from $0.01 to $0.99. However, ProPublica reported that the typical tree planting cost is $0.10 each.
  • Co-founder and CEO Andrei Cherny, in a statement to ProPublica, defended keeping part of the program’s proceeds, stating that the cost of running the program is more than just the actual tree plantings.
  • Its Redwood mutual fund is marketed as being fossil-fuel “free,” but its portfolio includes shares in companies that are heavy users or work in the fossil-fuel industry. Cherny pointed to Redwood’s A grade from As You Sow, which does ESG grading—but ProPublica reports the grading organization doesn’t include industries that use large amounts of fossil fuels.

The big takeaway: The gaps between Aspiration’s marketing of its ESG practices and the reality should serve as a wakeup call for other banking players that position themselves as ESG-friendly. To build and retain consumers’ trust, banks need to back up their high-minded marketing with transparency about the actual results—or at least stick to honestly highlighting their relatively modest measures.

The adverse publicity Aspiration has received serves as a cautionary note for banking players that unveiled their own climate initiatives this month:

  • Monzo, which said it wants to reach net-zero emissions by 2030.
  • Starling, which revealed a 2030 goal for its one-third emissions cut, and with a net-zero year to be determined.
  • U.S. Bank, which announced a 2025 goal for sourcing 100% renewable energy and a 2050 net-zero emissions date.

The discrepancies with Aspiration’s marketing and its actions could damage its reputation—it’s relying heavily on environmental consciousness as its primary differentiator from other neobanks—and lead disaffected customers to abandon it.

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