The article in the url link below uses a recent talk at Wharton by Patagonia’s ex-CEO, Kristine Tompkins, to present a profile of the firm (Special Cases of CSR: Malden Mills, p299):
“The company's mission statement today reads: "Build the best product, cause no unnecessary harm, use business to inspire and implement solutions to the environmental crisis."”
Two things about the interview are striking: First, how far ahead of the curve Patagonia was in implementing a socially responsible approach to business:
“Patagonia has worked to reduce the environmental impact of its products, processes and facilities -- developing recycled polyester for use in its popular Synchilla fleece, introduced in 1985; shifting to recycled content paper for catalogs in the mid 1980s; minimizing packaging in the mid-1990s; and taking extensive energy conservation and waste reduction measures in its Reno, Nev., distribution center … . As of this fall, Patagonia expected one third of its clothing line to be recyclable.”
And, second, how clear the focus has been all along on financial viability:
“"People don't listen to failing companies," said Tompkins. "You can't be a model for 100 years if you're not profitable. If you're not profitable, you are beholden to a banking system [you don't] believe in.... People thought we were fast and loose financially. We were just the opposite." Headed by CEO and president Casey Sheahan since March 2006, privately held Patagonia reported revenues of $270 million in 2006.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Leadership, Patagonia-style: Changing the Criteria for Success
Knowledge @ Wharton
October 31, 2007
Kristine Tompkins, former CEO of outdoor apparel company Patagonia, pulled no punches with the audience attending her recent Wharton Leadership Lecture. Tompkins said that when she began working full-time at Patagonia in 1972, she didn't understand how the actions of the business world as well as the behavior of individuals "affected the very underpinnings" of the individual, the family and the community. "You know that now," she said, and "the choices you make count more and more." People who can manage "the tough decisions and incorporate" difficult issues into their lives, she said, "are the future leaders."
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/1829.cfm
To sign-up to receive the CSR Newsletters regularly during the fall and spring academic semesters, e-mail author David Chandler at david.chandler@ucdenver.edu.
Friday, November 30, 2007
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Strategic CSR - Sustainability
The article in the url link below questions the “actual and moral authority” enjoyed by the IPCC regarding the science and, equally importantly, the economics surrounding climate change (Issues: Environmental Sustainability, p171):
“[The IPCC] is a seriously flawed enterprise and unworthy of the slavish respect accorded to it by most governments and the media. In the decisions which have already been made on climate-change mitigation, to say nothing of future decisions, the stakes are enormous. In guiding these momentous judgments, the flawed IPCC process has been granted, in effect, a monopoly of official wisdom. That needs to change and the IPCC itself must be reformed.”
The article is not against the science of climate change, but argues that in order to construct effective public policy in response, we need to have a better understanding than at present regarding the economic implications of the environmental changes we are experiencing:
“Underlying it all is a pervasive bias. From the outset the IPCC network was fully invested in the idea that climate change is the most pressing challenge confronting mankind and that urgent action far beyond what is already in prospect will be needed to confront it. … The IPCC may be right: climate change may indeed be mankind's biggest and most urgent challenge. … But if governments are to get the best advice, they need information and analysis from an open and disinterested source - or else from multiple dissenting sources. With the environmental risks calmly laid out, framing the right policies demands proper political accountability and a much wider range of opinion and expertise than the IPCC currently provides.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
The steamrollers of climate science
By CLIVE CROOK
879 words
2 August 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 9
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/39463a34-40a3-11dc-9d0c-0000779fd2ac.html
“[The IPCC] is a seriously flawed enterprise and unworthy of the slavish respect accorded to it by most governments and the media. In the decisions which have already been made on climate-change mitigation, to say nothing of future decisions, the stakes are enormous. In guiding these momentous judgments, the flawed IPCC process has been granted, in effect, a monopoly of official wisdom. That needs to change and the IPCC itself must be reformed.”
The article is not against the science of climate change, but argues that in order to construct effective public policy in response, we need to have a better understanding than at present regarding the economic implications of the environmental changes we are experiencing:
“Underlying it all is a pervasive bias. From the outset the IPCC network was fully invested in the idea that climate change is the most pressing challenge confronting mankind and that urgent action far beyond what is already in prospect will be needed to confront it. … The IPCC may be right: climate change may indeed be mankind's biggest and most urgent challenge. … But if governments are to get the best advice, they need information and analysis from an open and disinterested source - or else from multiple dissenting sources. With the environmental risks calmly laid out, framing the right policies demands proper political accountability and a much wider range of opinion and expertise than the IPCC currently provides.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
The steamrollers of climate science
By CLIVE CROOK
879 words
2 August 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 9
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/39463a34-40a3-11dc-9d0c-0000779fd2ac.html
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Strategic CSR - Wal-Mart
CSR is often presented by critics as an additional cost to firms, above and beyond core business costs, which explains why some firms (particularly low-cost retailers like Wal-Mart) fail to implement proactively a comprehensive social responsibility perspective. A distinction is rarely drawn, however, between a firm’s primary responsibility for CSR (i.e., concerning its own operations) and a secondary responsibility for CSR (i.e., concerning the operations of other firms with which the focal firm is connected, but over which it does not have direct control, such as off-shore suppliers):
“The changes afoot in the Thai shrimp ponds reflect the world-spanning, industry-rattling reach of Wal-Mart's push for environmental sustainability. The Bentonville, Ark., retailer has prodded its suppliers to cut their packaging and pare their reliance on nonrenewable fuels. It has relentlessly promoted long-lasting but slow-selling compact-fluorescent light bulbs. It is the world's largest buyer of organic cotton, purchasing more than 10 million pounds a year. And it has pledged to eventually buy its wild-caught fish only from fisheries certified as environmentally sustainable.”
The article in the url link below, however, demonstrates how a powerful firm like Wal-Mart (and its consumers) can conform to the social responsibility expectations of stakeholders by forcing its suppliers to adopt stringent standards, without incurring any additional costs itself:
“… some Thai farmers see little benefit in paying inspection fees -- amounting to a fraction of a penny per pound of shrimp produced -- or upgrading facilities where necessary because Wal-Mart won't reimburse them for their costs nor pay a premium for certified shrimp. Wal-Mart views those costs as the industry's responsibility.”
Wal-Mart has the power and influence to force suppliers to comply as they hang the threat of withdrawing their business if the standards are not met:
“Wal-Mart first threw its weight behind the aquaculture alliance's shrimp-farming standards in 2005, announcing that by the end of this year it would buy all its shrimp from farms certified as meeting the standards. The endorsement drew attention; Wal-Mart buys more shrimp than any other U.S. company, importing 20,000 tons annually -- about 3.4% of U.S. shrimp imports. With Wal-Mart's nod, "we went from trying to convince individual facilities to become certified to having long waiting lines," says George Chamberlain, president of the aquaculture alliance.”
The end result for small producers is a punitive threat to their business that encourages Western firms to favor large-scale producers that can absorb the cost implications of the higher production standards:
“Others see the standards fueling a continuing consolidation of the industry. Wal-Mart prefers to buy from fewer, stronger suppliers with control over all phases of production. Rubicon, for example, owns 14 seafood-processing plants, roughly 150 farms and importing and exporting operations. "Short term, [the costs of meeting the standards] are onerous," says Brian Wynn, Rubicon's president and chief executive. "Long term, they are beneficial because they set up barriers to entry to nonintegrated companies."”
Put it down to the unforeseen consequences of CSR advocacy in the West forcing small operators in developing countries out of business!
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
The New Wal-Mart Effect: Cleaner Thai Shrimp Farms
By Kris Hudson and Wilawan Watcharasakwet
1204 words
24 July 2007
The Wall Street Journal
B1
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB118523019620675464-lMyQjAxMDE3ODI1NTIyMzUwWj.html
“The changes afoot in the Thai shrimp ponds reflect the world-spanning, industry-rattling reach of Wal-Mart's push for environmental sustainability. The Bentonville, Ark., retailer has prodded its suppliers to cut their packaging and pare their reliance on nonrenewable fuels. It has relentlessly promoted long-lasting but slow-selling compact-fluorescent light bulbs. It is the world's largest buyer of organic cotton, purchasing more than 10 million pounds a year. And it has pledged to eventually buy its wild-caught fish only from fisheries certified as environmentally sustainable.”
The article in the url link below, however, demonstrates how a powerful firm like Wal-Mart (and its consumers) can conform to the social responsibility expectations of stakeholders by forcing its suppliers to adopt stringent standards, without incurring any additional costs itself:
“… some Thai farmers see little benefit in paying inspection fees -- amounting to a fraction of a penny per pound of shrimp produced -- or upgrading facilities where necessary because Wal-Mart won't reimburse them for their costs nor pay a premium for certified shrimp. Wal-Mart views those costs as the industry's responsibility.”
Wal-Mart has the power and influence to force suppliers to comply as they hang the threat of withdrawing their business if the standards are not met:
“Wal-Mart first threw its weight behind the aquaculture alliance's shrimp-farming standards in 2005, announcing that by the end of this year it would buy all its shrimp from farms certified as meeting the standards. The endorsement drew attention; Wal-Mart buys more shrimp than any other U.S. company, importing 20,000 tons annually -- about 3.4% of U.S. shrimp imports. With Wal-Mart's nod, "we went from trying to convince individual facilities to become certified to having long waiting lines," says George Chamberlain, president of the aquaculture alliance.”
The end result for small producers is a punitive threat to their business that encourages Western firms to favor large-scale producers that can absorb the cost implications of the higher production standards:
“Others see the standards fueling a continuing consolidation of the industry. Wal-Mart prefers to buy from fewer, stronger suppliers with control over all phases of production. Rubicon, for example, owns 14 seafood-processing plants, roughly 150 farms and importing and exporting operations. "Short term, [the costs of meeting the standards] are onerous," says Brian Wynn, Rubicon's president and chief executive. "Long term, they are beneficial because they set up barriers to entry to nonintegrated companies."”
Put it down to the unforeseen consequences of CSR advocacy in the West forcing small operators in developing countries out of business!
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
The New Wal-Mart Effect: Cleaner Thai Shrimp Farms
By Kris Hudson and Wilawan Watcharasakwet
1204 words
24 July 2007
The Wall Street Journal
B1
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB118523019620675464-lMyQjAxMDE3ODI1NTIyMzUwWj.html
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Strategic CSR - Biofuels
The subject of biofuels and the ludicrous set of government subsidies and trade quotas that are creating artificial markets in related products has been the subject of past Newsletters [Note: The best article I have seen on this subject is still Thomas Friedman’s September 2006 article: http://select.nytimes.com/2006/09/20/opinion/20friedman.html]. The article in the url link below, however, provides an informed (and depressing) summary and update:
“Energy security and climate change are two of the most significant challenges confronting humanity. What we see, in response, is the familiar capture of policymaking by well-organised special interests. A superb example is the flood of subsidies for biofuels. These are farm programmes masquerading as answers to energy insecurity and climate change. Not surprisingly, they have the depressing characteristics of such programmes: high protection, open-ended support to producers, and indifference to economic rationality.”
The article is full of facts, figures, and unintended consequences that effectively dismantle the current approach of a number of political administrations that are committed to specific remedies as a result of the lobbying of entrenched interests. The goal at present, clearly, is not to find efficient solutions to the huge problem climate change presents; rather, it is to appear interested by pursuing those policies that play well with domestic audiences:
“This then is a classic farm programme: a costly system of transfers looking for a rationale. Or, as the report puts it: "The bewildering array of incentives that have been created for biofuels in response to multiple (and sometimes contradictory) policy objectives bear all the hallmarks of a popular bandwagon aided and abetted by sectional vested interests."”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Biofuels: an everyday story of special interests and subsidies.
By MARTIN WOLF
1081 words
31 October 2007
Financial Times
Asia Ed1
Page 11
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/40a71f96-8702-11dc-a3ff-0000779fd2ac.html
The author’s blog on this article (with useful and insightful comments) can be found at:
http://blogs.ft.com/wolfforum/2007/10/biofuels-a-tale.html
“Energy security and climate change are two of the most significant challenges confronting humanity. What we see, in response, is the familiar capture of policymaking by well-organised special interests. A superb example is the flood of subsidies for biofuels. These are farm programmes masquerading as answers to energy insecurity and climate change. Not surprisingly, they have the depressing characteristics of such programmes: high protection, open-ended support to producers, and indifference to economic rationality.”
The article is full of facts, figures, and unintended consequences that effectively dismantle the current approach of a number of political administrations that are committed to specific remedies as a result of the lobbying of entrenched interests. The goal at present, clearly, is not to find efficient solutions to the huge problem climate change presents; rather, it is to appear interested by pursuing those policies that play well with domestic audiences:
“This then is a classic farm programme: a costly system of transfers looking for a rationale. Or, as the report puts it: "The bewildering array of incentives that have been created for biofuels in response to multiple (and sometimes contradictory) policy objectives bear all the hallmarks of a popular bandwagon aided and abetted by sectional vested interests."”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Biofuels: an everyday story of special interests and subsidies.
By MARTIN WOLF
1081 words
31 October 2007
Financial Times
Asia Ed1
Page 11
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/40a71f96-8702-11dc-a3ff-0000779fd2ac.html
The author’s blog on this article (with useful and insightful comments) can be found at:
http://blogs.ft.com/wolfforum/2007/10/biofuels-a-tale.html
Monday, November 26, 2007
Strategic CSR - GAP
The article in the url link below reports on GAP’s response to a piece of investigative journalism in October by the UK newspaper The Observer that uncovered evidence of under-age children making GAP clothes (Issues: Auditing CSR, p94; Cultural Conflict, p160). The story is interesting on two levels. First, the speed and extent of GAP’s response, which seems to me to be genuine:
“Gap said it would refine its procedures to ensure that items made in textile workshops in India were not being produced by children. It also announced a grant of $200,000 to improve working conditions and said it would hold an international conference next year to come up with solutions for issues related to child labor. … the children who were found to be embroidering decorations on blouses for toddlers for Gap would be paid until they were of working age and then offered employment.”
Second, the extent to which GAP could have (or should have) been expected to avoid this problem:
“… the vendor that got the Gap order for the children's clothes had employed a rural community center to do the embroidery work but that this entity had subcontracted the work to a Delhi workshop where children were employed. While auditing in factories is relatively straightforward, checking conditions in the informal workshops where hand embroidery is done is harder because large contracts are often divided up among dozens of small workshops.”
It is one thing for a firm to be held responsible for the business practices of an immediate supplier. It seems to be another thing altogether to expect GAP to know about a sub-contractor (“a rural community center”) that had again contracted out this order to a Delhi factory—three steps removed from the initial order by GAP. The extent to which a firm is responsible for the actions of its suppliers throughout its supply chain (as well as how that responsibility should be enforced) is an issue on which a consensus within the CSR community is yet to arise.
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Gap Vows To Combat Child Labor At Suppliers
By AMELIA GENTLEMAN
557 words
16 November 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
6
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/16/business/worldbusiness/16gap.html
“Gap said it would refine its procedures to ensure that items made in textile workshops in India were not being produced by children. It also announced a grant of $200,000 to improve working conditions and said it would hold an international conference next year to come up with solutions for issues related to child labor. … the children who were found to be embroidering decorations on blouses for toddlers for Gap would be paid until they were of working age and then offered employment.”
Second, the extent to which GAP could have (or should have) been expected to avoid this problem:
“… the vendor that got the Gap order for the children's clothes had employed a rural community center to do the embroidery work but that this entity had subcontracted the work to a Delhi workshop where children were employed. While auditing in factories is relatively straightforward, checking conditions in the informal workshops where hand embroidery is done is harder because large contracts are often divided up among dozens of small workshops.”
It is one thing for a firm to be held responsible for the business practices of an immediate supplier. It seems to be another thing altogether to expect GAP to know about a sub-contractor (“a rural community center”) that had again contracted out this order to a Delhi factory—three steps removed from the initial order by GAP. The extent to which a firm is responsible for the actions of its suppliers throughout its supply chain (as well as how that responsibility should be enforced) is an issue on which a consensus within the CSR community is yet to arise.
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Gap Vows To Combat Child Labor At Suppliers
By AMELIA GENTLEMAN
557 words
16 November 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
6
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/16/business/worldbusiness/16gap.html
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Strategic CSR - Freerice.com
This is a fun website that is very appropriate for the Thanksgiving holiday and also does a lot of good: http://www.freerice.com/:
“FreeRice has two goals:
1. Provide English vocabulary to everyone for free.
2. Help end world hunger by providing rice to hungry people for free.”
For every vocab word you get right, the organization pledges to “donate 10 grains of rice through the United Nations to help end world hunger.”
Happy Thanksgiving!
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
“FreeRice has two goals:
1. Provide English vocabulary to everyone for free.
2. Help end world hunger by providing rice to hungry people for free.”
For every vocab word you get right, the organization pledges to “donate 10 grains of rice through the United Nations to help end world hunger.”
Happy Thanksgiving!
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Strategic CSR - Unilever
The article in the url link below presents an interesting tension between for-profit and non-profit priorities in the developing world (Issues: Philanthropy, p196; Profit, p200):
“In their work to promote handwashing, partners say Unilever tends to be in a hurry to get things done, while some donors and aid workers get entangled in their own red tape. … One of toughest challenges faced by Unilever’s marketing experts has been to persuade partners that radio ads and roadshows need to be run at particular times of the year to be effective, and cannot always wait for consensus-building.”
Unilever’s involvement in the campaign to increase hand washing in Uganda hangs on the firm being able to get its branded soap (“Lifebuoy”) associated in the public’s mind with hand washing. Unicef’s goal, however, is to just get people to wash their hands, but they benefit from the marketing and distribution expertise that accompanies private sector involvement. It is easy to see how the two organization’s goals are compatible, while being awkward at the same time:
“Donors would never pay for a branded campaign that told the suspicious residents of Muko to “wash your hands with Lifebuoy”, Ms Sidibe says, and some are not comfortable with a multinational brand on the same list as campaign supporters. “But they are realising it’s the only way to keep us interested. It’s important the brand gets recognised otherwise it’s impossible to justify our involvement.””
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Unilever looks to clean up in Africa
The consumer goods group is piggybacking on public health networks to promote its antibacterial Lifebuoy soap.
By BARNEY JOPSON
1064 words
15 November 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 20
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ed8386ce-92cd-11dc-b9e6-0000779fd2ac.html
“In their work to promote handwashing, partners say Unilever tends to be in a hurry to get things done, while some donors and aid workers get entangled in their own red tape. … One of toughest challenges faced by Unilever’s marketing experts has been to persuade partners that radio ads and roadshows need to be run at particular times of the year to be effective, and cannot always wait for consensus-building.”
Unilever’s involvement in the campaign to increase hand washing in Uganda hangs on the firm being able to get its branded soap (“Lifebuoy”) associated in the public’s mind with hand washing. Unicef’s goal, however, is to just get people to wash their hands, but they benefit from the marketing and distribution expertise that accompanies private sector involvement. It is easy to see how the two organization’s goals are compatible, while being awkward at the same time:
“Donors would never pay for a branded campaign that told the suspicious residents of Muko to “wash your hands with Lifebuoy”, Ms Sidibe says, and some are not comfortable with a multinational brand on the same list as campaign supporters. “But they are realising it’s the only way to keep us interested. It’s important the brand gets recognised otherwise it’s impossible to justify our involvement.””
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Unilever looks to clean up in Africa
The consumer goods group is piggybacking on public health networks to promote its antibacterial Lifebuoy soap.
By BARNEY JOPSON
1064 words
15 November 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 20
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ed8386ce-92cd-11dc-b9e6-0000779fd2ac.html
Monday, November 19, 2007
Strategic CSR - Measuring CSR
The article in the url link below demonstrates the social and economic value of providing consumers with the information they need to make educated purchase decisions (Special Cases of CSR: GM Labeling, p293):
“The system that Hannaford developed, called Guiding Stars, rated the nutritional value of the grocery items in the store on a scale of zero to three stars, with three representing the most nutritious products.”
Simplifying the complicated, non-standardized information on food labels into an easily identifiable three star rating format enables consumers to better match their purchases with their needs (perceived or real):
“After analyzing a year's worth of sales data, Hannaford found that customers tended to buy leaner cuts of meat. Sales of ground beef with stars on their labels increased 7 percent, and sales of chicken that had a star rating rose 5 percent. Sales of ground beef labeled with no stars dropped by 5 percent, while sales of chicken that had a zero-star rating declined 3 percent. Similarly, sales of whole milk, which received no stars, declined by 4 percent, while sales of fat-free milk (three stars) increased 1 percent. Sales of fruits and vegetables, however, remained about the same as they did before the ratings were introduced. All fresh produce received stars.”
Interesting, however, is the low percentage of products that received a one star rating (the lowest recognition of some nutritional benefit) or better. Even more interesting would be to see a list of products that advertise themselves as “healthy” or “natural,” but which didn’t receive any stars:
“… when Hannaford ran its 25,500 products through the formula devised by its advisory board, many products that were marketed as healthful received no stars, usually because they had too much salt or sugar. Twenty-eight percent of the items in the store received one star or more.”
If more grocery stores were to implement such rating systems, my sense is that firms would quickly respond and the percentage of foods receiving a higher star rating would grow.
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Store Chain's Test Concludes That Nutrition Sells
By ANDREW MARTIN
818 words
6 September 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
3
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/06/business/06grocery.html
“The system that Hannaford developed, called Guiding Stars, rated the nutritional value of the grocery items in the store on a scale of zero to three stars, with three representing the most nutritious products.”
Simplifying the complicated, non-standardized information on food labels into an easily identifiable three star rating format enables consumers to better match their purchases with their needs (perceived or real):
“After analyzing a year's worth of sales data, Hannaford found that customers tended to buy leaner cuts of meat. Sales of ground beef with stars on their labels increased 7 percent, and sales of chicken that had a star rating rose 5 percent. Sales of ground beef labeled with no stars dropped by 5 percent, while sales of chicken that had a zero-star rating declined 3 percent. Similarly, sales of whole milk, which received no stars, declined by 4 percent, while sales of fat-free milk (three stars) increased 1 percent. Sales of fruits and vegetables, however, remained about the same as they did before the ratings were introduced. All fresh produce received stars.”
Interesting, however, is the low percentage of products that received a one star rating (the lowest recognition of some nutritional benefit) or better. Even more interesting would be to see a list of products that advertise themselves as “healthy” or “natural,” but which didn’t receive any stars:
“… when Hannaford ran its 25,500 products through the formula devised by its advisory board, many products that were marketed as healthful received no stars, usually because they had too much salt or sugar. Twenty-eight percent of the items in the store received one star or more.”
If more grocery stores were to implement such rating systems, my sense is that firms would quickly respond and the percentage of foods receiving a higher star rating would grow.
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Store Chain's Test Concludes That Nutrition Sells
By ANDREW MARTIN
818 words
6 September 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
3
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/06/business/06grocery.html
Friday, November 16, 2007
Strategic CSR - Energy
Martin Wolf is one of a number of excellent commentators who appear regularly on the FT’s op-ed pages. In his article this week (in the url link below), he summarizes a recent report by the International Energy Agency that provides an overview of the state of the global energy industry and its frightening projected increases in future demand (Issues: Environmental Sustainability, p171; Special Cases of CSR: ExxonMobil, p292; Shell, p302). There is no point me providing a summary of a summary—the article is better read directly. I was struck, however, by the quote he uses to open the article, which highlights starkly the challenge the world faces in the coming decades in transforming a global economy that is dependent on carbon-based fuels—a dependence that is only intensifying with rapid economic expansion:
“"The increase in China's energy demand between 2002 and 2005 was equivalent to Japan's current annual energy use." This nugget of information … tells one almost all one needs to know about what is happening to the world's energy economy.”
Have a good weekend.
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Welcome to the new world of runaway energy demand.
By MARTIN WOLF
1100 words
14 November 2007
Financial Times
Asia Ed1
Page 11
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/af2a0ed4-9223-11dc-8981-0000779fd2ac.html
“"The increase in China's energy demand between 2002 and 2005 was equivalent to Japan's current annual energy use." This nugget of information … tells one almost all one needs to know about what is happening to the world's energy economy.”
Have a good weekend.
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
Welcome to the new world of runaway energy demand.
By MARTIN WOLF
1100 words
14 November 2007
Financial Times
Asia Ed1
Page 11
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/af2a0ed4-9223-11dc-8981-0000779fd2ac.html
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Strategic CSR - Ethical Retailing
The article in the url link below reviews the extent of the market for “ethical retailing” (Chapter 2: CSR: Do Stakeholders Care? p25; Issues: Consumer Apathy, p156). In spite of the common perception among executives that consumers do not tend to make purchase decisions based on their best intentions, the author argues this is now changing:
“But there is no mistaking the trend. Worldwide sales of Fairtrade-certified products, for example, grew 42 per cent last year, although at Pounds 1.1bn (Dollars 2.2bn) they are still equivalent to only 2.6 per cent of Tesco's revenues and 0.6 per cent of Wal-Mart's.”
In general, the author portrays the UK’s ethical retail market as being relatively mature:
“One UK retail executive who has made a detailed study of the phenomenon divides consumers into four categories. The first, about 8 per cent of the total, are committed, cause-driven purchasers. A second group, accounting for 30-35 per cent, want to purchase ethically but are not really sure how and are looking to retailers to help them. The third group, also about 30-35 per cent, feel the same, but doubt that their individual purchases can make much difference. The fourth group, the remainder, are completely uninterested, often because they are too poor to think about much more than putting food on the table for their families.”
In using this evidence to make his case, however, the author only serves to highlight the limitations of this market. These category numbers mean that the “completely uninterested” group is at least twice the size of the “committed, cause-driven consumers,” possibly three times as big. At the end of the day, we are still nowhere near a majority of consumers who are willing to place social responsibility concerns above more traditional considerations in arriving at their purchase decisions. The overwhelming sense, despite the author’s enthusiasm, is that any gains made are still largely superficial and are more about relieving first-world consumer guilt than re-shaping the underlying business model to instill a permanent strategic CSR perspective:
“… by publicising their initiatives the supermarkets help consumers feel they have done the world a good deed. Only a small proportion of goods in their shopping baskets may be Fairtrade, but all the in-store advertising about ethically sourced this and free-range that helps persuade consumers that they are buying more of it than they are.”
The final quote in this article, however, is most interesting and demonstrates the danger for firms that are too progressive on this issue:
“Retailers need to be alert to the change. The supermarket executive I mentioned above told me: "A smart retailer is half a step ahead of the consumer. Ten steps ahead and you're out of business."”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
There is a good trade in ethical retailing
By MICHAEL SKAPINKER
789 words
11 September 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 15
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/352205cc-5fc6-11dc-b0fe-0000779fd2ac.html
“But there is no mistaking the trend. Worldwide sales of Fairtrade-certified products, for example, grew 42 per cent last year, although at Pounds 1.1bn (Dollars 2.2bn) they are still equivalent to only 2.6 per cent of Tesco's revenues and 0.6 per cent of Wal-Mart's.”
In general, the author portrays the UK’s ethical retail market as being relatively mature:
“One UK retail executive who has made a detailed study of the phenomenon divides consumers into four categories. The first, about 8 per cent of the total, are committed, cause-driven purchasers. A second group, accounting for 30-35 per cent, want to purchase ethically but are not really sure how and are looking to retailers to help them. The third group, also about 30-35 per cent, feel the same, but doubt that their individual purchases can make much difference. The fourth group, the remainder, are completely uninterested, often because they are too poor to think about much more than putting food on the table for their families.”
In using this evidence to make his case, however, the author only serves to highlight the limitations of this market. These category numbers mean that the “completely uninterested” group is at least twice the size of the “committed, cause-driven consumers,” possibly three times as big. At the end of the day, we are still nowhere near a majority of consumers who are willing to place social responsibility concerns above more traditional considerations in arriving at their purchase decisions. The overwhelming sense, despite the author’s enthusiasm, is that any gains made are still largely superficial and are more about relieving first-world consumer guilt than re-shaping the underlying business model to instill a permanent strategic CSR perspective:
“… by publicising their initiatives the supermarkets help consumers feel they have done the world a good deed. Only a small proportion of goods in their shopping baskets may be Fairtrade, but all the in-store advertising about ethically sourced this and free-range that helps persuade consumers that they are buying more of it than they are.”
The final quote in this article, however, is most interesting and demonstrates the danger for firms that are too progressive on this issue:
“Retailers need to be alert to the change. The supermarket executive I mentioned above told me: "A smart retailer is half a step ahead of the consumer. Ten steps ahead and you're out of business."”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther/
There is a good trade in ethical retailing
By MICHAEL SKAPINKER
789 words
11 September 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 15
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/352205cc-5fc6-11dc-b0fe-0000779fd2ac.html
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Strategic CSR - Apple
The article in the url link below from BusinessWeek provides insight into the tactics sometimes used by interest groups to pressure high-profile companies that the interest group suspects of committing social harm (Issues: NGO and Corporate Cooperation, p192; Internet, p237):
“Greenpeace is bringing the rhetorical hammer down on Apple for what it considers environmental offenses, namely for not moving fast enough to eliminate nasty chemicals from its products. Its latest headline-grabbing maneuver: pressure on ex-Vice-President and current Apple director Al Gore … . Publicly pressuring Gore, the thinking goes, improves the chances that Apple's board will amply consider two eco-friendly shareholder proposals.”
In this case, however, it is hard to escape the conclusion that Greenpeace is picking on a high-profile brand, rather than focusing on meaningful reform. As the author notes, Greenpeace seems to be applying double-standards in this case and unfairly targeting Apple for what it has failed to say, rather than what it has actually done:
“As of now, neither Apple nor Dell—nor Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) for that matter—is selling a single PVC- or BFR-free computer. So in truth, Greenpeace has graded Apple based on statements, not actions. Both Dell and Apple are in the same boat, but one is saying the right things in public, and getting applause for it. … So if you're evaluating an Apple purchase versus another computer product based on the haranguing that Apple is receiving from Greenpeace, don't be fooled. Apple's no more or less evil than any other computer manufacturer. And while it's one thing to call attention to a problem that an entire industry needs to address, Greenpeace's methodologies, in this particular case, don't paint an accurate picture.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Business Week Online
Insider NewsletterSaturday, March 31, 2007
*******************
BYTE IF THE APPLE: IS GREENPEACE OFF THE MARK ON APPLE?
The group says Apple isn't ridding its products of nasty chemicals fast enough. But it may be holding the company to different standards
by Arik Hesseldahl
http://newsletters.businessweek.com/c.asp?653539&c55a2ee820194f0f&51
“Greenpeace is bringing the rhetorical hammer down on Apple for what it considers environmental offenses, namely for not moving fast enough to eliminate nasty chemicals from its products. Its latest headline-grabbing maneuver: pressure on ex-Vice-President and current Apple director Al Gore … . Publicly pressuring Gore, the thinking goes, improves the chances that Apple's board will amply consider two eco-friendly shareholder proposals.”
In this case, however, it is hard to escape the conclusion that Greenpeace is picking on a high-profile brand, rather than focusing on meaningful reform. As the author notes, Greenpeace seems to be applying double-standards in this case and unfairly targeting Apple for what it has failed to say, rather than what it has actually done:
“As of now, neither Apple nor Dell—nor Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) for that matter—is selling a single PVC- or BFR-free computer. So in truth, Greenpeace has graded Apple based on statements, not actions. Both Dell and Apple are in the same boat, but one is saying the right things in public, and getting applause for it. … So if you're evaluating an Apple purchase versus another computer product based on the haranguing that Apple is receiving from Greenpeace, don't be fooled. Apple's no more or less evil than any other computer manufacturer. And while it's one thing to call attention to a problem that an entire industry needs to address, Greenpeace's methodologies, in this particular case, don't paint an accurate picture.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Business Week Online
Insider NewsletterSaturday, March 31, 2007
*******************
BYTE IF THE APPLE: IS GREENPEACE OFF THE MARK ON APPLE?
The group says Apple isn't ridding its products of nasty chemicals fast enough. But it may be holding the company to different standards
by Arik Hesseldahl
http://newsletters.businessweek.com/c.asp?653539&c55a2ee820194f0f&51
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Strategic CSR - Nike
The article in the url link below demonstrates that, no matter how hard it tries, a firm cannot please all of the people all of the time (Issues: Cultural Conflict, p160; Special Cases of CSR: Nike, p286):
“''If this isn't an example of corporate manipulation of race, I don't know what is,'' wrote one of about 200 readers commenting online about an article that appeared in The Rapid City Journal in South Dakota.”
Given the effort and good intentions that went into designing the shoe, as well as the fact that Nike will donate all of the profits the shoe generates, you would think this is something that the firm will be showered with plaudits for by stakeholders:
“''What makes this a ridiculously bad move is decorating it 'Native American style,''' … ''They probably brought in a Native consultant and heard what they wanted to hear, which is that Native Americans like sunrises and rainbows and feel real connected to the earth and the night sky and stuff.''”
What is not clear from the article, however, is how much of this process the various critics knew about. The question then becomes: How much should Nike advertise its good work/intentions? It seems that it is damned if it does (CSR is only a PR exercise) and damned if it doesn’t (Nike is patronizing ethnic minorities):
“''When I heard it, the first thing I did is I laughed until I cried, because I just though it was hilarious,'' said Sherman Alexie, a Spokane/Coeur d'Alene Indian and a novelist … ''The day it was announced, I thought: 'Are they going to have dream catchers on them? Are they going to be beaded? Will they have native bumper stickers on them that say, 'Custer had it coming'?''”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
To the Nike Swoosh, Add Indian Artifacts
By ANDREW ADAM NEWMAN
746 words
3 October 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
3
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/03/business/03nike.html
“''If this isn't an example of corporate manipulation of race, I don't know what is,'' wrote one of about 200 readers commenting online about an article that appeared in The Rapid City Journal in South Dakota.”
Given the effort and good intentions that went into designing the shoe, as well as the fact that Nike will donate all of the profits the shoe generates, you would think this is something that the firm will be showered with plaudits for by stakeholders:
“''What makes this a ridiculously bad move is decorating it 'Native American style,''' … ''They probably brought in a Native consultant and heard what they wanted to hear, which is that Native Americans like sunrises and rainbows and feel real connected to the earth and the night sky and stuff.''”
What is not clear from the article, however, is how much of this process the various critics knew about. The question then becomes: How much should Nike advertise its good work/intentions? It seems that it is damned if it does (CSR is only a PR exercise) and damned if it doesn’t (Nike is patronizing ethnic minorities):
“''When I heard it, the first thing I did is I laughed until I cried, because I just though it was hilarious,'' said Sherman Alexie, a Spokane/Coeur d'Alene Indian and a novelist … ''The day it was announced, I thought: 'Are they going to have dream catchers on them? Are they going to be beaded? Will they have native bumper stickers on them that say, 'Custer had it coming'?''”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
To the Nike Swoosh, Add Indian Artifacts
By ANDREW ADAM NEWMAN
746 words
3 October 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
3
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/03/business/03nike.html
Friday, November 9, 2007
Strategic CSR - Unforeseen Consequences
The article in the url link below indicates the difficulty in upending established systems and replacing them with new systems that emphasize outcome over process, but also generate unforeseen consequences:
“Then there are biofuels. Often put forward as an eco-friendly alternative to fossil fuels, they now seem to be anything but. In theory, the crops from which the biofuels are derived should mop up around half the greenhouse gas generated by the burning of the fuel in vehicles. But environmentalists are now warning that the demand for biofuels is driving up rates of deforestation in Indonesia, Malaysia and Brazil, as farmers chop down trees in order to plant more profitable biofuel crops instead. A UN expert committee on energy warned this month that the result could be a net increase in greenhouse emissions, and "significant biodiversity loss, soil erosion and nutrient leaching".”
In addition to having to turn around the supertanker global economy in the face of global warming, sustainability advocates have the added pressure of discovering viable alternative processes and products, and quickly!
Have a good weekend.
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Unforeseen consequences
Businesses can fend off the risk of 'revenge effects' with more vigilant expertise and less optimism.
By ROBERT MATTHEWS
1039 words
24 May 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 16
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1892df7c-0994-11dc-a349-000b5df10621.html
“Then there are biofuels. Often put forward as an eco-friendly alternative to fossil fuels, they now seem to be anything but. In theory, the crops from which the biofuels are derived should mop up around half the greenhouse gas generated by the burning of the fuel in vehicles. But environmentalists are now warning that the demand for biofuels is driving up rates of deforestation in Indonesia, Malaysia and Brazil, as farmers chop down trees in order to plant more profitable biofuel crops instead. A UN expert committee on energy warned this month that the result could be a net increase in greenhouse emissions, and "significant biodiversity loss, soil erosion and nutrient leaching".”
In addition to having to turn around the supertanker global economy in the face of global warming, sustainability advocates have the added pressure of discovering viable alternative processes and products, and quickly!
Have a good weekend.
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
Unforeseen consequences
Businesses can fend off the risk of 'revenge effects' with more vigilant expertise and less optimism.
By ROBERT MATTHEWS
1039 words
24 May 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 16
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1892df7c-0994-11dc-a349-000b5df10621.html
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Strategic CSR - Carbon Labels II
The article in the first url link below demonstrates the growing impact of carbon footprints in the UK (Special Cases of CSR: GM Labeling, p293):
“Carbon footprints provide a measure of how much of an impact an individual or company is having on the planet, and a carbon label is an indication of the amount of carbon dioxide emitted as a result of producing goods and services. This information is difficult to estimate without detailed knowledge of the producer's methods, so consumers and investors have little idea of a company's carbon footprint, or the footprint of what they buy, unless companies choose to disclose it. … Walkers Crisps then put the first carbon label on packets of its crisps. More companies followed: Timberland, Coca-Cola, Halifax, Muller Dairy and the brewer Scottish & Newcastle are all committed to either carbon labelling or footprinting.”
In spite of the enthusiasm, however, the processes used to generate these carbon profiles are still evolving and there is little informed agreement about both their reliability and validity at this stage:
"Quoting results in grams of C02 per product suggest a high level of accuracy that is not possible on a large scale today. Much of the data required is not readily available so many assumptions need to be made which reduce the accuracy of the calculation. … Another concern is that there is as yet no standard way to perform the measurements. "Companies typically spend 2-3 months doing footprint analysis for their first product and even then results are contentious due to methodology."
The article in the second url link below demonstrates the importance of having an holistic perspective in viewing a firm’s supply chain, especially when estimating the environmental impact of specific food products:
“While much consumer and media attention has recently focused on "food miles", transportation, it turns out, is only a small part of the carbon footprint of food. Meanwhile, food and agriculture are responsible for a wide range of environmental impacts ranging from food waste and water use to nitrogen run-off and methane emissions from livestock.”
The complexity of the problem is paralyzing, especially when considering the institutionalized production processes in farming and other financial barriers to reform:
“"It's just that it's such a diverse group of stakeholders and there's not enough technical research or grant money available to farmers to allow cost sharing when adopting some of these sustainable strategies." For food and agriculture businesses, another challenge is to introduce sustainable practices in an industry in which rising commodity prices are eroding margins.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
FT REPORT - SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS 2007
http://www.ft.com/reports/susbusiness2007
Food footprints coming soon to a label near you.
By FIONA HARVEY
900 words
12 October 2007
Financial Times
Surveys SUB1
Page 4
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1/cb820020-76e7-11dc-ad83-0000779fd2ac,dwp_uuid=f89cd9c6-7567-11dc-b7cb-0000779fd2ac.html
Food chain is complex.
By SARAH MURRAY
822 words
12 October 2007
Financial Times
Surveys SUB1
Page 7
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1/ceb3bf22-76e7-11dc-ad83-0000779fd2ac,dwp_uuid=f89cd9c6-7567-11dc-b7cb-0000779fd2ac.html
“Carbon footprints provide a measure of how much of an impact an individual or company is having on the planet, and a carbon label is an indication of the amount of carbon dioxide emitted as a result of producing goods and services. This information is difficult to estimate without detailed knowledge of the producer's methods, so consumers and investors have little idea of a company's carbon footprint, or the footprint of what they buy, unless companies choose to disclose it. … Walkers Crisps then put the first carbon label on packets of its crisps. More companies followed: Timberland, Coca-Cola, Halifax, Muller Dairy and the brewer Scottish & Newcastle are all committed to either carbon labelling or footprinting.”
In spite of the enthusiasm, however, the processes used to generate these carbon profiles are still evolving and there is little informed agreement about both their reliability and validity at this stage:
"Quoting results in grams of C02 per product suggest a high level of accuracy that is not possible on a large scale today. Much of the data required is not readily available so many assumptions need to be made which reduce the accuracy of the calculation. … Another concern is that there is as yet no standard way to perform the measurements. "Companies typically spend 2-3 months doing footprint analysis for their first product and even then results are contentious due to methodology."
The article in the second url link below demonstrates the importance of having an holistic perspective in viewing a firm’s supply chain, especially when estimating the environmental impact of specific food products:
“While much consumer and media attention has recently focused on "food miles", transportation, it turns out, is only a small part of the carbon footprint of food. Meanwhile, food and agriculture are responsible for a wide range of environmental impacts ranging from food waste and water use to nitrogen run-off and methane emissions from livestock.”
The complexity of the problem is paralyzing, especially when considering the institutionalized production processes in farming and other financial barriers to reform:
“"It's just that it's such a diverse group of stakeholders and there's not enough technical research or grant money available to farmers to allow cost sharing when adopting some of these sustainable strategies." For food and agriculture businesses, another challenge is to introduce sustainable practices in an industry in which rising commodity prices are eroding margins.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
FT REPORT - SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS 2007
http://www.ft.com/reports/susbusiness2007
Food footprints coming soon to a label near you.
By FIONA HARVEY
900 words
12 October 2007
Financial Times
Surveys SUB1
Page 4
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1/cb820020-76e7-11dc-ad83-0000779fd2ac,dwp_uuid=f89cd9c6-7567-11dc-b7cb-0000779fd2ac.html
Food chain is complex.
By SARAH MURRAY
822 words
12 October 2007
Financial Times
Surveys SUB1
Page 7
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/1/ceb3bf22-76e7-11dc-ad83-0000779fd2ac,dwp_uuid=f89cd9c6-7567-11dc-b7cb-0000779fd2ac.html
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Strategic CSR - Carbon Labels I
The article in the url link below tracks the latest evolution in CSR-related consumer labeling in the UK (Special Cases of CSR: GM Labeling, p293):
“Pick up a packet of Walkers potato crisps in the UK and you might notice something unusual on the back. Alongside the normal information on how much fat, salt and calories they contain, there is another label. It informs the consumer that the bag contains only 34.5g of crisps, but 75g of carbon dioxide.”
The “virtual CO2” level on these carbon labels represents:
“… a calculation of the amount of the gas expelled into the atmosphere as a result of the processes that went into the packet's production, from growing the potato to packaging and distributing the finished crisps.”
Such developments place the power (and responsibility) largely in consumers’ hands to determine the extent to which firms will genuinely adopt a CSR perspective. We argue in Strategic CSR that it is in a firm’s best interests to strive to meet the needs and expectations of its stakeholders, broadly defined. This statement only rings true, however, if:
(a) Stakeholders actually care about CSR (Chapter 2: Do Stakeholders Care? p25); and
(b) Those stakeholders that do care (consumers in particular) are willing to punish firms that ignore their demands by taking their custom elsewhere (Chapter 2: Consumer Reaction, p35).
On the positive side:
“… the measurement and monitoring can yield useful information. All of the companies that the Carbon Trust has worked with on the labels have found they could make savings as a result of what they discovered during the process, cutting their costs at the same time as cutting their carbon output.”
On the less positive side:
“Separate research by LEK Consulting, to be published tomorrow, has found that just over half of people in the UK say they "would value details concerning a product's carbon footprint when making a buying decision". Rather under half would use this information to switch to a product or service with a lower carbon footprint, however, and only one in five would go to a less convenient retailer in order to obtain such products.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
A chance for shoppers to start counting the carbon
Manufacturers are supplying information on the environmental costs of products to convince consumers of their green credentials.
By FIONA HARVEY
1101 words
13 August 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 9
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/01879832-4903-11dc-b326-0000779fd2ac.html
“Pick up a packet of Walkers potato crisps in the UK and you might notice something unusual on the back. Alongside the normal information on how much fat, salt and calories they contain, there is another label. It informs the consumer that the bag contains only 34.5g of crisps, but 75g of carbon dioxide.”
The “virtual CO2” level on these carbon labels represents:
“… a calculation of the amount of the gas expelled into the atmosphere as a result of the processes that went into the packet's production, from growing the potato to packaging and distributing the finished crisps.”
Such developments place the power (and responsibility) largely in consumers’ hands to determine the extent to which firms will genuinely adopt a CSR perspective. We argue in Strategic CSR that it is in a firm’s best interests to strive to meet the needs and expectations of its stakeholders, broadly defined. This statement only rings true, however, if:
(a) Stakeholders actually care about CSR (Chapter 2: Do Stakeholders Care? p25); and
(b) Those stakeholders that do care (consumers in particular) are willing to punish firms that ignore their demands by taking their custom elsewhere (Chapter 2: Consumer Reaction, p35).
On the positive side:
“… the measurement and monitoring can yield useful information. All of the companies that the Carbon Trust has worked with on the labels have found they could make savings as a result of what they discovered during the process, cutting their costs at the same time as cutting their carbon output.”
On the less positive side:
“Separate research by LEK Consulting, to be published tomorrow, has found that just over half of people in the UK say they "would value details concerning a product's carbon footprint when making a buying decision". Rather under half would use this information to switch to a product or service with a lower carbon footprint, however, and only one in five would go to a less convenient retailer in order to obtain such products.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
A chance for shoppers to start counting the carbon
Manufacturers are supplying information on the environmental costs of products to convince consumers of their green credentials.
By FIONA HARVEY
1101 words
13 August 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 9
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/01879832-4903-11dc-b326-0000779fd2ac.html
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Strategic CSR - Labor Law
The article in the url link below charts the progress of a dramatic revision of labor law in China that was due to be finalized this past summer (Issues: Employee Relations, p118; Wages, p204):
“The draft law was first presented in December 2005, and the standing committee met in April to discuss it and other pending bills. If passed in June, the measure is expected to take effect next year.”
While the article is vague in terms of details (to be fair, the revision of the legislation was on-going at the time), the focus here is on the broad, consultative approach of the Chinese government in soliciting input during the drafting process:
“The delay in passing a labor law has been because of a surprising development in China: The government solicited public comments on the draft, and it received nearly 200,000 of them. … But the process shows how China's government is increasingly seeking to involve interest groups and the public at large in the formation of laws. The cautious steps toward greater transparency reflect both the state's desire to retain popular support of its rule and its need to tap a wider base of expertise to ensure laws are suited to the ever-more-complex economy and society.”
The article comments on the apparent genuine desire of the Chinese authorities to ensure the law improves the social unrest that has accompanied many of the economic reforms that have transformed the Chinese economy and society in recent years:
“China wants the new law to bring more order to the workplace. Many workers lack written contracts and often don't receive salaries on time. The government is also concerned that many workers are being unfairly trapped in short-term contracts, with little chance of advancement.”
An update on the legislation and a discussion of its pros and cons can be found in a recent Knowledge@Wharton Newsletter at:
http://www.knowledgeatwharton.com.cn/index.cfm?fa=article&articleid=1685&languageid=1
“China's labor market is rife with problems -- frequent coal mine accidents and workplace injuries, and unpaid wages on a large scale. Legislators as well as scholars are keenly aware of these issues, but have come up with different solutions. Professor Chang Kai's answer is to raise labor standards, but Dong believes “high standards” will lead to "narrow coverage" and "weak enforcement". On the other hand, "The new law might hurt the workers it tries to protect," Dong wrote in another paper. "For example, to cope with difficulty in firing, companies might be more unwilling to hire, and some job positions might not be created."”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
China Toils Over New Labor Law
Rare Public Debate Pits Growth vs. Worker Rights
By Andrew Batson and Mei Fong
1038 words
7 May 2007
The Wall Street Journal
A8
http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB117849173259593852-iksPXSVyWmuECE4t646qC0rO0P4_20070514.html?Mod=regionallinks
or, reproduced in ChinaDaily.com at:
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-05/07/content_867069.htm
“The draft law was first presented in December 2005, and the standing committee met in April to discuss it and other pending bills. If passed in June, the measure is expected to take effect next year.”
While the article is vague in terms of details (to be fair, the revision of the legislation was on-going at the time), the focus here is on the broad, consultative approach of the Chinese government in soliciting input during the drafting process:
“The delay in passing a labor law has been because of a surprising development in China: The government solicited public comments on the draft, and it received nearly 200,000 of them. … But the process shows how China's government is increasingly seeking to involve interest groups and the public at large in the formation of laws. The cautious steps toward greater transparency reflect both the state's desire to retain popular support of its rule and its need to tap a wider base of expertise to ensure laws are suited to the ever-more-complex economy and society.”
The article comments on the apparent genuine desire of the Chinese authorities to ensure the law improves the social unrest that has accompanied many of the economic reforms that have transformed the Chinese economy and society in recent years:
“China wants the new law to bring more order to the workplace. Many workers lack written contracts and often don't receive salaries on time. The government is also concerned that many workers are being unfairly trapped in short-term contracts, with little chance of advancement.”
An update on the legislation and a discussion of its pros and cons can be found in a recent Knowledge@Wharton Newsletter at:
http://www.knowledgeatwharton.com.cn/index.cfm?fa=article&articleid=1685&languageid=1
“China's labor market is rife with problems -- frequent coal mine accidents and workplace injuries, and unpaid wages on a large scale. Legislators as well as scholars are keenly aware of these issues, but have come up with different solutions. Professor Chang Kai's answer is to raise labor standards, but Dong believes “high standards” will lead to "narrow coverage" and "weak enforcement". On the other hand, "The new law might hurt the workers it tries to protect," Dong wrote in another paper. "For example, to cope with difficulty in firing, companies might be more unwilling to hire, and some job positions might not be created."”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
China Toils Over New Labor Law
Rare Public Debate Pits Growth vs. Worker Rights
By Andrew Batson and Mei Fong
1038 words
7 May 2007
The Wall Street Journal
A8
http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB117849173259593852-iksPXSVyWmuECE4t646qC0rO0P4_20070514.html?Mod=regionallinks
or, reproduced in ChinaDaily.com at:
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-05/07/content_867069.htm
Monday, November 5, 2007
Strategic CSR - Conflict Jewelry
The article in the url link below evaluates the jewelry industry’s reaction to the recent democracy protests in Burma (Issues: Country of Origin, p223). Burma supplies a large amount of the world’s jewels and is particularly dominant in supplies of rubies (90%) and jade (98%):
“Within days, they were telling their cut-stone suppliers that they would not buy any more gems mined in Burma and would conduct random checks to ensure that the stones they did buy were not coming from there.”
Two aspects of this story are notable:
1. That the jewelry profession is moving so quickly on this, without any obvious external prompting.
2. The framing of this action as “an emotional response,” rather than a strategic business decision:
“Cartier's move reflects the strong response by big western jewellers to last month's crackdown in Burma after many of them had long overlooked human-rights concerns.”
A positive interpretation of this move recognizes the actions as a form of atonement for the industry’s slow reaction to the negative publicity it received over the issue of ‘conflict diamonds.’ The swift action on this issue suggests that lessons have been learned. A less than positive interpretation, however, suggests greenwash, or, at a minimum, strategic PR. The main argument supporting this interpretation is that Tiffany is the only jewelry company that has been boycotting Burma for any length of time (“since 2002”). While this suggests that Tiffany has undergone a somewhat genuine process of reflection following the conflict diamonds fiasco, the implication for the rest of the industry is that it is jumping on the bandwagon rather late in the day. The military regime in Burma did not turn anti-democratic overnight. The main difference with these protests is that pictures of the violent clampdown were broadcast on TVs and computers direct to Western consumers (Figure 3.4: The Free Flow of Information in a Globalizing World, p56).
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
The junta's exports lose their sparkle.
By AMY KAZMIN
787 words
27 October 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 9
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/45c8f650-83e9-11dc-a0a6-0000779fd2ac.html
“Within days, they were telling their cut-stone suppliers that they would not buy any more gems mined in Burma and would conduct random checks to ensure that the stones they did buy were not coming from there.”
Two aspects of this story are notable:
1. That the jewelry profession is moving so quickly on this, without any obvious external prompting.
2. The framing of this action as “an emotional response,” rather than a strategic business decision:
“Cartier's move reflects the strong response by big western jewellers to last month's crackdown in Burma after many of them had long overlooked human-rights concerns.”
A positive interpretation of this move recognizes the actions as a form of atonement for the industry’s slow reaction to the negative publicity it received over the issue of ‘conflict diamonds.’ The swift action on this issue suggests that lessons have been learned. A less than positive interpretation, however, suggests greenwash, or, at a minimum, strategic PR. The main argument supporting this interpretation is that Tiffany is the only jewelry company that has been boycotting Burma for any length of time (“since 2002”). While this suggests that Tiffany has undergone a somewhat genuine process of reflection following the conflict diamonds fiasco, the implication for the rest of the industry is that it is jumping on the bandwagon rather late in the day. The military regime in Burma did not turn anti-democratic overnight. The main difference with these protests is that pictures of the violent clampdown were broadcast on TVs and computers direct to Western consumers (Figure 3.4: The Free Flow of Information in a Globalizing World, p56).
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
The junta's exports lose their sparkle.
By AMY KAZMIN
787 words
27 October 2007
Financial Times
London Ed1
Page 9
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/45c8f650-83e9-11dc-a0a6-0000779fd2ac.html
Friday, November 2, 2007
Strategic CSR - Accountability
The article in the url link below features the Top 10 from a ranking of the world’s largest 100 firms in terms of “the quality of their commitment to social and environmental goals.” To create the ranking, Fortune partnered with AccountAbility and CSRNetwork—organizations that are leading the effort to create a meaningful, standardized method of assessing a firm’s CSR profile that allows comparison among different firms in different industries and cultures (Issues: Auditing CSR, p94). Below is the summary report for BP, which is the top firm ranked, in spite of recent troubles:
1. BP
Accountability score: 75.2
2006 rank: 2
Global 500 rank: 4
“The world's second-biggest company reclaims the top spot on our list from Vodafone, the leader on last year's list. BP has led its industry in the research and development of wind, solar, and carbon-dioxide sequestration technologies. But new CEO Tony Hayward's core focus is getting new oil and gas projects online, like fields in Azerbaijan, Angola, Indonesia, and the Gulf of Mexico. That pleases shareholders and helps to lower prices for consumers through increased supply - a goal BP considers a core part of its social responsibility. Despite two years of major accidents - a pipeline spill in 2006 and a refinery explosion in 2005 - BP earned points for replacing several executives at those businesses.”
Have a good weekend.
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
ACCOUNTING FOR ACCOUNTABILITY 10 Most 'Accountable' Companies
Fortune partnered with AccountAbility and CSRnetwork to rank the world's 100 largest corporations by the quality of their commitment to social and environmental goals.
CNNMoney.com
http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2007/fortune/0710/gallery.accountability.fortune/index.html
1. BP
Accountability score: 75.2
2006 rank: 2
Global 500 rank: 4
“The world's second-biggest company reclaims the top spot on our list from Vodafone, the leader on last year's list. BP has led its industry in the research and development of wind, solar, and carbon-dioxide sequestration technologies. But new CEO Tony Hayward's core focus is getting new oil and gas projects online, like fields in Azerbaijan, Angola, Indonesia, and the Gulf of Mexico. That pleases shareholders and helps to lower prices for consumers through increased supply - a goal BP considers a core part of its social responsibility. Despite two years of major accidents - a pipeline spill in 2006 and a refinery explosion in 2005 - BP earned points for replacing several executives at those businesses.”
Have a good weekend.
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
ACCOUNTING FOR ACCOUNTABILITY 10 Most 'Accountable' Companies
Fortune partnered with AccountAbility and CSRnetwork to rank the world's 100 largest corporations by the quality of their commitment to social and environmental goals.
CNNMoney.com
http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2007/fortune/0710/gallery.accountability.fortune/index.html
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Strategic CSR - Diversity
The article in the url link below reports on an interesting project introduced by graduating law students at Stanford (Issues: Diversity—Discrimination, p164; Diversity—Helpful Intent, p168):
“The students are handing out ''diversity report cards'' to the big law firms, ranking them by how many female, minority and gay lawyers they have. … Firms in the top fifth received A's, in the second fifth B's, and so on. Overall grades were arrived at by averaging grades for partners and associates in five categories: women, blacks, Hispanics, Asians and gay people.”
As the article notes, this is a strong indication that it is currently a sellers’ market for the students, but it is also an important message for firms that they need to reflect the values of a key stakeholder—their prospective employees. In addition, it seems to me that this, controlling for individual ability, is as good a point of differentiation among their prospective employers as any other the students could come up with:
“The students have ambitious plans, including asking elite schools to restrict recruiting by firms at the bottom of their rankings. They also plan to send the rankings to the general counsels of the Fortune 500 companies with the suggestion that they be used in selecting lawyers.”
This story also reflects a shift in the locus of power from producer to consumer thanks to the free flow of information encouraged by the internet (The Free Flow of Information in a Globalizing World: Figure 3.4, p56). The results of the project are very revealing:
“In New York, a third of the big firms had no black partners, and an overlapping third no Hispanic ones. … Half the firms in Boston had no black partners, and three-quarters no Hispanic ones. The students also found relatively few female partners in New York, ranging from 7 percent at Fulbright & Jaworski to 23 percent at Morrison & Foerster.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
In Students' Eyes, Look-Alike Lawyers Don't Make the Grade
By ADAM LIPTAK
914 words
29 October 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
10
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/29/us/29bar.html
“The students are handing out ''diversity report cards'' to the big law firms, ranking them by how many female, minority and gay lawyers they have. … Firms in the top fifth received A's, in the second fifth B's, and so on. Overall grades were arrived at by averaging grades for partners and associates in five categories: women, blacks, Hispanics, Asians and gay people.”
As the article notes, this is a strong indication that it is currently a sellers’ market for the students, but it is also an important message for firms that they need to reflect the values of a key stakeholder—their prospective employees. In addition, it seems to me that this, controlling for individual ability, is as good a point of differentiation among their prospective employers as any other the students could come up with:
“The students have ambitious plans, including asking elite schools to restrict recruiting by firms at the bottom of their rankings. They also plan to send the rankings to the general counsels of the Fortune 500 companies with the suggestion that they be used in selecting lawyers.”
This story also reflects a shift in the locus of power from producer to consumer thanks to the free flow of information encouraged by the internet (The Free Flow of Information in a Globalizing World: Figure 3.4, p56). The results of the project are very revealing:
“In New York, a third of the big firms had no black partners, and an overlapping third no Hispanic ones. … Half the firms in Boston had no black partners, and three-quarters no Hispanic ones. The students also found relatively few female partners in New York, ranging from 7 percent at Fulbright & Jaworski to 23 percent at Morrison & Foerster.”
Take care
Dave
Bill Werther & David Chandler
Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility
© Sage Publications, 2006
http://www.sagepub.com/Werther
In Students' Eyes, Look-Alike Lawyers Don't Make the Grade
By ADAM LIPTAK
914 words
29 October 2007
The New York Times
Late Edition - Final
10
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/29/us/29bar.html
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