Sürdürülebilirlik / Kurumsal Sosyal Sorumluluk için üzerinde mutabakata varılmış net bir tanım henüz yoktur.
UNSDG United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (BM Sürdürülebilir Kalkınma Hedefleri) 17 hedefiyle WEF World Economic Forum (Dünya Ekonomik Forum) 13 en ciddi küresel risk tanımı birbirleriyle uyumludur.
Sürdürülebilirliğin izlenmesinde en yaygın yöntem denetimlerdir. Ancak denetçilerin yetersiz olması veya markaların bütçelendirirken zorladığı fiyatlar nedeniyle denetim etkinliği düşüktür.
ISO serilerinde fark edilen "hileli raporlama" eğiliminin diğer denetim programlarında da rastlanması riski vardır. Kimi zaman sürdürülebilir aktivetinin kendisi yerine bunun denetimi - raporlaması ön plana çıkmaktadır.
Çabaların istenen etkiyi yaratabilmesi için Tedarik (Değer) Zinciri boyunca uygulanması gerekir. Ancak Satılan Malın Maliyeti içindeki İşçilik - Hammadde - genel gider kalemlerinin tamamı Sürdürülebilirlik maliyetlerinden etkilenir. Ancak markalar bu maliyetleri karşılamadıkları gibi fiyat baskısına devam ederler. Bu tedarikçileri ikileme sokan bir gerçekliktir.
Tüketicilerin ve markaların tedarik zincirinin devamında sürdürülebilirlik açısından pozitif ayrımcılık yapması süreci güçlendirecektir.
Sürdürülebilirliğin yarattığı katma değerin alışılmış finansal raporlama (GAAP, Tek Düzen Hesap Planı) içerisinde gösterilmesi çok güçtür. Dolayısıyla firmanın esas stratejisiyle birleştirilmediği sürece sürdürülebilirlik çabaları güdük kalacaktır. Müşterilerin ticari anlamda pozitif ayrımcılığı önemlidir.
Müşterilere anlatılan Değer Önermesi içinde sürdürülebilirlik ruhu olmalıdır, Yapılandırılmış bir sunum (belki ön maliyete sürdürülebilirlik katkı payının eklenmesi) müşterinin gezegen için iyi olanı seçmesini kolaylaştırabilir.
"Sürdürülebilirlik" kavramının tüketicideki yansıması maalesef her zaman olumlu değildir, kimi hallerde "istenen fonksiyonunu sürdürülebilirlik uğruna kısmen yerine getiremeyecek" olarak yorumlanmaktadır. Bu dayanıklılık, çeşitlilik, fiyat, estetik vb çeşitli şekillerde düşünülebilir.
2016 daki bir çalışmada katılan CEO ların sadece %2 si sürdürülebilirlik çabasından olumlu finansal dönüş aldıklarını söylemiştir. Her firmanın yapısı farklıdır ancak sürdürülebilirlik çabasının beklenen etkinliğe ulaşabilmesi için organizasyonda CEO ya yakın konumlanması ve liderin organizasyonda kabul görmüş-operasyon kökenli-iletişim becerili seçilmesi önemlidir. Çabanın içeriği firmanın bugün-yarın durumuna ve ticari etkinliğine göre belirlenmelidir. Başkalarının yaptıklarını yapmak zorunda değiliz.
* Yeni nesil tahminsiz dinamik stok yönetimiyle stokları azaltarak bulunurluk sağlayın. * Gününde teslim edin. * Nakit akışınızı iyileştirin. * SCAI>TECH.
22 Aralık 2019 Pazar
amazon highlights: Killing Sustainability / Lawrence M. Heim / 2018
This book is
about sustainability failures and obstacles, their origin and avoiding them. McKinsey
& Co.’s 2017 study on sustainability indicated that the top five
sustainability topics today are social issues rather than environmental
matters.
Key point: There is no consensus, clear and actionable definition of
sustainability/CSR.
In September
2015, the United Nations announced the adoption of the Sustainable Development
Goals, or SDGs. The UN SDGs are certainly a credible source for defining
sustainability/CSR but at a practical business level, the SDGs may be
overwhelming. The World Economic Forum (WEF) published its 10th Annual Global
Risks Report. Eight of the 17 SDGs correlate to the WEF’s risks and risk-trend
interconnections, and conversely eight of the WEF’s 13 most significant global
risk trends had a corresponding SDG.
Key point: One way to begin changing the perception of sustainability is to stop
using the word.
It is a
direct reflection of the book’s intent - end the old discourse on
sustainability/CSR and use new tools/approaches to help create new
conversations.
Key point: Like a hereditary disease passed on to next generations of management,
contempt about environmental regulations continues to be entrenched in
corporate culture.
Not every
environmental compliance professional or engineer was (or is) suited for auditing.
An auditor’s particular set of skills includes natural skepticism,
perseverance, curiosity and the ability to remain objective in assessing facts,
applying rules and communicating issues. Today, environmental, health and
safety (EHS) auditing is a mature, well-established profession that has proven
to be highly effective. The ISO 14000 series of voluntary environmental
management and certification standards focused on policies and management
rather than on performance or outcome.
Key point: ISO is still seen by many to be a distraction, with companies generally
more interested in hanging a certificate in their lobby than the actual outcome
of the EMS.
In order to
issue an ISO 14001 certification, the auditor did not have to consider the
effectiveness of the management system. Rather, the auditor was to assess
whether the system contains the elements required of the standard,
documentation supporting that, and to some extent whether programs were
implemented.
Key point: Assessing the mere presence of procedures is not the same as evaluating
the content, adequacy or effectiveness of those procedures.
Key point: A manufacturer’s influence - and corporate sustainability/CSR - extends
backwards into a company’s supply chain and forward to a product’s disposal or
recycling.
Any one
supply chain link can choose to change business practices and improve lives. Such
changes can also disrupt the business model, pricing and competitive position
of both parties, creating a powerful opposing force. Approximately 50% of many
companies’ costs are the cost of goods sold (COGS) - that is, the price paid
for the labor required to make the product, the direct materials used to make
the product, and overhead charges necessary for making the product. Sustainability/CSR initiatives can mean increases in all
three cost elements.
Key point: Today’s manufacturing business model presents the sustainability/CSR
professionals’ biggest challenge. Manufacturers have minimal influence beyond
their direct suppliers and supply chain initiatives. Imposing
sustainability/CSR requirements on suppliers can increase COGS.
Key point: A manufacturer can impose contractual requirements onto their direct
suppliers, but they must rely on those suppliers to then push
requirements/initiatives down further.
Things and Stuff Used in Other
Things and Stuff
Key point: The more things and stuff that are made, the more other things and
stuff are required - meaning the manufacturer at the end of the line has to
invest in understanding and managing supply chain sustainability/CSR.
Things and Stuff Used Indirectly
Key point: Indirect materials are a component of COGS for manufacturers and their
suppliers, and therefore, are not excluded from cost pressure.
Sustainability/CSR initiated changes may again impact costs, so resistance is
to be expected.
Things and Stuff Discarded
Just because technology exists to
recycle materials does not mean recycling actually occurs. No alternative has
yet been identified to effectively manage the volume of materials previously
sent to China. The enlightened way to manage back-end impacts of disposal is to
address them in the beginning - designing products to extend their useful life,
minimize hazardous chemical content and reduce post-use recycling burdens. Design
for the Environment (DfE) was an initiative US EPA started in the 1990s,
primarily in the technology industry.
Key point: Current expectations are that manufacturers maintain some level of
responsibility through the end of a product’s useful life.
Corporate
procurement guidelines sometimes give preferential consideration to products
that are sustainable or socially responsible. “millennials” also seem committed
to the same buying preferences.
Key point: Consumption of things and stuff is what creates the need for the supply
chain in the first place. This burden can be recast into business opportunity.
Key point: Current CSR audit price points are a major driver of audit quality, or
lack thereof.
Key point: Brands and factories share blame for poor CSR audit quality because
they establish scopes, hire auditors and set market prices.
Anyone
committed to improving CSR audits procured on behalf of a company should
consider the following: * Adjust expectations or pricing to match the quality
and scope of activities desired. * Explore the auditor(s) professional
qualifications. * Test the auditor(s) technical knowledge beyond checklists. * Find
out how much time the auditor(s) spend onsite, and on each audit activity. * Look
at audit report findings and cited evidence. * Determine how audit reports are
peer-reviewed, if at all. * Don’t get swayed by broad company or program
certifications such as ISO. Audit fatigue at facilities at all points in the
supply chain has become an epidemic. To fix problems, problems have to be
fixed, not simply found.
Key point: No audit is effective if audit findings are not addressed.
Sustainability
professionals have searched for a credible financial metric to quantify the
value of our efforts. Only 26% of those responding to McKinsey & Co.’s 2017
sustainability survey reported a positive financial impact of their
sustainability/CSR activities, and approximately 25% reported not knowing what
the financial impacts or benefits are at all. “Maximizing shareholder value” (MSV) has been a
corporate mantra for decades. MSV is really MEPW - Maximizing Executive
Personal Wealth. MSV fails for multiple reasons. Public shareholders do not invest in a corporation’s
productive capabilities. In theory, companies issue shares in exchange for
money to invest in growth. In reality according to Lazonick, “stock markets in
advanced countries have in fact been insignificant suppliers of capital to
corporations.”
Key point: In our zeal or a need to justify our existence in the context of
Maximizing Shareholder Value, sustainability/CSR practitioners overreach; our
biases turn into obstacles when we try to force a solution or valuation where
one may not exist, or is inappropriate - destroying credibility.
Key point: Linking sustainability/CSR to stock price may not the right approach.
Key point: In the US, traditional accounting and financial reporting measures have
become less valuable to investors. Non-GAAP financial disclosures are growing
in importance, meaning reported sustainability/CSR valuations should be
supported with credible processes, assumptions, and data.
Key point: The question must be asked if the intended audience understands what is
being said, and whether they are astute enough to realize what is not being
said.
from Albert
Einstein: “If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.” “The definition of genius is taking the
complex and making it simple.”
Key point: Use simple and jargon-free language when possible.
Key point: Sustainability generally remains the domain of big companies and
certain industries. Internal challenges to sustainability/CSR in smaller
companies are frequently greater than in large companies.
Key point: Countering Friedman’s position on sustainability involves developing a
sustainable product that is clearly aligned with the company’s traditional
offerings.
Key point: Rather than attacking a “company,” consumers and investors should try
to influence corporate managers by appealing to their personal sense of morals
and responsibilities.
Key point: Established thinking is difficult to alter because physical neural
pathways in the brain are not easily changed.
Key point: When discussing sustainability/CSR, we may unintentionally evoke frames
that undermine our ability to convince others of our position.
Key point: Behavior is frequently driven by the wording in instructions, guidance
or even naming products/services, whether intentional or not.
Thaler
describes choice architecture - the design of thoughtfully presenting
information choices or options “in a way that will make choosers better off, as
judged by themselves.” Wording of options and the way they are offered impacts
how people act and this behavior can be predicted. Choice architects influence
behavior by how they offer information and choices. This is what Thaler calls a
“nudge.” Choice architecture and nudging principles include minimizing and
focusing options, using careful wording to subtly influence behavior, and
formatting the presentation of options. Fundamentally, choice architecture is
about reducing cognitive effort and overload; making it easy to choose the
“right” choice.
Key point: When presenting options for consumers or executives, apply choice
architecture to reduce - or maximize - desired bias and behavior in the
outcome. In other words, nudge.
Key point: Public disclosure can be an effective nudge for initiating change
because executives wish to avoid being called out as a result of what is
disclosed.
Key point: Consumers may not follow through on behaviors they demonstrate in
market surveys or testing, so new products or marketing campaigns can be built
on false expectations.
Stoknes
points out that humans hate financial losses about two times more than they
like financial gains.
Key point: Presenting a sustainability/CSR opportunity in terms of avoiding a
risk/negative may be valuable because humans are psychologically biased to
avoid risk, but it may be better to frame the opportunity in positive terms.
Assess the best direction for a specific audience.
Stoknes
states “what we choose to purchase depends not only on price and technical
information, but even more on how the choice is presented.”
Key point: To resolve the tension of cognitive dissonance, people can choose to
change feelings or thoughts and continue their desired behavior.
Key point: Once thoughts or feelings are altered to justify existing behavior,
confirmation bias becomes another obstacle.
Key point: Framing sustainability appropriately to executives is a prerequisite to
communicating facts and nudging toward the desired outcome.
Key point: Maximizing short-term extra-normal profits resulting from
sustainability innovations may involve reducing transparency in order to
maintain the exclusivity of those innovations.
Key point: The internal perception of sustainability’s place in the org chart, its
leader and staff can predetermine a program’s success or failure.
A 2016 Bain
& Company study on organizational aspects of sustainability indicated that
only two percent of 300 companies surveyed actually achieved or exceeded the
sustainability goals those companies established for themselves. “dilution of value and mediocre performance”
in sustainability. The reasons for this failure boil down to two themes:
ineffective sustainability leadership and lack of convincing valuation of
sustainability programs/efforts.
Where?
Key point: If the program is seen as an important part of the company, the
pressure is on to retain that respect. Otherwise, time must be spent reframing
and building credibility before perception changes.
if the
C-suite takes a specific interest in sustainability/CSR, then it tends to
happen. Looking back at articles about sustainability/CSR success at major
brands, the C-suite is featured on a regular basis.
Who? (He’s on First)
Personality, technical skills,
business acumen, interpersonal skills and communication all factor into how a
leader is perceived by others and the judgments made about the leader.
Key point: Finding the right leader involves clearly defining what
sustainability/CSR means to the company, evaluating candidates against criteria
based on that definition and determining if/how gaps can be closed.
Changing
a long-embedded operating culture of “production first” is challenging. The
goal is to change long-established mindsets and behaviors of people whose
priorities typically center on production.
What? (Second base!)
Key point: If your background is a concern, tackle that perception by continually
reinforcing the present and future of sustainability/CSR initiatives in a
credible manner.
“short-termism.” This disease causes
executives to focus almost exclusively on quarterly financial performance
instead of establishing and managing toward long-term goals.
Key point: Executives have incentives to manage short-term financial performance
that can compromise long-term thinking. In these situations, the credibility of
the sustainability/CSR organization, leader and financial justification are
crucial, as is the ability to effectively frame the value.
Key point: To many executives, the word sustainability is a cue to stop listening
based on existing frames.
Key point: Building sustainability/CSR choice architecture that appropriately
balances executive points of view and new sustainability frames requires effort
and skill.
Identify where
sustainability initiatives may make sense within the company’s operating
context. Where a potential project is identified, discuss relevant business
benefits using the appropriate business words. Link initiatives to key buying
criteria or other customer requirements. Focus on real economic value created
and try to avoid couching value in terms of risk avoidance. Eliminate the
unnecessary barrier, artificial distinction and separation from business that
“sustainability” creates - don’t use the word until near the end of any
conversation: “Oh, and it’s a sustainability success, too.” Michelle Edkins of
BlackRock suggested using “language of long-term operational excellence …
innovation and adaptation and sustainable financial performance, the companies
tend to be very fluent and well-versed in those issues.”
Key point: Some sustainability squirrels are worth catching; others, perhaps not.
Sustainability practitioners should critically evaluate each and make the
determination.
Customers
understand customers’ key buying
criteria, how their perceptions of sustainability impact decisions and then
meet their needs.
CDP
CDP, formerly the Carbon Disclosure
Project, is a UK-based non-profit that has operated for 15 years. CDP is very
well known and is essentially the standard for reporting greenhouse gas
emissions. They also collect and track water use data.
Statement of Significant Audience
and Materiality
Yet in analyzing “hundreds of
quarterly analyst calls” over multiple years, not one analyst raised a question
about sustainability, CSR or ESG.
ESG Ratings and Investors
Environmental, social and governance
(ESG) ratings are essentially the terminology the investment community uses to
mean sustainability/CSR. investors view companies with good ESG performance as
having lower systemic risk and beta, therefore reducing the expected CoC. This,
according to MSCI, results in “higher company valuations.” Organizations have
differing opinions on ESG ratings and their importance. Make that assessment
before
Sustainability/CSR Reporting
Sustainability programs should focus
on implementation, not on the report. A company can have an excellent
sustainability program without reporting on it or may reflect it poorly in a report.
What tends to be more common is the opposite - a company publishes a beautiful
sustainability report aligned with a reporting framework, but the actual
program maturity and implementation differ meaningfully from what is
communicated in the report.
When
considering whether - or what - to report, think about the following:
&Why
does the company want to report? Is the company looking to improve its
reputation? Join a CSR index? Because competitors are reporting?
&Will
reporting have a negative impact? In certain circumstances, issuing a
sustainability/CSR report may weaken the company’s competitive position.
&Who is
the intended audience? Is the company most interested in engaging the public,
customers, investors or NGOs? Use the answer to define what and how to report.
&What
story should be told? Is the goal to communicate financial impact of
sustainability/CSR efforts, focus on specific matters or to tell a general
story?
&How
should it be told? Is the story most effectively communicated by using a
narrative, technical data or metrics? Should it follow a specific reporting
framework for standalone sustainability/CSR reports, or will it be integrated
into the financial report?
&Should it be audited/verified?
In the US, it is not common for sustainability/CSR reports to undergo an audit.
Doing so is voluntary, but may be considered worth the cost.
The G20's
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) released their
reporting recommendations in June 2017. TCFD recommendations involve reporting
on major themes of climate risk governance, strategy, risk management metrics
and targets. TCFD intends that climate disclosures be incorporated into
financial reports rather than in stand-alone sustainability/CSR reporting. But
the process of reporting can consume those involved, distracting from what is
really important. Some well-known global corporations have a surprisingly weak
reality behind their impressive looking reports.
Supply Chain/Supplier CSR
Evaluations
Auditing should not be considered
the end game. The goal is for identified deficiencies to be corrected and
eliminate environmental, social and safety risks. Supplier CSR audits can be
valuable if they are given due respect by buyers and executed professionally by
auditors.
In a perfect world,
sustainability and corporate social responsibility would be so deeply
integrated into company strategy, products and operations that it would not be
distinct or identifiable.
16 Aralık 2019 Pazartesi
amazon highlights: The Caring Economy: How To Win With CSR / Toby Usnik / 2018
The early
roots of CSR were more local, charitable, and almost quaint; however, today CSR
is global, strategic, and business critical. Thirty years into my CSR journey,
I see business winners advocating fiercely for compassion, inclusion, and
transparency in their operations. CSR – it is truly a journey not a
destination.
There is a
point at which a company's responsibilities to society are so deeply aligned
with its responsibilities to investors and employees that there is no
meaningful distinction between business strategy and CSR.
CSR strategy
at its best is essentially a public accounting of a company’s commitment to
“the triple-bottom-line” – its people, its profitability, and the planet. Did
we grow our people? Did we make money? Did we help or hurt the planet? This is
the “triple-bottom-line” measurement of genuine success. For such
purpose-driven organizations, CSR is the critical avenue through which each company’s
purpose gains expression.
The rising
consumer class of Millennials numbered 2 billion in 20172 according to the Pew
Charitable Trust, and as they consume, they are sharing their experiences,
learning from and supporting each other, and recognizing the fundamental
importance of empathy and responsibility. They form the foundation of the
Caring Economy and CSR is the essential channel for engaging them. The
Millennial generation (those born between roughly 1981 and 1997) now
constitutes the largest adult demographic in history, and numerous surveys show
Millennials have an overwhelming preference for employment at socially
responsible companies. They are also among the large majority of consumers who
say they are willing to pay more for sustainably produced goods and services.
As older generations have passed along, the percentage of consumers who prefer
sustainable goods has been climbing steadily.
For makers
of consumer products, CSR is a vital source of pricing power required for
maintaining profitability. A company that is socially responsible is a company
built for long-term sustainable success. Typically, sustainability goals for
organizations are broken into three broad categories of concern: environmental,
social, and governance, known as ESG.
Leaders of
the profitable corporations in the Caring Economy will be those who understand
that company stakeholders expect them to be socially responsible, transparent,
and accountable.
CSR ends when
everyone in the company exercises CSR reflexively each day because, for that
company, social responsibility is synonymous with fiscal responsibility and
sustainable long-term growth.
Great Brands
Are Purpose Driven
1.1. Seek mission alignment: the key to beginning and sustaining
your CSR effort is to set goals and objectives that are very strongly aligned
with the mission and business goals already embraced by the organization’s
leadership. these companies pursues CSR in ways that are highly relevant to its
industry, its customers, and their communities. The United Nations has a list
of 17 Sustainable Development Goals, known as SDGs.
1.2. Assess
Your Existing CSR for Quick Wins: Many companies that do not have CSR programs
nonetheless exercise social responsibility by other names, by sharing their
expertise on a philanthropic basis. One reliable resource to consult as you
begin is The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), an independent
international standards organization that helps businesses, governments, and
other organizations take stock of their CSR impact. A second resource tailored
for investors is the Sustainability Accounting Standards
Board (SASB), a U.S.-based non-profit that develops and promotes
accounting standards for sustainability, much like FASB (the Financial
Accounting Standards Board) promotes accounting principles for financial
reporting.
1.3. Make
your SWOT Analysis: Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. Another very practical way to shake out
your short-term triple-bottom-line points of emphasis is to undertake a
standard SWOT analysis: strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. Which
items represent your company’s strengths, where brand alignment might make a
powerful statement? Think of Intel’s use of its technology to empower more
people to innovate and harnessing its data to address society’s most complex
issues – from climate change to energy efficiency to economic empowerment and
human rights.
Which items
represent some of your company’s weaknesses and vulnerabilities, where
attention needs to be paid to avoid potential problems with customers and other
stakeholders?
Which items
represent clear opportunities, where positive action is most likely to attract
employee engagement, leverage the capabilities of company suppliers, and
attract strategic partners outside the organization?
Which items
represent areas of threat to the organization, where a lack of CSR attention in
a particular area might put the company at a serious competitive disadvantage?
1.4. Go on a
listening tour: when it
comes to CSR, “Management never knows what it wants but will like what you
get.” Building a CSR platform involves a mix of “tenacity and finesse” says
Andrea Sullivan. People want to be engaged but you need to find what resonates
for them.
1.5. Define
your terms. My advice
then and now has always been to get out on the table the various concepts that
CSR may connote for colleagues, and never assume that everyone sees CSR the
same way.
1.6. Create
a CSR culture
CSR Beginner’s Checklist
Mission
Alignment: Get support
from the top. Set your initial goals and objectives so they are strongly
aligned with the mission and business goals already embraced by the
organization’s leadership.
Quick Wins: Pick the low-hanging fruit.
Identify existing efforts and fold them into your CSR story.
SWOT
Analysis: Plan your
efforts based on your analysis of your organization’s strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities, and threats.
Term
Definitions: From the
start, get out on the table the various concepts that CSR may connote for
colleagues, and never assume that everyone sees CSR the same way.
Listening
Tour: Test market
your thoughts with colleagues and listen for feedback and fresh perspectives.
All this early research and analysis will pay off later when you need to make a
case for CSR funding and other resources with your organization’s top
decision-makers.
Company
Culture: Seek CSR
opportunities that are best aligned with the company’s culture and can
contribute to strengthening it. Look for socially responsible initiatives that
express your organization’s agreed-upon brand values.
Building
your CSR Platform
LEGO’s
distinction as the world’s most powerful brand. Company’s mission through three
ambitious ESG objectives. These three ESG objectives gave birth to a series of
strategic initiatives. These initiatives have been crucial in LEGO’s turnaround
by integrating CSR directly into its business operations. You and your company
can take a page of the LEGO playbook by working to interpret your company’s
mission statement and business goals through a similar CSR lens.
2.1.
Building consensus and Support: Sierra Club implemented sustainability program can
contribute three major strategies to an organization: “a bottom-line strategy
to save costs, a top-line strategy to reach a new consumer base, and a talent
strategy to get, keep, and develop creative employees.” Your CSR program follow
four keys of branding success, as outlined by the Interbrand consulting group:
clarity, commitment, responsiveness, and governance. Be clear about what CSR
means for your organization. As the CSR platform launches and develops, you
will need to remain in campaign mode, always reaching out, creating new
initiatives, and delivering updates to attract still more momentum for CSR. Demonstrate
and communicate your commitment. Simply Googling “CSR Resources” will provide
you with some of the most current and frequented sources. Make responsiveness a
top priority. Nurture support from the top of the organization. Keep your top
contacts in the company informed, involved and consulted. When company
leadership is missing, it is too easy for CSR to take on the aura of a “nice to
have” exercise, and not the mission-critical, brand-building, employee-morale
boosting enterprise that it can be.
2.2.
Strategy execution: Support
existing activities. Start small and allow colleagues to pick up your tune. Put
your money where your mouth is.
2.3. The
power of networking with CSR colleagues: The professional listening tour. Start your own CSR
association. Convene and Connect
3.1.
Employees – The Bullseye: Particularly among younger employees, there is a belief that CSR is
something the employer should provide, no different than any other item in
their benefits package. It is good for team building, fostering a shared sense
of purpose and overall morale. At its best, CSR makes a difference, and in
doing so, makes employees feel better about themselves, their colleagues and
their employer. In everything you do, using social media platforms from
Facebook to Instagram to WeChat is essential to your success with CSR
campaigns. As numbers of Millennials and younger digital natives increasingly
predominate in the workplace,
3.2.
Customers – The Middle Ring of the Bullseye: They like companies that make them feel good about
associating with them. Authenticity and caring to make a difference need
to be part of your company culture.
3.3 The
Outer Ring of the Bullseye: Community and the World: We believe it is important to
regularly review our stakeholder identification process,” says John Cheh, Vice
Chairman and CEO of at Esquel Group, the textile manufacturer. “It is about
building relationships that share common values and creating synergy.” Esquel’s
broad list of stakeholders include the Fair Labor Association, Sustainable
Apparel Coalition, and all the suppliers, communities, and regulatory agencies
that they are involved with.
The
broadest, most inclusive business alliance promoting CSR globally is the UN
Global Compact. All 13,000 member CEOs and their employees have signed on to principles-driven
business practices that grow their enterprises while pursuing the United
Nations’ list of 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.19
Iterate: The question is, how to try again,
how to re-think, re-adjust or take a new path.
4.1. No
workplace is perfect
4.2. Volunteering ups and downs
4.3. Learn from others’ mistakes: the risks of combining CSR with
marketing (greenwashing, clumsy advertising, product gimmickry, awkward
corporate donations or off-message sponsorships).
4.4 Never
Stop Taking Chances: Measure
What is Material. “In God we trust; all
others must bring data.” – Jack Welch
5.1.
Measuring CSR Impact
For other
CSR projects, you can begin the task of measuring and tracking them with the
help of KPIs related to these four basic measures: Inputs Outputs Outcomes
Impacts
Basically, a
CSR outcome is about your company. A CSR impact is about your stakeholder. For
instance, if your company installs high-efficiency lighting as a part of a
sustainable energy initiative, the reduced dollars spent on electricity is an
outcome. The avoided pounds greenhouse gases entering the environment is the
impact.
5.2.
Integrated ESG Reporting
Leading
companies have responded by moving toward ESG reporting that is integrated with
their financial reporting. More than 8,000 companies globally are using GRI to
share the results of their CSR efforts alongside of their financial reporting. A
sound approach is to use GRI to identify the key drivers that would appear in
your company’s report, and then take note of what public companies in your
industry or sector are doing along these lines. An enormous library of GRI
reports is available for review at the UN Global Compact website (UNGC.org).
5.3.
Communicating Your Results
The UN Global Compact has developed
an exceptionally useful online tool called the Value Driver Model, which can
help you assess and communicate the financial impact of your CSR strategies. The
model uses common business metrics to illustrate how corporate sustainability
activities contribute to overall company performance in three basic areas:
Growth – Revenue growth from
sustainability-advantaged products, services, and strategies.
Productivity
– Total annual cost savings (and avoided costs) from sustainability-driven
productivity initiatives.
Risk
Management – Sustainability-related reductions in risk-exposure that might
otherwise impair the company’s performance.
5.4. The
rise of the ratings
5.5. How CSR
metrics can shake the World: industry or within its community, it is worth
considering how you can extend the use of your internal metrics for the common
good, and enhance your reputation among some of your most important customers,
suppliers, and other stakeholders. As CSR becomes increasingly easier to
measure and compare from one company to the next, socially irresponsible companies
will find it increasingly difficult to remain viable in the Caring Economy. The
Campaign is Ongoing
6.1. The
future of work: Millennials
and Generation Z are career nomads willing to move to another job if they do
not feel their workplace offers them a sense of purpose and treats employees
fairly. The term “holacracy” has emerged to describe a form of organization
that is both “holistic” and “democratic” in its power structure. Quoting
Darwin’s Origin of Species, Hsieh points out, “It’s not the fastest or
strongest that survive. It’s the ones most adaptive to change.”
6.2. The
future of commerce
6.3. The
future of governance: On its website, the B-Team explains the origin of its name: “Plan A – where
companies have been driven by the profit motive alone – is no longer
acceptable. It’s time for Plan B.” by the 2016 “Commonsense Principles of
Corporate Governance,” issued by an ad hoc group of U.S. business leaders,
including JPMorgan, Berkshire Hathaway, Verizon, Vanguard, and BlackRock. The
full list of principles is available at www.GovernancePrinciples.org.
LEED
(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification was once a
somewhat rarified, high-end discipline.
7.1. Aim
High
7.2. Declare
Your Values
7.3. Rethink
Your Culture
7.4. Raise
the Bar
7.5. Invest
in People: “At Esquel, we do not see CSR as a defensive
strategy, in reaction to international criticism of working conditions in
regions with low cost labor. Rather, we would like to set a positive example
and prove that a company can be both profitable and committed to sustainability
and worker welfare.
7.6. Break
Boundaries
7.7. Share
What You Know: Go Open Source
7.8. Partner
for Progress: A CSR program
that is limited to philanthropic giving misses out on truly participating in
the Caring Economy.
7.9. Imagine
New Paradigms
7.10. See
Your Evangelist in the Mirror: The trends are your friends. Churchill, “We make a
living by what we get. We make a life by what we give.” It all matters in the
Caring Economy. Doing the right thing, by the way, means doing it before it is
expected of you. There is no constant in this new world except change.
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