The
Sustainability Challenge
Corporations are
increasingly in the public spotlight, and the business decisions
they make are now subject to scrutiny in both the traditional media
as well as on blogs and Internet sites. And they are being judged on
new, far-reaching criteria.
There is a
growing sense among senior leadership that corporate responsibility
is no longer an option. Now, to achieve sustainability, corporations
realize they must pay attention to what is called the “triple bottom
line” -- economic prosperity, environmental quality and social
justice.
As a consequence,
many companies are asking themselves a new set of questions:
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What would
triple bottom line success mean in our business?
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What
impact are our business decisions having on the environment?
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Do our
corporate values include concern for the physical health and
well-being of the communities in which we do business?
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Are we
aware of public attitudes? Are we concerned?
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Do we know
the impact of our decisions on all levels of society?
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Do our
corporate behaviors appeal to the employees we need to attract?
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Are we
doing a good enough job of communicating our value system to our
stakeholders? Employees? Shareholders? Unions? Service
providers?
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What are
the areas that we must begin to address to maintain our
competitive edge?
-
What are
the areas in which we could more easily begin to make an impact?
As corporations
are addressing these questions by launching initiatives that bring
the CSR dimension into the business, they are facing new challenges.
“The
opportunities for making gains in sustainable practices require
coordination across business units. The challenge is to have the
whole organization see the big picture. You have to get everyone to
play ball in a different way than business as usual.”
Manager of
CSR, Fortune 500
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Do you
have trained leaders who can drive your organization towards
sustainability?
-
Do you
have leaders who understand, believe in, and execute, corporate
responsibilities?
The stakes are
high. Until now, in the USA and much of the developed world,
business decisions have been made on assumptions that are no longer
valid, like resources are unlimited; growth and expansion are
fundamentally good and carry no risks. Significantly, much of the
corporate world has acted in almost willful ignorance of the
consequences of their actions, and of the systemic connection
between all facets of our environment. Each action has an impact on
our larger system.
The
Sustainability Revolution is changing the way business is done.
Leaders are facing complex challenges, for which they have not been
prepared. Practices in accounting, manufacturing, new product
development, logistics, marketing, sales, procurement, investment,
business development and Human Resources have all been set up to
operate in a market-driven economy focused on global expansion, and
on the principle of maximizing returns. However, legislators,
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the general public are
looking at compliance and the impact of current practices.
As some
companies have begun to realize, it doesn’t have to be at the
expense of profit. On the contrary: multi-dimensional thinking can
create wins on the environmental, business and community level.
But this
requires a new way of thinking.
Do your leaders have the mindsets and skills to develop a
sustainable business?
“In a complex world, a complex mind in the leader is no luxury. We
simply cannot afford otherwise.”
Robert Kegan, Harvard University
The new
complex challenges demand more than linear thinking. They demand
systemic, and creative thinking. They demand inquiry and advocacy
skills. They demand increased self-awareness and dialogical
negotiation skills.
LIM ’s CoRe
(COrporate REsponsibility) Program is designed to develop the
competencies and mindsets required for this new leadership profile...-
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