Permaculture principle two is catch and store energy — here’s how it can be used as a practical thinking tool to guide more ethical marketing and business decision-making.
This is Part 3 of a 13-part series: How to Use the 12 Permaculture Principles in Business and Marketing. If you’re new to the principles, start here. Or, you can view the full series here.

What ‘catch and story energy’ means
While the permaculture principles were originally developed to guide the design of farms and gardens, they’re actually universally applicable. Let’s look at the traditional definition, then reimagine what ‘observe and interact’ means for ethical business and marketing.
Land-based definition
Harvest resources such as homegrown veggies, rainwater and solar energy when seasonally abundant, and store them well for later use during times of scarcity.
Marketing definition
Stockpile ideas, trust and financial buffers within longer-term structures and systems that can support your business and marketing during leaner times.
Proverb
Make hay while the sun shines — reminding us to take advantage of opportunities as they arise, as they may only be available for a limited time.
Translating this principle to marketing
Marketing and business become more stable and sustainable when we remember to capture and save some of today’s abundance for future needs.
Without this, we become dependent on constant effort and ideal conditions just to survive — a pattern that’s fragile in both ecosystems and businesses. Because circumstances can change, and resources that are abundant today may become scarce tomorrow.
We also need to be cautious about over-reliance on debt.
“This principle stresses the importance of not running a business on a constant high-speed cash throughput with little or no capital reserves. It highlights the perilous lack of resilience in the just-in-time supply approach,” Rob Hopkins writes.
‘Catch and store energy’ encourages us to shift away from right-now thinking and perpetual hustle toward long-term asset building that continues to work over time.
This supports resilience, meaning you’re less likely to panic and throw your values out the window for a quick buck to cover a leaner season.
A key focus is storing energy in forms that degrade slowly, meaning they require minimal ongoing input to remain valuable.
In a marketing context, this might mean packaging your best ideas and insights into a repeatable offer and framework that you can use again and again when supporting your clients and community.
Or, building a strong email list, which is somewhat inexpensive to maintain and doesn’t require you to be constantly “on” like social platforms.
How to apply ‘catch and store energy’ in marketing
‘Energy’ in marketing comes in many forms — skills, money, relationships, structures — all of which you can ‘capture and store’ as long-term assets for your business.
Human energy:
- Your knowledge, expertise, skills and lived experience
- Kindness, care and generosity with other people (stored as trust, goodwill, reputation)
- Community and local networks you’re part of
- Word-of-mouth and advocacy
- Your community’s willingness to learn, participate or buy from you
- Customer case studies, testimonials and social proof
Financial energy:
- Savings and financial buffers
- Ethical investments and co-operatives
Systems and structural energy:
- Your ideas and insights, articulated in reusable frameworks
- A well-designed and maintained website
- Evergreen content (blogs, videos, workshops, resources)
- Email addresses stored in a central place
- Marketing funnels and pathways (as long as they’re ethical, not pushy)
- Automations (email sequences, booking systems, onboarding)
- Clear processes, workflows, templates and checklists
What permaculture thinkers say about this principle
“In a time of rapid change and short-term thinking, we need to rebuild the aspect of our culture that emphasises caring for the future.” — David Holmgren, Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability
“The goal of permaculture is not only to recycle and therefore increase energy, but also to catch, store and use everything before it has degraded to its lowest energy use and so is lost to us forever.” — Bill Mollison, Introduction to Permaculture
Other closely connected principles
The 12 permaculture principles work best as a set of interconnected design prompts.
Each offers a different lens, and the combination creates depth, balance and a tempering effect — the holistic approach at the heart of systems thinking.
For example, ‘catch and store energy’ is closely related to:
- Principle 6, ‘produce no waste’, which encourages us to reframe “waste” as a resource not properly utilised; therefore, a form of energy that could be reused or stored.
- Principle 9, ‘use small and slow solutions’, because storing energy, such as financial buffers or customer goodwill, is often a gradual, incremental process.
Ready for the next principle? Explore the full series here.
And a quick side note: this series is adapted from a lesson from inside my Permaculture Marketing course, in case you’d like to go deeper.



