More companies are adopting sustainable business models that consider environmental and social impacts, not just profits and shareholders. This is driven by consumer expectations, empowerment, and demands for corporate social responsibility. Effective measurement of economic, social and environmental performance allows companies to understand trade-offs and stakeholder perceptions, which influence reputation. Managing reputation among stakeholders is important for competitive advantage and business outcomes like brand equity and social license to operate.
2. More and more companies have put aside doubts and are
inventing new models of business.
• They are walking away from traditional models that assume
unlimited resources and focus on the narrow interests of
profit and shareholders.
• They are moving beyond corporate philanthropy and corporate social responsibility initiatives that look and feel good
but aren’t solidly integrated into or driving their business
strategy.
• They are leaning forward into an awareness that public
opinion increasingly demands the value they create must
be sustainable, that all stakeholders are important - not just
shareholders - and, because business is part of society and is
not separate from it, that profit supports a purpose.
Companies are also responding to the paradigm shift - fuelled
by social media and global digital connection and provoked by
the global financial crisis - that has occurred between brands
and customers and between companies and stakeholders. Much
influence has been transferred from companies to consumers.
Consumers have been empowered.
Changing their stance
2010, provides a complete roadmap, best practices and “practical tools for all three dimensions of sustainable development:
economic, social and environmental.”
At the center
Graphic visualizations of TBL typically put sustainability at the
center of three intersecting circles: the three bottom lines of
Profit, People and Planet.
• The Profit sphere is financial and relates, as it always has, to
economic success and prosperity. The very familiar metrics
include revenue, margin, sales growth, ROI, cash flow and job
creation among others.
• The People sphere is social and relates to stakeholder value.
The focus can vary dramatically, depending on the nature of
the business, but commonly includes employee welfare and
retention; labor practices; fair trade; community and human
rights impacts; cause marketing; and product responsibility.
Some of these can be objectively measured; others can be quantified using survey-based interviewing techniques.
• The Planet sphere is environmental and relates to sustainable
use and stewardship of resources (e.g., air and water quality,
energy consumption and resource and waste management).
These can usually be objectively measured.
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Just as companies are changing their stance towards consumers, so too are consumers’ expectations of companies changing. Studies show that consumers want to feel good about the
companies and brands they have a relationship with. They
expect companies to act responsibly. Some will get involved
and participate actively, making shared value a reality. Harris
Interactive’s 2013 Reputation Quotient survey shows that the
attributes consumers ascribe to “great companies” that have
increased the most in importance over the past two years are
“plays a valuable social role,” is “a good company to work for”
and have “a good feeling about the company.” The survey also
shows that the American public is now more likely than in the
past to proactively try to learn more about the companies they
hear about or do business with.
Companies are finding academic and theoretical support for
their new models from many sources, including Michael Porter’s
thinking on shared value; the work of Edward Freeman, John
Mackey and others on conscious capitalism; and of course, from
stakeholder theory.
Ready to compete
So it’s a good time to be a sustainability officer but also a challenging time. The Reputation Institute’s 2013 global reputation
leadership survey shows nearly 80 percent of corporate executives think we now live in a “reputation economy” but only 20
percent say their company is ready to compete.
For companies adopting sustainable business models,
there are now numerous cases that can be studied and
companies to benchmark. Organizations such as the Global
Reporting Initiative offer guidelines, processes, frameworks
and reporting tools that can be adapted to the needs of most
businesses. Most useful of all, the ISO 26000 voluntary international standards on social responsibility, introduced in
Effective measurement of the TBL dimensions enables companies to examine and learn not just from their performance on
each sphere but also the trade-offs they make between spheres.
For example, how equitable is our financial performance, given
our commitments to stakeholders? How bearable is our use of
resources, given our stakeholders’ needs? How viable are our
financial targets, given the sustainability of the resources we
consume?
Perception is reality
While much measurement can be objective or evidence-based,
there is one key area where a company’s scorecard performance
is judged not by the company itself or by objective assessment.
Just as beauty is in the eye of the beholder, sustainability is in
the eye of the stakeholder. In effect, what stakeholders subjectively judge as the company’s performance, is the company’s
performance. Perception is reality. In this sense, sustainability is
a reputational issue and a company’s reputation is a perceptual
equity that the company can manage but not ultimately control.
So how do stakeholders influence reputations, why is sustainable development a reputational issue and how can a company
measure and manage its reputation for sustainability and social
responsibility?
Stakeholders are commonly defined as any group or individual who can affect or be affected by the achievement of the company’s purpose. A company should maintain its own stakeholder
map as a way to understand and manage their reputation among
the stakeholders who are relevant to their business. Relevant
internal stakeholders will include owners, managers and employees. External stakeholders include customers, shareholders,
creditors and suppliers. Other external groups - government, the
local community, society at large, media, NGOs, activists, future
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