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Transcript of Corporate Social Responsibility Why doing good is good for business Pierre McDonagh, Wednesday,...
Corporate Social Responsibility
Why doing good is good for business
Pierre McDonagh,Wednesday, September 26th 2007
Presentation format
Setting the parameters Sign value and legitimation CSR in Society What’s happening in Ireland? Conclusions
What is going on? Society
Risk & UncertaintySurveillanceBranding
ConsumerismSpeed of Technology
Risk & UncertaintySurveillanceBranding
ConsumerismSpeed of Technology
Consuming Value&
Consuming Organisations
Why would we think of any organisation as socially
responsible?
Why would we think of any organisation as socially
responsible?
http://www.ccs.dcu.ie
The Centre for Consumption Studies (CCS) is a new research cluster of people interested in how people consume IDENTITY such as visual culture via the creative arts, digital education and more broadly how we consume within CONSUMER CULTURE.
The Centre for Consumption Studies (CCS) is a new research cluster of people interested in how people consume IDENTITY such as visual culture via the creative arts, digital education and more broadly how we consume within CONSUMER CULTURE.
Critics always ‘out’ bad business
organisations!
WatchdogsFly on the wall documentaries
WhistleblowersMovie makers
The public and media LOVE a good SCANDAL
WatchdogsFly on the wall documentaries
WhistleblowersMovie makers
The public and media LOVE a good SCANDAL
Corporation Movie
http://www.ccs.dcu.ie/consumingidentity/resources/docs/Corporation.mpg
SIGN VALUE -the basics
What makes a lump of rock worth a million dollars?
What makes a $20 dollar harmonica worth $1000?
What makes a painting worth a cool million?
SIGN VALUE
What makes a lump of rock worth a million dollars? If it is from the moon?
What makes a $20 dollar harmonica worth $1000?
What makes a painting worth a cool million?
SIGN VALUE
What makes a lump of rock worth a million dollars? If it is from the moon?
What makes a $20 dollar harmonica worth $1000? If it once belonged to Bob Dylan?
What makes a painting worth a cool million?
SIGN VALUE
What makes a lump of rock worth a million dollars? If it is from the moon?
What makes a $20 dollar harmonica worth $1000? If it once belonged to Bob Dylan?
What makes a painting worth a cool million? If it was painted by Van Gogh?
Where are these values created or produced? Sign value is created in our cultural environment.
Things (companies) become valuable because we talk about them, display them and:
RE-PRESENT them in a certain manner:
They become ascribed with SIGN VALUE.
We can use the terms branding or ‘commodity discourse’.
Legitimation signs
“Whereas consumer-goods ads help arrange commodity -sign production, corporate advertising engages in corporate-sign construction, especially the construction of legitimation signs.” Goldman and Papson (1996:216)
Legitimation signs
“As commodity discourse, corporate image ads and advocacy ads have contributed to a significant reshaping of public discourse in terms of ‘soundbites’ and visual ‘sign bites’.” Goldman and Papson (1996:220)
Building Corporate Sign Values
“Corporate giants value a stable (though dynamic) image as part of their authority and power” Goldman and Papson (1996:224).
turning legitimation claims into corporate sign values locates questions of legitimation in the spectacle rather than society itself.
Abbreviate public discourse. Use images out of their original context to make the corporation look good.
Corporate Ads & Public Debate
How free is a free market? Discourse governed by commodification. Corporate interests have disproportionate access to the field of discourse. (Goldman and Papson 1996:252) Corporate ads muddly questions as to how they use their power and the public interest.
So lets think of how business can fight
back
Corporate Social Responsibility
Corporate ReputationCorporate Citizenship
…complex social processes…
Corporate Social Responsibility
Corporate ReputationCorporate Citizenship
…complex social processes…
“ Business ethics? I didn’t think there
were any!”
Business and ethics are intrinsically linked Many business decisions are based on certain ethical beliefs or values e.g. That customers should/should not be exploited.
That firm resources should/should not be available for personal use.
That deception in negotiation is/is not acceptable.
That fair competition is a good/bad thing. That men and women should/should not be treated equally.
That paying bribes is/is not acceptable. Even ‘bad’ ethics are ethics!
Doesn’t the law already determine what is right and
wrong?
Ethics and the Law
Ethics
Law
Grey area
Aren’t social issues the government’s responsibility?
Business is an important social actor Firms are involved in social activities, e.g.: Providing employment. Producing products and services. Building roads, bridges, airports, etc. Providing health care, education, security, arts, etc.
Extracting and using resources. Discharging pollutants. Giving to charity.
Business wields considerable power and influence in society (cf the ‘Corporation’ clip) more so than many governments.
Business and its stakeholders in society
Business
Customers
Government
CommunityEmployees
Shareholders
Suppliers
Society
Critics
Taking away the mystery
So ethics and responsibility are not esoteric or far-removed from reality.
They are about the daily decisions we all make in organizations.
They are about fundamentally important issues.
They are not only about optional extras, but about core business issues.
CSR is not New
It is not just a trendy topic that will disappear overnight!
For example: SRI: SRI by Quakers in the 1800s. Early 20th century ‘sin’ products: alcohol, tobacco,
gambling. 1940s: unfair labour practices. 1970s: Vietnam war, urban strife, Apartheid. Today: the environment, weapons production, product
safety, women’s issues, local communities. SRI increased by nearly 200% in 1990s in US. 2003 represented 10% of all investment dollars in the
US. European market up from €1 trillion in 2005 to €1.6
trillion in 2007. Co-op Ethical Fund topped UK all companies growth
league in 2006. Fair trade sales in Europe in 2004 worth €560 million.
Many companies continue to be targeted on social, ethical and environmental issues
“ Nike admits abuse at Indonesian plants”, 22nd February 2001.
“Consumer boycott to 'stop Esso’”, 8th May 2002 “McDonald's targeted in obesity lawsuit”, 22nd November 2002.
“Tobacco giant urged to leave Burma”, 2nd July 2003
“BOC hit by US court ruling” , 29th October 2003. The Economist 2006 – suggests sales of Danish goods in Muslim countries will fall by DKr10bn per annum.
Poor CSR is bad for business
Managerial and empirical evidence that corporations with poor CSR records will have negative consequences:
Large scale consumer boycotts (eg boycotts of famous brands in UK cost companies £3.2 bn in 2006)
Reductions in brand images Temporary drop in sales Drop in share price
Recent research by Gfk NOP consumers in both US and Europe feel business ethics have declined in past five years.
New evidence which suggests there is positive correlation between purchase intention and positive image, and consumers do discriminate when making product/brand choices.
If you do a half-hearted job you will get caught out: “Why, until two years ago, were Nike and Gap’s codes available only
in English? Why weren’t they distributed to workers in the factories?” Naomi Klein 2000
BUT not all doom gloom in same Gfk study business is trusted more than governments and the media!
“ Nike admits abuse at Indonesian plants”
22nd February 2001
“ BOC hit by US court ruling” 29/10/03
US court verdict links welding fumes to Parkinson's disease.
GlaxoSmithKline provides research funding to doctors who write favorable opinions of depression drugs for children, despite evidence from clinical trials that the medication can cause anger and even suicide. http://www.corpwatch.org
GlaxoSmithKline provides research funding to doctors who write favorable opinions of depression drugs for children, despite evidence from clinical trials that the medication can cause anger and even suicide. http://www.corpwatch.org
A supplier and two employees of the furniture giant Ikea have admitted to using bribes in purchasing deals. Adam Hauxwell-Smith, of Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, pleaded guilty to 18 charges of corruption when he appeared in Birmingham Crown Court. He paid up to 」 648,000 to John Brown, a buyer, and Paul Hoult, a sales leader with Ikea, to overlook store rules. http://www.corpwatch.org
A supplier and two employees of the furniture giant Ikea have admitted to using bribes in purchasing deals. Adam Hauxwell-Smith, of Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, pleaded guilty to 18 charges of corruption when he appeared in Birmingham Crown Court. He paid up to 」 648,000 to John Brown, a buyer, and Paul Hoult, a sales leader with Ikea, to overlook store rules. http://www.corpwatch.org
Clean Clothes CampaignClean Clothes Campaign
While customers continue to demand more social
responsibility Millennium Poll (2000), first ever European-wide survey on consumers attitudes to CSR: 70% said that a company’s commitment to social
responsibility was important when buying a product. 1 in 5 willing to pay more for products that were
environmentally and socially responsible. Nearly 60% believed that business did not pay enough
attention to social responsibilities at present. CSR Monitor (2004) Domestic cos have adv when it comes
to TRUST People trust NGOS most to operate in best interests of
society Continued discontent in EU re CSR, more trusting in
Canada and USA People give -ve assessment of CSR performance of large
cos (less so in Asia/Africa)
And newspapers continue to criticise poor behaviour“Too many companies are failing to grasp the extent to which they are at the receiving end of a sharp increase in social expectations about the role of corporations in society.” (FT, 2002)
Bad business dealings will make it to the front pages as well as the business pages (cf Enron, Martha Stewart etc).
Authors continue to write anti-coropration best sellers
Naomi Klein “No Logo” 2002. George Monbiot “Captive State: The Corporate Takeover of Britain” 2000.
Film Makers continue to produce critically acclaimed movies and
documentaries criticising business practices
From Silkwood in the 1980s to
The Insider in the 1990s
Blood Diamond in the noughties
To successful 21st century documentaries: Bowling for Columbine
The Corporation Super Size Me An Inconvenient Truth
Football Movie
http://www.ccs.dcu.ie/consumingidentity/resources/docs/Footballs.mpg
What’s happening in Ireland?
Lagging behind on CSR reporting etc. BUT also proactive in Europe and globally:
Protection of employees via smoking in the workplace.
New code for advertising to children introduced in Jan 2005.
Plastic bag tax. Rise of Fair Trade and new markets(cf FairTrade Mark
Ireland) http://www.fairtrade.ie More than 60 farmer’s markets in Ireland (north and
south) Consumers are trying too:
Recycling for household waste up from 4.3% in 1995 to 9% in 2004.
2007 Responsible Competitiveness Index for business – Ireland ranked 8th! (Scandinavian countries top 4, UK 5th, USA 18th)
Members
Business in the Community Ireland
Core Partnerships:
Conclusion
Ethics and responsibility are integral parts of any business BUT be cautious; seek advice.
Defining specific responsibilities and obligations is crucial but complex.
There is a major social and ethical challenge facing business that offers both opportunities and dangers.
This affects different companies in different ways, but few will be immune.
Management tools are emerging, but can only ever be partial remedies. POOR CSR can devastate share price.
Conclusions
“The constantly challenging goal is to ensure that responsible business is integrated and embedded in the decision making culture rather than confined to a progressive individual, area or division.”
(Business in the Community, Ireland)