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Many Companies have Already done much. They put business against society, when clearly the two are interdependentThey pressure companies to think of CSR in generic ways instead of in the way most appropriate to eaach firm
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1. Corporate Social Responsibility Strategy & Society
Michael Porter and Mark Kramer
Harvard Business Review
2. Many Companies have Already done much They put business against society, when clearly the two are interdependent
They pressure companies to think of CSR in generic ways instead of in the way most appropriate to eaach firm´s strategy
3. Being Hold Accountable for Social Issues In fact the most common corporate response has been neither strategic nor operational, but
Cosmetic, pibliv relations and media campaigns
64% of the 250 largest multinational companies published CSR reports
These reports rarely offer at coherent framework for CSR activities
4. Four Pevailing Justifications for CSR Proponents for CSR have used four arguments to maake their case:
Moral obligation
Sustainability
License to operate
reputation
5. 1. Moral Obligation Balancing competing values, interests and costs!
Example:
Googles entry to China
6. 2. Sustainability The notion af sustainability can become so vague as to be meaningless
Transparency vs. corruption
Philanthropy may contribute to ”sustainability” of a society
They offer little basis for balancing long-term objectives against the short-term costa the incur
Trade-offs without offering a framework
7. 3. License-to-operate A firm that views CSR as away to calm down pressure groups often finds that this approach devolves into a series of short-term defensive reactions
A-never-ending public relations palliative with minimal value to society and to stratigic benefit for the business
8. 4. Reputation In stigmatized industries, such as chemicals and energy, a compaany may instead pursue social responsibility initiatives as a form og insurance
Example:
Body Shop have distinguished themselves through an extraordinary long-term commitment to socila responsibility
9. All Four Schools: All these four schools of thought share the same weakness:
They focus on the tension between business and society rather than on their interdependence
10. Integrating Business and Society(Porter and Kramer´s Theory) Successful corporations need a healthy society
And healthy societies needs successful companies
Both business decisions and social policies must follow the principle of shared value
11. Identifying the Points of Intersection
Vitually every activety in a company´s value chain touches on the communities in which the form operates, creating either positive or negative social consequences
12. Competitive Context – Four Areas Quantity and quality of bussiness inputs
The rules and incentives yhat govern the competition
The size and sophistication of local demand
The local availability of supporting industries
13. Choosing Which Social Issues to Address
14. Creating a Corporate Social Agenda
Responsive CSR
Strategic CSR
15. Corporate InvolvmentA Strategic Approach
16. Integrating Inside-out and Outside-in Practices Pioneering value chain innovations and addressing social constraints to com petitiveness are each powerful tools for creating economic and social value
When value chain practices and investments in competitive context are fully integrated, CSR becomes hard to distinguish from the day-today business og the company
17. Creating a Social Dimension to the Value Proposition Not every company can build its entire value proposition around social issues
But adding a social dimension to the value proposition offers a new frontier in competitive positioning
18. Organizing for CSR Strategy is always about making choices, and success in CSR is no different.
It is about choosing which social issues to focus on
19. The Moral Purpose of Business Perceiving social responsibility as building shared value rather than as damage control as a PR campaign will require dramatically different thinking in business.
We are concinced, that CSR will become increasingly important to competitive success