Of course you probably don't want to purposefully build software that is energy-_ineffecient_, but I think this really misses the point.
Productivity software in general should be considered energy-efficient, because no matter how much energy the program itself requires it's going to be orders of magnitude less than the real-world task it replaces. So what if your app requires an extra watt to retrieve and display that fancy document from the file server, if it means a person didn't have to get up and retrieve and actual real paper document from a filing cabinet. Now there's no energy expended in producing and delivering the paper (or the filing cabinet and office space to hold them both, for that matter).
Even eye-candy UI features can be energy efficient. Maybe your new flashy/pretty whizbang UI feature requires more cpu time, but if it helps someone complete a task in less time than it used to you'll still end up with a net savings. Or maybe it helped drive sales of the software in the first place, such that without the nice graphics people would be using inferior software and therefore less productive.
Using StackOverflow as an example, let's say it was built to be very energy inefficient, such that even simple searches require 4 times as much electricity as a comparable service. But if it saves you from spending an extra hour Googling those other sites it comes out to a net gain.
In other words, if you believe in you have a quality product, then you have an energy efficient product. It's much more important to focus on providing a good workflow that people will actually use.
