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Winds of change

dotted underlineIn January, Marks & Spencer announced plans to become carbon neutral within five years. A few months before, Virgin boss Sir Richard Branson had announced that for the next decade he will donate profits from his rail and air travel businesses to researching environmentally friendly fuels.

As these examples show, corporate social responsibility (CSR) is now important to almost every corporation, regardless of sector or background.


Yet, while companies may be keen to develop their CSR credentials as quickly as possible, they should approach the area cautiously. CSR is a broad and complex area. Rushing in too quickly can cause many problems. It can create enormous operational disruption, it can prove very costly and, in extreme cases, it can do more harm than good to the consumer and employer brand.


Rachel Hawkes, Account Director at Elemental Communications, a media communications consultancy, says: ‘A fully integrated and operational CSR plan is not one that can be decided and implemented within a week. There are many issues to take into consideration, such as who will drive the initiative, how the internal culture will need to change to successfully carry any changes and how to communicate this to stakeholders.’


The first step is to gain commitment in the company to social responsibility. The business can then begin appraisals of how various parts of the company currently affect society. Typically, companies consider their impacts on the environment, their employees, their supply chain, their local community and their customers. However, each company needs to work out where it has the greatest environmental and ethical impact on society.

 

While researching existing impacts, the company should develop a vision of where it wants to end up. It should talk to key stakeholders to build a picture of what they feel the company should do to be responsible.

 

The views of stakeholders, such as investors and environmental campaigning groups, are likely to conflict so, having listened to all views, the company needs to make its own judgment on what constitutes a responsible position.


Having assessed the current situation and defined the ultimate future goal, the next step is to produce a strategy for getting from here to there. This should identify clear first steps and incorporate frequent reviews.


The steps that we’ve covered are just the beginning of the process; even getting to this point requires considerable investment of time and money – an investment that sceptics and even some shareholders may feel doesn’t pay off.


Finding the balance is a lengthy process. As Peter Walker, Executive Chairman at Pielle Consulting Group, advises: ‘Don’t set out to save the world. Focus your efforts where the business and the individuals in it can make a difference and accept that, to be effective, CSR has to be rooted in self-interest.’

 

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