Stakeholders want value, too

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Companies have finally begun to understand the true importance of stakeholder engagement when it comes to CSR, and are now implementing various techniques to connect with these groups and learn from them.

A recent book - 'Leveraging Corporate Responsibility: The Stakeholder Route to Maximizing Business and Social Value' - goes deeper than any other we have seen in discussing this increasingly central CSR topic.

The main premise is that without a proper understanding of various stakeholders and how differently they may react to brands and CSR initiatives, many such efforts are bound to fail.

There are many valuable lessons in this book, but one particularly resonated with me. more


Let’s get creative with CSR communications

World of 7 Billion

The SMI – Wizness Social Media Sustainability Index was recently published. The report emphasizes the efforts that many companies have undertaken over the past year in terms of using social media for sustainability communications.

This report's findings are interesting to us for several reasons.

First, they show what we have known for some time: that social media has a strong role to play in the CSR field. Companies involved in CSR have lagged behind other corporations in their adoption of social media, but as executives and managers develop a better understanding of the medium, it has become clear that proper use of social media can lead to meaningful stakeholder engagement. more


Spiele und Verantwortung

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Auf der Suche nach einer angemessenen Weihnachtslektüre stieß ich auf das UN Global Compact International Yearbook 2011. Wenn auch nicht ganz so spannend wie ein Roman von John le Carré, so war es doch nicht das fade Geschwafel das man in solchen Veröffentlichungen manchmal erwartet.

Besonders interessant fand ich einen Artikel, „The Accountability Web: Weaving Corporate Accountability with Interactive Technology“ (zu deutsch etwa, „Verantwortung im Netz: die Verwobenheit von Unternehmensverantwortung und interaktiver Technologie“) von Bill Baue und Marcy Murninghan. Und Nein, der Artikel hat mich nicht nur deshalb beeindruckt, weil er unser Spiel CEO2 erwähnt, das wir 2010 für WWF und Allianz entwickelt haben. more


Sustainability for Numbers People

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Two recent studies have given us a clearer picture about what sustainability actually means to executives and investors.

The first one comes from Harvard Business School, and it says that investors are showing more interest in non-financial information about companies. The authors know this by looking at what environmental, social, and governance (ESG) terms investors are searching for on the Bloomberg database.

For example, there were 2,395,230 hits for "ESG Disclosure Score" versus 606,998 hits for "UN Global Compact Signatory." Or 109,883 hits for "Total CO2 Emissions" versus 78,499 hits for "Fair Remuneration Policy." more


Shared Value Marketing

Credit: Luc De Leeuw

Apparently, green marketing is dead. In the past months, several media outlets have reported about the so-called death of green marketing, relying on studies that show that consumers are (still) not changing their purchasing behavior based on green claims. Price remains the number-one criteria for purchasing decisions, so now we are being told that if your marketing message is to succeed, the green angle must be mixed in adroitly with price and quality attributes. more


Beautiful data: Is it worth it?

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Is spending the time and money to produce a beautiful infographic really worth it? (DE)

This isn't a philosophical question; it is a very practical one for companies and NGOs: "Should I just pay a graphic designer to layout a PDF document, or should I invest in something more than that?"

Clearly, there are great infographics being made out there in print and online - highly artistic and innovative ways of presenting data.

Obviously, we think it's worth investing more. That's our business, so we would be silly not to think that, right? Luckily, we're not the only ones.

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