
Pen Written Post took Gold for Sustainable Communications at the International Corporate Social Responsibility Awards, recognising work in environmental responsibility, community impact, and ethical business practice. Part of that recognition came from something we’ve been doing quietly for a while: planting 2,400 trees a year through our Gift a Tree partnership, alongside a broader shift toward more considered, lower-impact print materials.
But the award itself is not really the interesting part. The interesting part is what it represents.

The Idea That Sustainability and Effectiveness Don’t Have to Compete
There’s a quiet assumption in a lot of marketing that doing the right thing environmentally means accepting a worse result. Greener paper, the thinking goes, must mean a cheaper-looking finish. More responsible production must mean less commercial impact.
We’ve never believed that, and this award is a reasonably good piece of evidence that we were right not to.
“For a Northampton business to be recognised on an international stage is incredibly rewarding,” says Daniella Paolozzi, founder of Pen Written Post. “We’ve always believed organisations shouldn’t have to choose between effective communication and environmental responsibility. This award demonstrates that businesses can achieve strong marketing results while reducing their environmental footprint.”
In practice, that means materials most people have never considered for direct mail: recycled paper, cotton, rag, seed paper, and even paper made from cannabis fibre. Not because it’s a novelty (though, fair enough, it raises an eyebrow or two), but because it reduces waste without making the finished piece feel like a compromise.

Why This Matters More Than a “We Care About the Planet” Statement
Here’s the thing about sustainability claims: most of them are background noise at this point. Every company says it cares. Fewer can point to what that actually looks like.
“By showing your customers that you care about sustainable practices, you are demonstrating the type of company that you are,” Daniella explains. “More and more people are choosing to do business with companies that genuinely care, and this is a great way to do that alongside other initiatives that support people, our communities, our customers and the planet.”
Beyond the materials, that includes ongoing support for Cancer Research UK, Gift a Tree and TreeSisters, an organisation focused on women-led reforestation and ecosystem restoration. Not because it looks good on an About page (though, again, here we are, writing about it on a blog), but because it’s part of how the business actually operates.

The Bit That’s Easy to Miss
Here’s where it gets more interesting than “local business wins award.”
Pen Written Post doesn’t stop at sustainable print. It combines that with handwritten direct mail, which is, on its own, a slightly unusual thing to be proud of in 2026.
In a world increasingly filled with polished, AI-generated content that nobody asked for and fewer people read, handwriting does something most digital communication has stopped doing. It signals that someone actually thought about the person receiving it. Not a segment. Not a list. A person.
That distinction matters more now than it used to. We’re in something close to a trust recession, where people are exhausted by communication that feels automated, generic, or designed to extract something from them. The businesses cutting through aren’t the loudest ones. They’re the ones that demonstrably show they’ve made an effort.
Combine that with materials that are genuinely better for the planet, and you get something that’s eco-conscious and emotionally intelligent at the same time. Sustainable communication with a pulse, if you like. (We do. We say it a lot.)

What’s Next
This award isn’t the finish line. If anything, it’s confirmation that the direction is right, which means doing more of it.
We’re expanding the environmental initiatives, continuing the tree planting, and working with more organisations to help them communicate in a way that’s better for their audience, better for their community, and better for the planet, without sacrificing the results that actually matter to a business.
Standing in St Paul’s Cathedral holding a gold award felt like a strange place for a Northampton direct mail company to end up. But it’s also a useful reminder that doing things properly, even quietly, eventually gets noticed.
Get in touch: daniella@penwrittenpost.co.uk

