Shaping The Future Mckinsey
Shaping The Future Mckinsey
Shaping The Future Mckinsey
AboUT CECP
Based in New York, the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy is the only international forum of CEOs and chairpersons pursuing a mission exclusively focused on corporate philanthropy. The Committees membership consists of more than 170 executives who lead the business community in raising the level and quality of corporate giving. CECP hosts CEO conferences, publishes best-practice articles, conducts extensive research with corporate giving data, and offers corporate giving professionals tools to help refine and expand their strategic giving programs. A current membership list and information about CECPs events and research are available at CorporatePhilanthropy.org. Download additional copies of this report at: CorporatePhilanthropy.org/resources When referencing findings from this report, please list the source as: Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy. 2010 Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy
PREFACE
At the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, we chose to celebrate our ten-year anniversary not by looking backward, but instead by challenging ourselves and our membership to consider what the worldand the environment for corporate involvement in solving social problemscould look like in the year 2020 if we adopt a solutions-oriented mind-set on local and global issues. Most organizations elect not to look so far into the future, because the pace of change for business is too rapid. Thinking even 18 months ahead can feel like a lifetime. Yet some risks and opportunities are best addressed now while a full range of options and actions is available. The longer companies wait, the narrower the choices become. This is true not only for todays multinational corporations, but also for every individual and organization with a passion for social change and justice. In that light, the most important and inspiring trend CECP sees across its corporate membership is the commitment to engage in problem solving on tough issues. The walls and silos that separate funders, grantees, governments, multilaterals, activists, and others are falling away as each change agent instead focuses on bringing its unique skills and resources to bear on todays most difficult social challenges. For companies, increased involvement is driven partly by a growing realization that they can take an active role in solving social problems in a way that simultaneously delivers tangible bottom-line results (either by reducing costs or increasing revenues). This model goes beyond simply aligning philanthropy with business objectives or creating smart signature programs in relevant funding areas; instead, it requires synthesizing core values and financial goals into a single corporate strategy. With this report, CECP is encouraging its members to embrace the advice and models contained here as a means of taking ownership of the next decade. We hope those who share this ambition will join us in fostering the skill sets and mind-sets needed to make it work.
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CoNTENTS
INTRodUCTIoN: Shaping the Future CHAPTER 1: Scenarios for Corporate Involvement in Solving Social Problems over the Next decade Five Game-Changing Trends Two Major Uncertainties Four Visions of business and Society in 2020 Toward Sustainable Value Creation CHAPTER 2: Maximizing Profitability and Societal Impact Preparing for Leadership Mobilizing the organization to Lead delivering Win-Win Solutions Collaborating to Create Sustainable Value CoNCLUSIoN: Pathways to 2020 APPENdIx: Research Methodology and Acknowledgments 4
5 6 11 13 17 18 18 20 24 26 31 33
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For these reasons, this report aims to address the following future-oriented questions: 1. What will the next decade look like, and what are the implications for corporate involvement in solving social issues? 2. How can corporations position themselves now to maximize their profitability and societal impact? Chapter 1 of this report tackles the first question. Despite the difficulty of predicting in detail what the year 2020 will look like, it is already clear that several gamechanging trendssuch as the shift in economic activity from the Western to the Eastern Hemisphere and an increased stress on natural resourceswill have an acute impact on the context in which large multinational companies compete ten years from now. Another reasonable prediction is that social problems will become increasingly complex and widespread over the next decade. At the same time, societal expectations that companies should take a substantial role in addressing those issues will escalate. The chief axes of uncertainty are how high those expectations will rise and how business will respond. The chapter concludes with four distinct visions of 2020 based on those two key uncertainties. Chapter 2 turns its attention to the second question, investigating the steps that companies can take today to mitigate the risks and seize the opportunities for long-term value creation in the changed landscape of 2020. It presents specific recommendations for how individual companies can prepare, offers guidance on whether companies should act independently or seek collaborators, and provides ideas for new models of collaboration to meet the challenges of the next decade. The reward for a company with a proactive mind-set is the ability to rework business strategy with the goal of shaping the futurecapitalizing on the opportunities to devise win-win solutions that benefit communities and corporate bottom lines alike.
1. International Telecommunication Union (ITU), Measuring the Information Society 2010 (ITU, 2010), www.itu.int; and ITU, World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators Database (ITU, 2000), www.itu.int. 2. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Sustainable Energy Finance Initiative, Global Trends in Sustainable Energ y Investment 2009 (UNEP, 2009), www.unep.org.
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CHAPTER 1: Scenarios for Corporate Involvement in Solving Social Problems over the Next Decade
Of all of the global demographic, environmental, technological, and geopolitical forces that will shape the business landscape in 2020, McKinseys in-depth research has surfaced a list of five trends most likely to be transformative in the coming decade: The Great Rebalancing: The rise of China and other emerging economies is shifting the locus of economic activity. The Productivity Imperative: Continued prosperity in developed countries will require an unprecedented step change in productivity to offset a shrinking labor force and global talent shortages. The Global Grid: Global integrationof capital markets, trade, and technologywill continue to drive market and societal restructuring. Pricing the Planet: Demand for natural resources outpaces supply, leading to resource scarcities that will constrain business. The Market State: Activist states will compete to capture jobs while struggling to provide for their populations. This chapter outlines the essential dimensions of each of these trends, focused on the aspects that keep senior business executives awake at night, according to McKinseys interviews of CECPs CEO members. It also investigates the implications of these trends for businesss evolving relationship with society.
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more than doubled from 27 in 2005 to 58 in 2009. Though companies from developed economies are likely to recover some ground in these metrics as the rebound from the economic downturn continues, the overall trend is clear. As 2020 approaches, large corporations will increasingly compete with, and in some cases be dominated by, emerging-market leaders. Jim Rogers, Chairman, President and CEO of Duke Energy Corporation, reveals what these trend means for the energy industry, China is where the growth is going to be in the next ten years. It has the potential to truly leap frog more developed countries in the use of smart grid technology. How will this shift of economic inf luence from the Western to the Eastern Hemisphere affect the way companies headquartered outside BRIC nations compete for bottom-line growth? What are the implications for Western companies if the number of employees and percentage of total corporate profits earned abroad exceed those figures in their home markets (as is already the case for many global players)? What implications will differing levels of social regulations and expectations have for companies operating in both Western and emerging economies?
1. The Great rebalancing: The rise of China and Other emerging economies
Even today, the discussions taking place in the corporate boardrooms of large multinational companies around the world are centered on the strategic possibilities inherent in riding the wave of growth in the emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRIC). After all, by 2020, developing countries will account for over 55 percent of worldwide GDP.4 Another indication of the rise of emerging markets is that the number of Fortune Global 500 companies that are based in BRIC countries
Exhibit 1
Five transformative trends will shape the environment for business over the next decade
The Great Rebalancing Emerging markets gaining larger share of global GDP Growth of a multipolar global economy The Global Grid Increasing interconnection of markets, trade, and technology The Productivity Imperative Economic growth in developed economies increasingly dependent on productivity gains Insufficient supply of highly trained talent for rising global demand
Pricing the Planet Significant increase in resource demand as emerging markets surge Growing environmental pressures on business and society
The Market State Growing need of states to compete for economic growth and innovation Competition to attract business activity
3 4
3. Peter Bisson, Rik Kirkland, Elizabeth Stephenson, and Patrick Viguerie, What Happens Next? Five Crucibles of Innovation That Will Shape the Coming Decade, (McKinsey & Co., forthcoming), www.mckinsey.com. 4. IHS Global Insight, World Economic Service Forecast, updated January 15, 2010.
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5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
IHS Global Insight; Bureau of Labor Statistics; Bureau of Economic Analysis. Manpower, 2009 Talent Shortage Survey Results (Manpower, May 2009), www.manpower.com. National Science Board, Science and Engineering Indicators 2010 (National Science Foundation, January 2010), www.nsf.gov. International Labor Organization (ILO), Global Employment Trends for Youth (ILO, October 2008), www.ilo.org. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Statistics of International Trade database, http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx, accessed February 2010. 10. ITU, Measuring the Information Society 2010; ITU, World Telecommunication/ICT Indicators Database. 11. 2030 Water Resources Group, Charting Our Water Future (McKinsey & Company, 2009), http://www.mckinsey.com/clientservice/water/charting_our_water_future.aspx.
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This trend is evident in China, where water shortages are estimated to have reduced industrial production by $28 billion a year.12 Another example can be found in the fishing industry: An estimated 52 percent of the worlds fisheries are now fished at their maximum limit, and 24 percent are overfished, depleted, or recovering, up from 10 percent in 1974. Although global fisheries have increased their production by an average annual growth rate of 2.6 percent from 1988 to 2004, production is projected to slow to an average of 2.1 percent annually between 2005 and 2030 due to limitations in the worlds supply of fish. While this may seem like a small numerical shift, the magnified effect on associated businesses will be substantial.13
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12. Jeffrey Mazo, Asian Environmental Concerns, Adelphi Series 48 (400) (October 2008): 133146. 13. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, OECD Environmental Outlook to 2030 (OECD, March 5, 2008). 14. 2002 purchasing power parity (PPP). Allen Hammond, William J Kramer, Julia Tran, Rob Katz, and Courtland Walker, The Next 4 Billion: Market Size and Business Strateg y at the Base of the Pyramid (World Resources Institute/International Finance Corporation, March 2007), www.wri.org.
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logistical infrastructure and the needs for consumer education and consumer finance or microloans, also will likely require policies, incentives, and social-support services that government, multilateral, and nonprofit partners can provide.15 Achieving More with Less. In a world of increasing resource scarcity and climate change, businesses can respond by creating more efficient products and production techniques, investing in research that leverages raw materials that are less at risk of shortages, and finding ways to help companies and consumers achieve their goals more sustainably. An example of this mind-set comes through in the remarks of Ken Powell, Chairman and CEO of General Mills: Arable land is a limited resource, so crop and food productivity are of vital importance. Solutions require improved technologies and modern farming. Jim Rohr, Chairman and CEO of The PNC Financial Services Group, shares his companys experience with environmentally sustainable construction across the companys local branch offices: Since 2000, PNC has built 100 sites according to green design standards, and has more newly constructed LEED certified buildings than any company on earth. Our experience with LEED has shown that green buildings lower costs, increase efficiency and improve employee satisfactionand, as a result, are a wise investment for our company and our communities.16
Tapping Top Talent. Shifting demographics and demands for highly skilled workers, while causing problems for many companies with offices in countries experiencing talent shortages, can be managed proactively over the next decade. Christina Gold, President and CEO of The Western Union Company, is keenly aware of the way these trends are shaking up the manner in which companies recruit, train, and retain talent: With globalization comes labor migration. Over 200 million migrants cross borders, and 300 million move within their own countries. We are seeing mass movements of people to jobs. This is a huge opportunity for business, but it changes the types of talent we need to manage our companies. The leaders of tomorrow will be those who are flexible enough to work with different cultures around the world. As with expansion into new markets, new infrastructure and social services will need to grow up to support these population shifts. Companies have a vested interest in the success of efforts to close the talent gap, so they must look for ways both to reduce demand (for example by leveraging information and communication technologies) and to increase supply (for example, by employing older workers and investing in skill development). Some of these strategies will involve working together with public- and independentsector stakeholders to ensure that mobilized workforces flourish rather than flounder, closing the talent mismatch. Proactive companies may reconsider retirement policies, provide more flexible and culturally aware training programs, and create systems that optimize globally distributed workforces. Additionally, to protect their future talent pipelines, forward-thinking companies must advocate for public education systems that adequately prepare future workers to meet the requirements of business. Engaging New Voices. In an increasingly technologically connected world, businesses have unprecedented direct lines of communication with their customers and employees. However, collecting information and putting it to use are two very different pieces of the same puzzle. Further, as companies design the tools to capture and implement findings from traditional constituencies, they also have an opportunity to build robust feedback loops with other stakeholders who will play an important role in shaping the business landscape in 2020. In the face of oncoming regulation and activism, companies have an incentive to bring more partners into the conversation. Chad Holliday, former Chairman and CEO of DuPont, explains the
The leaders of tomorrow will be those who are flexible enough to work with different cultures around the world.
Christina Gold, The Western Union Company
However, reworking business strategy to make the most of these possibilities requires creating the mechanisms within a company that solicit and respond to the concerns of other parties, such as governments and nonprofits, which can alert companies to trends (or aspects of trends) they might have missed. Jim Rogers of Duke Energy puts it best when he says, Running a business from a stakeholder perspective allows for sustainable value creation.
15 16
15. Hammond et al., The Next 4 Billion. 16. LEED is an internationally recognized, voluntary green building certification developed by the U.S. Green Building Council. It holds buildings to specific standards for environmental sustainability.
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unexpected benefits of open dialogues: Inviting local leaders to provide feedback on business plans might at first seem to add unnecessary delays and complexitybut often it elicits an even better overall solution and, in my experience, is well worth the effort. Further, companies will need to be increasingly diligent about communicating proactively and transparently about the consequences (good and bad) of their actions and hold themselves to international standards such as the Global Reporting Initiative, a sustainability reporting framework that has been adopted by more than 1,500 companies worldwide. Winning on an Uneven Playing Field. As large multinational companies establish operations and target consumers in increasingly dispersed regions, they are faced with having to reconcile differing standards for corporate social responsibility and community involvement. Given the prohibitive cost of tailoring practices to each local context, the worlds biggest companies often craft company-wide policies that meet the requirements of the most rigorous market, thereby exceeding the standards in all of the other markets in which they do business. Abiding by the easier-tomaintain higher standards (while local competitors meet only the lower regional standard) puts multinationals at a competitive disadvantage. Thus, the worlds largest companies often face the extra cost of leading by example. Further, 94 percent of CEOs polled at CECPs February 2010 Board of Boards conference agreed that they are increasingly being held responsible for their entire supply chain on social issues (Exhibit 2). Over the next decade, as corporate value chains become increasingly globalized and fractured, it seems likely that large multinational companies will need to enforce their high company-wide standards not just within their companies, but among all vendors and suppliers system-wideor else incur the public-relations risks that occur when a supplier fails to enforce standards, triggering product recalls. Marilyn Carlson Nelson, Chairman of Carlson, describes the trend: Business's role has always been to identify needs and to fulfill those needs in a competitive, efficient way. That role has been expanded to include the expectation that business will work in an environmentally and socially friendly manner, and to hold our suppliers to the same standards. It has become a competitive differentiator. To overcome this challenge, business will need to green their supply chains, work in partnerships to establish voluntary industry standards for natural-resource
Exhibit 2
Agree
39%
55%
Strongly agree
0% Strongly disagree
SOURCE: CECP Board of Boards CEO Conference, February 2010
use, and advocate for stronger and more universal government regulation of resources (such as a carbon emissions standard and water conservation measures). They will also have to cooperate significantly more with governments, communities, and society at large to secure access to scarce raw materials. It remains to be seen whether this will present a challenge in BRIC countries, which consistently ranked below the countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) on the World Banks World Governance Indicator for regulatory quality, a measure of public perceptions of the governments ability to formulate and implement sound policies and regulations that permit and promote private sector development.17 The question is whether increased globalization will lead to a race to the bottom or a race to the top. Partnering on Regulation. Growing mistrust in business over the past decade has led to a public call for greater governmental regulation of business. In 2009, 65 percent of consumers surveyed across 20 countries agreed that government should impose stricter regulations and greater control over business across all industry sectors in the future.18 Indeed, some countries have already taken steps in this direction, with European countries
17 18
17. World Bank, Governance Matters 2009: Worldwide Governance Indicators, 19962008, World Bank Web site, http://info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi/index.asp, accessed February 2010. 18. Edelman, 2009 Trust Barometer, Edelman Trust Barometer 2009: The Tenth Global Opinion Leaders Survey, http://www.edelman.com/trust/2009/ (survey of informed public, ages 2564 in 20 countries).
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taking the lead. For example, Denmark recently passed the Social Responsibility for Large Businesses law, which requires the countrys largest companies to include data about environmental, social, and governance issues in their annual reports. Some emerging-market countries are following suit. In China, for example, the Assets Supervision and Administration Commission in 2008 issued a directive that encourages state-owned companies to report on corporate social responsibility, and India in 2009 released a set of voluntary guidelines on corporate governance and corporate social responsibility. In regions where governments are increasingly involved in business oversight, companies will need to partner with government and with other companies to help shape regulation or develop voluntary standards to head off regulation. Chad Holliday, formerly of DuPont, says, I get very concerned when countries say they will set all the rules. That doesnt seem like a workable model. I think youll find company leadership will push regulation, because we have a vested interest in the strict enforcement of good regulation.
19. Edelman, 2010 Edelman Trust Barometer: An Annual Global Opinion Leaders Survey, Executive Summary, http://www.edelman.com/trust/2010/ (survey of informed public ages 2564).
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Lower consumer trust creates a difficult dilemma companies will need to address in the next decade: corporations cant do more if society is antagonistic toward their business-motivated incentives for getting involved. Still, companies also cant ignore market pressures, so they need to see a direct connection between the bottom line and their involvement to justify expanding their role. Further contributing to the trend of rising societal expectations is the fact that when regional socioeconomic conditions improve, consumer expectations of business rise concurrently. Mike Duke emphasizes the point: As economies advance, there is a greater focus on social issues. For companies to be successful in emerging markets, they will have to be out in front of those issues. China is a big growth market with a growing middle class and a growing focus on sustainability and responsible product development. That trend will only increase.
Exhibit 3
12
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companies, they currently appear to be headed perilously toward the space between the dangerous mismatch and the vicious circlea state of affairs that will require strong business leadership to improve.
Exhibit 4
Moving together: Companies cooperate with watchdog agencies and consumers to enforce robust, voluntary standards across industries and geographies (e.g., product certifications, ISO standards), promoting greater international trade and greater opportunities for business to work and compete globally. Greater choice: Business builds sustained partnerships with government and education institutions to advocate for appropriate training to meet future workforce demands. Industries help develop solutions to tackle long-term talent needs at a local and national level (e.g., training in math and sciences). Companies develop creative corporate programs to meet immediate talent needs, such as using retirees to train staff or teach at schools. Mutual benefit: Business views increased connectivity as an opportunity to better understand consumers and develop products and services to meet their needs, particularly consumers at the bottom of the pyramid. Companies actively use new social technologies to be transparent and receive recognition for proactive behavior.
Sustainable supply: Businesses view sustainability as an opportunity and harness technology to develop innovative solutions to environmental and social issues (e.g., alternative energy, smart grids, desalination). Regulatory incentives guarantee markets for new sustainability innovations and encourage business to make longterm investments. Business and society together develop an enforceable strategy for protecting international resources. Healthy economy: Governments work collaboratively with business to compete to attract businesses that innovate for sustainable environmental and social solutions (e.g., stimulus funding for green job creation), and provide incentives to encourage the competitive global growth of successful companies.
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(perhaps including competitors) to invest strategically in forward-looking products, services, and social programs. Governmentally imposed regulation is largely replaced with self-imposed industry standards that simultaneously ameliorate social issues and create tangible financial results that support ongoing shareholder satisfaction. Scarcities of talent and of natural resources are transformed from threats to opportunities, social issues improve, and the economy sees robust advances due to a climate of continuous innovation.
In this vision of 2020, companies are doing their part by engaging in social issues, yet they find themselves working without the benefit of governmental or nonprofit partnerships. Stagnant societal expectations feed uneven global regulatory standards (because self-imposed standards developed by business are not recognized), so there is great geographic disparity in the quality and consistency of efforts to address social issues. While there is some improvement on social issues, particularly when the problems pertain to a single companys operations, widespread social and business benefits are limited and sporadic. While trust in business is deservedly high, there is a lost opportunity for collaborative innovation and collective action on issuessuch as talent and resource scarcitiesthat affect many players yet are dealt with individually.
Exhibit 5
To each their own: Leading multinational companies more consistently meet best-in-class standards and push for improved social standards across their sphere of influence. Some globally competitive companies in emerging markets meet voluntary global standards, while others meet only minimum required standards. This creates an uneven and unpredictable playing field for multinational corporations.
Managing the pipeline: Companies try to solve their own talent shortage by investing in intensive employee-training programs and partnering with educational institutions to develop their own pipeline of employees (e.g., local scholarships to community colleges, deployment of retirees in schools) yet do not work to solve the problem at a systemic level.
Uneven application: While some businesses actively use social technologies to be transparent about their social engagement, expectations are uneven across geographies, making it hard for leading multinational companies to maintain competitive positioning vis--vis less transparent competitors.
First-mover disadvantages: Some businesses develop innovative solutions to address social issues (e.g., alternative energy, smart grids, desalination). Without consistent government incentives, investments are riskier and more capital intensive, and companies must fiercely compete for market share.
Protectionist policy: Although businesses increasingly engage in social and environmental issues, protectionist measures and unevenly enforced regulations and incentives prevent companies from investing consistently in long-term solutions to social issues.
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Enron and the credit crisis damaged public trust in the private sector particularly toward large companies. Rebuilding trust is core to collaborating with governments and society.
Andrew Witty, GlaxoSmithKline plc
A third scenario occurs when societys expectations of business rise while companies take a reactive (rather than proactive) stance on addressing social issues. In this dangerous mismatch (Exhibit 6), governments set regulations after little consultation with business, so corporate compliance with these regulations is unnecessarily costly. One consequence is that less capital is available for more productive uses, making companies less apt to invest in innovation. Progress is made on social issues due to strictand strictly enforcedrules, but trust in business declines because corporations are perceived as apathetic.
Exhibit 6
Blunt instrument: More uniform, stricter social regulations are enforced at a country level. Because business does not engage, it has little input in the development of regulations, which are broad and often impede innovation and global business growth.
Expensive solutions: Businesses are required by regulation to invest in higher levels of employee training. Businesses do not take advantage of opportunities to tailor programs to their specific needs. Protectionist regulation around immigration prevents companies from bringing in the talent they need. Businesses that lack sufficient access to talent become less competitive.
Watchdogs unleashed: Increased connectivity between customers and greater expectations for businesses to address social issues combined with low business standards contributes to a wave of consumer backlash against the private sector. Business responds reactively to public protests and struggles to stay on top of the most salient issues. Public trust in business hits an all-time low, and consumer activism increases.
Quotas: Stringent regulation on environmental issues constrains business growth and impedes business investment in innovative sustainability solutions. Business develops new products and services to comply with regulatory requirements rather than to seize new business opportunities.
Best of intentions: Governments provide incentives for innovation around social issues. But because business is not engaged in developing the incentives, they are often misaligned with business needs.
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We all have to contribute to sustainable solutions over timenot any one group can do it alone. You cannot assume that everyone else will address the problem and that you do not have to engage. If we do not align ourselves and work in a collective way on these social issues, everybody will be worse off.
Bill Weldon, Johnson & Johnson
Exhibit 7
Race to the bottom: Corporate standards and regulation are unevenly enforced across geographies. Leading multinational companies maintain status quo standards across all operating locations; companies based in emerging markets maintain lower standards. Leading multinational companies are faced with losing market share or lowering their standards in order to compete. Not enough, not where you need it: Companies face increasing difficulty in finding qualified employees in the geographies where they are most needed. Business does not engage in education policy but bears a high expense for buying talent and needs to provide extensive employee training to make up the skills gap.
Whiplash: Consumers in some geographies demand greater transparency of companies than consumers in other geographies. Global businesses are unable to plan for unpredictable/uneven consumer expectations and reactions.
Implosion: Companies take a reactive stance to addressing resource scarcity, and they compete over access to limited supplies. Some resources (e.g., oil) are depleted irreversibly, while others (e.g., water) can be acquired only at prohibitively high costs. Business growth suffers globally as essential resources are constrained.
No help here: Governments take a dominant role in global economies and do not engage with businesses to spur economic development. Governments become protectionist and apply regulations unevenly across geographies, limiting business growth and innovation.
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Exhibit 8
50%
Be Part of the Solution: Collaborate in problem solving without seeking a leadership role
42%
Fund the Solution: Primarily contribute cash/resources Invest Pragmatically: Address a social problem only if it connects directly to shareholder value
5%
3%
Do Not Engage: Business should have a negligible role in solving social problems
0%
More will be expected from market leaders and globally successful companies, and those companies who are most involved will be most successful, creating an upward spiral.
Mike Duke, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
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20. Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, Benchmarking Tables, Giving in Numbers, Editions 2006-2009 (CECP, 2009), http://www.corporatephilanthropy.org/resources/benchmarking-reports/giving-in-numbers.html
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Case study
http://www.dow.com/ Building on Core Competencies to address social Challenges RECREATE PMS
Beyond Philanthropy?
Social issues that meet the standard of sustainable value creation bump up against longstanding definitions of philanthropy and community involvement, and raise important questions: If the business is explicitly enhancing its profit along the way, is it really altruism? Isnt that just good business? In light of the explicit profit motive, its easy for external stakeholders to be cynical about companies taking action of this kind. But seen from the opposite point of view, satisfying the financial expectations of the companys owners (shareholders, for public companies) is paramountunless you dont mind being fired. The crux of the issue, then, is execution, as discussed later in this chapter.
The dow Chemical Company, an industry leader in the specialty chemical, advanced-materials, agrosciences and plastics businesses with sales of $45 billion annually, has encouraged innovation through its breakthroughs to World Challenges program. The goal of the program is that by 2015, dow will achieve at least three breakthroughs that significantly improve the worlds ability to solve the challenges of affordable and adequate food supply, decent housing, sustainable water supplies, or improved personal health and safety. The breakthroughs are to meet these global needs by building on dows ability to develop new technologies with innovative chemistry, manufacturing processes, or delivery mechanisms in a manner that supports the companys future revenue streams. In one such initiative, the company has applied dows understanding of plastics and water purification to invest in a new, inexpensive water filtration system and has created a partnership with a social entrepreneur in India to collaborate on distribution and sales mechanisms. The end result will be the development of an innovative business model for selling these products at marketappropriate prices to communities without a safe water supply, thus meeting a social need while contributing to dows bottom line.
Unique assets
A further benefit of companies extending themselves beyond the traditional boundaries of philanthropy by aiming for sustainable value creation is that they can apply distinctive capabilities and resources to social issues that individuals, governments, and independent-sector contributors cannot. While many companies already put these resources in service to the public good, pursuing sustainable value creation opens up the opportunity to leverage these assets in a manner that is more deeply intertwined with corporate strategy. As Exhibit 9 shows, 60 percent of surveyed CEOs say it is necessary to take a proactive approach to solving social problems important to their business because they are in a unique position to make a difference. When assessing a companys potential for leadership on issues associated with sustainable value creation, it is important to remember assets such as marketing channels, project management skills, in-kind resources (product, physical assets, and intellectual property), financing expertise, legal expertise, negotiating skills, international reach, vendor relationships, and logistics infrastructure. Duncan Niederauer of NYSE Euronext confirms this view: There are more ways to make a difference than just writing a check. We can also move the needle on important social issues through involving our time, brand, and resources. Although intangible, a unique asset of business is its ability to take small financial risks that other stakeholders
geopolitical unrest, take longer to address. I dont think that many companies think generationally, but increasingly were going to have to. For this reason, judiciously choosing the social issues on which a company will take a leadership role is paramount.
I dont think that many companies think generationally, but increasingly were going to have to.
Marilyn Carlson Nelson, Carlson
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Exhibit 9
CEOs recognize that business has a unique role to play in addressing social problems
Complete this sentence: Taking a proactive approach in solving social problems that are important to my business is . . .
Necessary because we are in a unique position to make a difference Necessary because our consumers and employees expect it Necessary because it creates opportunities to innovate our products/services Necessary to mitigate the risk of public criticism Unnecessary and/or impractical
60%
that you dont understand, says Stanley S. Litow, Vice President of IBM Corporate Citizenship and Corporate Affairs and President of the IBM International Foundation. Indeed, as shown in Exhibit 10, a resounding 77 percent of CEOs surveyed agree with this sentiment and believe that embedding social engagement into the companys overall business strategy is the best way to embark on a path toward sustainable value creation. The recommendations, tools, and case studies in this section provide concrete steps for seizing opportunities to create competitive advantage.
29%
8%
3% 0%
might not be at liberty to take. Small investments in pilot programsmade either directly or through philanthropic foundationscan be useful in uncovering innovative proof-of-concept solutions that governments and foundations can then carry forward. In these situations, the company is playing a catalytic role in an issue area that is important to the business. This approach benefits all parties: the company does not need to remain involved over an unwieldy time horizon, and the government and other stakeholders benefit from proven solutions that are more easily communicated to their constituencies. Further, all parties share in the ultimate benefit: an improvement in the social issue originally targeted. Verizons Ivan Seidenberg explains: Our belief is that corporate philanthropy expands the business. If you do the right thing over time, you expand the capabilities of your customer base, business and society. Sharing his own positive experience, Aetnas Chairman and CEO Ron Williams says, Through philanthropy, we can help develop new models and programs that can be brought to scale by the government.
Embedding social engagement into business strategy is seen as the most important action that a CEO can take to prepare for 2020
Which one of the following actions could you, as CEO, initiate today to best prepare your company to address the social problems that will affect your business in 2020?
Embed social engagement into our strategy and organizational structure Commit to long-term collaborative partnerships with other stakeholders Promote measurement standards to quantify the business and social impact of our engagement Improve feedback loops on social engagement with consumers, suppliers, and others
77%
11%
9%
3%
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scan for issues and opportunities. Corporations can gather information about evolving trends by tracking legislative agendas, examining media trends, and interviewing internal and external stakeholders to gather their views on what issues are taking shape. Shelly Esque, Intels Director of Corporate Affairs and President of the Intel Foundation, advises, Broaden your view of a problem by reaching out to your partners for their input. Then be disciplined, and actually spend the time necessary to plan for the future in all aspects of your business so that you can implement against long-term goals. While the investment in establishing this expertise may seem expensive, these commitments are analogous to venture capital investments or R&D projects. Exhibit 11 provides a tool that companies can use to determine whether a social issue is truly integral to the success of the business. Companies will need to address many relevant issues where there are stakeholder expectations, but they should take the lead on issues that are integralwhere societal expectations are high and there is a significant impact on the businesss profitability. For manufacturing companies, a sound beginning when using Exhibit 11 might entail a careful analysis of the supply chain: raw-material acquisition, production, distribution, sales, product use, and recycling/disposal. A company might outsource many of these steps, sometimes to thousands of vendors, but that does not preclude them from consideration. The aim of this exercise is to challenge the tacit assumptions that underpin the functioning of the supply chain. Following are two examples of such assumptions, along with countervailing questions that encourage a sustainable value creation approach: Assumption #1: Local manufacturing facilities are necessary to compete in our business, but our company cannot establish one in rural India, because the highquality inputs we need cannot be sourced locally. Sustainable Value Creation Approach: Can we partner with the local government and NGOs to develop infrastructure and training programs to foster a local market for the inputs we need? Assumption #2: Employee turnover rates in some of our factories cannot be improved, because the malaria epidemic is simply intractable in those areas. Sustainable Value Creation Approach: Can we work with our competitors, who are similarly affected, to craft a public treatment program that local NGOs can help design and administer locally?
Case study
Structured questioning along the value chain is apt to produce a list of issues for further investigation; these issues can be prioritized based on their potential gains/ losses to the business. Leadership is required if the cost of inaction exceeds the cost of action. As one final hurdle, companies are advised to forecast how the social issues under consideration will evolve over time. Will they change in ways that bring them closer to or further from the trajectory of the business?
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Exhibit 11
Medium
Relevance to business Evidence of gravity or magnitude of issue on the company, now or in the near future Core competency of the business to address the issue Legitimacy of the company as a leader on addressing the issue Potential for new business opportunities Resonance of issue with company values and core competencies
Low
Low
High
listened to key stakeholders and employees. Aetnas Ron Williams stresses the importance of preparing employees to deal with emerging issues: Use your talent development and management programs to give people the experiences they need to prepare for future trends. Also, educate your board of directors so they appreciate the importance of social issues in the context of business strategy.
Getting started
Exhibit 12 presents a diagnostic tool that can be helpful for assessing how well prepared a company is to meet the challenge of sustainable value creation. The exhibits questions are not comprehensive but capture the types of questions a company might ask at this stage. For example, a company facing a talent shortage in a community in which it has substantial fixed assets might target dropout rates at local vocational schools as one means of solving its human resources problem. In researching the issue, however, the company may discover that the vocational schools are unsuccessful due to larger, entrenched social issues that the company is less equipped to combat on its own. In that case, strategic analysis must begin in earnest.
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Exhibit 12
Do you have a plan to educate and retain talent (e.g., employee-training programs, flexible work for retirees)? Do you have a strategy in place to assure a pipeline of future employees (e.g., partnerships, advocacy for education, immigration reform)? Does your organization use technology to maintain a dialogue with civil society and the public sector, as part of its corporate reputation strategy? Does your company use new technology to solve social and environmental issues?
What social issues are top of mind for your consumers and could create risks or opportunities for your business? What is the effect of increased transparency in your business (e.g., changes in consumers expectations of business and associated purchasing behaviors)? Does new media give you new opportunities to utilize your business to solve social and environmental problems? What are the resources that your company and its supply chain require for operation, and which of these are at risk of scarcity? How does impending scarcity of essential resources affect the growth of your business? What factors are contributing to resource scarcity? What is the governments position on social issues in the geographies that you operate in? What are the risks and opportunities associated with the governments position? Are there specific government incentives, regulations, contracts, or purchasing trends that will affect your business? How open is government to collaborating with business in each of your companys geographies?
Are you looking for opportunities to reduce your corporate environmental footprint? Are you pursuing business opportunities that alleviate resource scarcity?
Have you planned for different scenarios that will be affected by government behavior?
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Case study
active role in ensuring their long-term success. Nestl promotes agricultural development by building infrastructure, training farmers (with no obligation to sell to Nestl), and paying producers directly, rather than middlemen. In addition, Nestl, which deals with 540,000 farmers around the world, made microfinance loans to the value of CHF 48 million available to farmers in 2009. Nestls involvement in building the capacity of local farmers creates higher-quality agricultural output of the commodities that become inputs to Nestl products. The strong relationships also safeguard a reliable supply to Nestl factories, even when the overall market may experience shortages. In 2007, for example, the price of milk powder on the world market soared, but through its direct links to farmers, Nestl was able to mitigate the supply and price risks in certain parts of the world while garnering reliable value for all stakeholders from farmers to consumers.21
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strategy on social problems can lead to the opening of new markets, the development of new products, opportunities for increased operational or workforce efficiency, and leadership development (among a host of other benefits). This and similar research can be used to foster a deeper understanding throughout the company and help ensure that the social benefits and the tangible financial impact for the business are considered in program design and execution.
21. For more information about Nestls commitment to Creating Shared Value, please visit www.creatingsharedvalue.org. 22. Valuing Social Responsibility Programs, McKinsey Quarterly, (December 2008). 23. Valuing Corporate Social Responsibility: McKinsey Global Survey Results, McKinsey Quarterly (February 2009).
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to action around measuring and monitoring the external environmentand the effect the companys programs are having on that environmentis widely shared by the other CEOs interviewed for this research. Mike Duke corroborates this notion: There is definitely a need for measurement. Evaluation can be one of the most challenging aspects of engaging in a social and environmental issue, yet if our activities are not measured, they lose their importance. As stated previously, social issues also evolve over time, making ongoing measurement a clear priority. However, CEOs polled are split in their opinions when asked which side of the equation is most important to measure: 55 percent name social impact, and 45 percent choose business benefits (Exhibit 13). Alcoas Chairman and CEO Klaus Kleinfeld advocates both: First you measure the direct impact of what you do: the social impact. Then you measure the indirect impact: business impact. In the end, investors do see a return. CECPs recent monograph, Measuring the Value of Corporate Philanthropy: Social Impact, Business Benefits, and Investor Returns, available as a free download from the CECP Web site, provides deeper guidance on these issues, including tools, frameworks, and case studies.
Exhibit 13
45%
55%
Measuring results
Be really obsessed with reality, advises Chad Holliday. He adds, I get very concerned about senior executives at any organization who are not in touch with how things are really done, and the problems their employees and suppliers are dealing with. Set up systems to stay in touch with reality, or you might be missing important information. This call
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Business benefits: Understanding the tangible and intangible contribution to morale, recruitment, reputation, etc.
SOURCE: CECP Board of Boards CEO Conference, February 2010
24. How Companies Manage Sustainability: McKinsey Quarterly Global Survey, McKinsey Quarterly, (March 2010).
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Communication
Given that the first uncertainty highlighted in Chapter 1 is the level and consistency of societys expectations of business, the degree of public mistrust toward business is central to understanding which vision of 2020 will prevail. Thus, open and transparent communication is fundamental to the success of a strategy aimed at shared value creation. While communication is important, it needs to be built on transparency and action, not spin. Andrew Witty notes, The minute you start to spin your message, you risk unraveling. Communication is about speaking in a language society understands. I suspect that business has lost touch with that language over the years, which has something to do with the erosion of trust in companies. Under the intense pressure of the market, companies also need to improve in communicating the financial value creation of social activities. While reporting on corporate social responsibility (CSR) and community involvement programs has increased, a McKinsey survey from 2010 showed that 62 percent of companies do not communicate their sustainability activities to investors. 25 Companies will need to improve how well they measure and communicate the value of their social activities, both to society and to their investors.
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Exhibit 14
Collaborations of this type might involve creating voluntary standards on water usage; co-investing in research for more environmentally friendly and cost-effective desalination plants; working with NGOs and government agencies to safeguard public water resources; and participating in voluntary corporate policies and operations such as the CEO Water Mandate. Over the next decade, many companies are likely to face challenges of this higher collaborative order, suggesting that there are steps to take now to adapt to new ways of working with other stakeholders.
0%
Companies ought to minimize the number of partners they engage with when they: Derive a competitive advantage from being the first among their peers to get involved; Have an opportunity to play a unique catalytic role; or Must respond immediately to protect the company from an impending threat. By contrast, it makes more sense to collaborate broadly when: Doing so creates gains that no single player could achieve individually; The complexity of the targeted social issue requires broad skills and experience; or A large constituency (of which the company is a member) benefits from unified action. Many companies find that targeted partnerships are the most effective means through which they can address social issues that affect their business, in evidence throughout several corporate case studies featured in this chapter. Conversely, the escalating problem of water scarcity provides a prime example of a social value creation issue that requires broad collective action: in water-stressed communities, no single actor can assure that there will be sufficient supplies of potable water for future generations. While companies are individually accountable for their own water efficiency and that of their suppliers (an issue that typically falls under the aegis of a corporate social responsibility officer), coordinated cross-sector efforts are needed to protect and renew fresh water supplies.
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choices in Exhibit 15 might begin to look like a relic from a simpler time. Exhibit 16 identifies a diverse group of potential partners likely to be relevant for companies with a serious bent toward sustainable value creation, as well as a variety of organization structures and activities for the collaboration. The three lists in the exhibit function as a reminder of the differing structures and institutions that may allow for new collaborative breakthroughs in the future. When choosing a partner, organizations should consider the following questions, which are likely to help identify promising opportunities for collaboration: Is the other organization credible? What are its motivations, and how might those shift over the life cycle of the project? Are the goals of that organization truly aligned with those of the initiative? Does it contribute unique assets? Are your contacts at that institution empowered to make decisions and marshal resources? As Johnson & Johnsons Chairman and CEO Bill Weldon summarizes his experience in complex collaborations, As long as were aligned around our objectivesand there is trust and transparency it is not hard to get organizations to work together to develop better solutions to the worlds problems. This advice is captured in the five high-level requirements for successful collaboration detailed in Exhibit 17. These requirements offer guidance for laying the groundwork for successful alliances.
Exhibit 15
33%
Nonprofits
SOURCE: CECP Board of Boards CEO Conference, February 2010.
While these prescriptions may seem elementary, many promising partnerships have stumbled as a result of a failure to ensure that each requirement in Exhibit 17 was met. The FutureGen Alliance provides an example of the importance of the need for motivated partners and effective governance. FutureGen is a public-private partnership created in 2005 to design, build, and operate the worlds first near-zero-
Exhibit 16
Cross-industry partnerships Public-private partnerships Purchasing consortia Joint ventures Open-source consortia Venture capital models Voluntary convenings Research collaborations Networks
Pool financial resources Co-develop products/services Co-invest in infrastructure Create consortia for sharing knowledge Create or adopt voluntary industry standards Advocate for regulation and policy change Educate public Influence key stakeholders
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emission coal-fueled power plant (with the hope that the new technology not only can reduce domestic emissions, but also can be replicated by private industry in the developing world to increase access to electricity in an environmentally neutral manner). The project, supported by 11 leading international energy companies, was nearly disbanded when the primary funder, the United States Department of Energy (DOE), pulled out of the partnership in 2008. Rising project costs due to the rapid price inflation of global raw materials exposed a misalignment in commitment levels between the governments and the private-sector participants.26 The alliance partners spent more than a year in negotiations to get the project moving again in 2009, when U.S. government stimulus funding favored green-energy projects. FutureGen lost four private-sector partners along the way but gained two when plans moved forward again in 2010.27
public-service organizations, filling vital community needs and delivering many valuable (although sometimes abstract) benefits to the business. However, few companies have fully adopted the approach to sustainable value creation, although the challenges of the upcoming decade compel it. Nonetheless, promising new approaches toward sustainable value creation have already begun to emerge that foreshadow the types of partnerships needed to tackle the social issues that the next decade will bring. Whether its the pooled funding model of The Global Fund, the region-specific partnership of the Itasca Project, or the convening power of the Clinton Global Initiative, these examples provide inspiration to companies seeking to take action on the recommendations in this report.
Exhibit 17
High-performing partnership
Effective governance Appropriate body of partners and structure to solve the problem Clearly defined organizational structure and decision rights Ability to act in a timely fashion
SOURCE: McKinsey analysis, expert interviews
Meaningful activities Clearly defined expectations and roles for each partner Activities that leverage partner resources and competencies
26. U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Clean Coal: DOEs Decision to Restructure FutureGen Should Be Based on a Comprehensive Analysis of Costs, Benefits, and Risks, GAO 09-248 (GAO, February 2009), http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09248.pdf. 27. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Record of Decision, FutureGen Project," DOE Clean Coal and Natural Gas Power Systems Web page ( July 14, 2009), http://www.fossil.energy.gov/programs/powersystems/futuregen/futuregen_rod_071409.pdf.
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Case study
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Case study
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What makes the next ten years of evolution in the relationship between business and society different from previous decades is an escalating predicament for corporate leaders: determining how best to adapt to the social issues raised by the game-changing trends identified in this report (talent shortages, shifting centers of economic activity, a new era of government action, increased scarcity of natural resources, and new levels of technological interconnectivity) at the same time that accelerating global competition exerts heavy downward pressure on profit margins and global financial markets show an insatiable appetite for performance data in ever-smaller time increments. In this context, what should corporate involvement in solving social issues look like? How might companies prepare now to maximize their impact and profitability over the next decade? These questions drove several months of joint research undertaken by CECP and McKinsey & Company, which tapped the minds of CEOs, academics, strategists, and nonprofit leaders through in-depth interviews and polling. The urgent vision that emerged from this work is sustainable value creationa self-reinforcing state of trustworthy, pro-social corporate behavior that simultaneously delivers bottom-line results and community benefits. Rather than following generic advice, companies that achieve sustainable value creation develop a customized strategy tailored to their own business ambitions. To bring about sustainable value creation in their firms, companies must challenge the tacit assumptions that underpin the functioning of their value chains, seeking to understand where social issues impede progress, and then work to engage others in ameliorating those issues for the good of business and society alike. Corporate involvement is required whenever the cost of inaction exceeds the cost of action. To reach a state of sustainable value creation, companies must begin by rigorously selecting the social issues on which they lead and engageensuring that the issues are integral to the achievement of larger business goals. In its most basic form, the question companies must ask themselves is this: Will working to help address this social
issue also help my firm create a tangible competitive advantage? Corporate community engagement of this type raises the bar from choosing social issues that resonate or make sense to instead selecting issues that drive growth or reduce costs, all while demonstrably helping local communities and broader societies address their own development priorities. Aiming for sustainable value creation is not intended to supplant a companys ongoing community engagement initiatives, such as employee matching-gift programs, signature philanthropic initiatives, corporate foundation giving, product donations, pro bono service, and employee engagement campaigns. The power of this concept is that it enables companies to go beyond historical levels of corporate community involvement. Companies are able to do more because the model of sustainable value creation dissolves the longstanding zero-sum tension faced by corporate executives: to increase shareholder returns or do the right thing for society. Sustainable value creation is founded on the idea that one strategy can achieve both goals. Mike Duke sums it up best: More will be expected from market leaders and globally successful companies, and those companies who are most involved will be most successful, creating an upward spiral. Naturally, the question arises: Is this breed of corporate social engagement genuinely altruistic? After all, there is an explicit profit motive at play. Capitalist purists may think sustainable value creation is simply business as usual. The evidence that it is not is apparent from the current state of affairs. Looking at the four scenarios presented for 2020 outlined in Chapter 1, companies currently are caught between the quadrants labeled dangerous mismatch and vicious circle. If companies were already implementing models of sustainable value creation, there would be less distance to travel between todays reality and tomorrows ideal. Those who mistrust business are likely to label sustainable value creation as corporate greed in sheeps clothing. In fact, this is one of the major uncertainties of the Four Visions of Business and Society in 2020 diagram shown in Exhibit 3. Will societys expectations
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for business stagnate, or will they increase? Increasing expectationsand commensurate increased trust when business meets themare good for companies, and they support sustainable value creation. Only a warmer climate toward corporate engagement in social problems (motivated by enlightened self-interest) leads to the ideal scenario. Ultimately, the level of trust in business is not wholly within the control of companies, but the integrity with which companies execute their strategies for sustainable value creation is of the utmost importance in earning public confidence. When companies collaborate effectively with external stakeholders, measure progress, and communicate transparently about their successes and failures, less room remains for misinterpreting corporate intentions and results. According to the CEOs and thought leaders interviewed for this research, shaping the future through sustainable value creation is a mandate, with 100 percent of CEOs citing the need to take an active or leadership role (Exhibit 18). Their view is demonstrated in the call to leadership made by J&Js Bill Weldon: We all have to contribute to sustainable solutions over timenot any one group can do it alone. You cannot assume that everyone else will address the problem and that you do not have to engage. If we do not align ourselves and work in a collective way on these social issues, everybody will be worse off. However, leadership toward sustainable value creation requires stepping outside typical business planning cycles and acknowledging the need for (and growth possibilities inherent in) new ways of thinking. It also entails embarking on new forms of collaborations, as reviewed in Chapter 2. These changes are more difficult than they might first appear, which is why CEO leadership is crucial. Ken Powell of General Mills elaborates: Done right, social engagement is incorporated into the mission of the company, which means that the CEO must be the person who shapes the agenda and communicates the message around it. The payoff is the ability to shape the future, seizing the opportunities and mitigating the risks on the pathway to 2020.
Exhibit 18
38%
62%
Active role: I can be supportive and make commitments, but taking the lead goes too far
SOURCE: CECP Board of Boards CEO Conference, February 2010
Done right, social engagement is incorporated into the mission of the company, which means that the CEO must be the person who shapes the agenda and communicates the message around it.
Ken Powell, General Mills
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CeO interviews
McKinsey & Company conducted a series of in-depth interviews with the following CEOs, who generously added their unique perspective regarding the challenges and opportunities of the next decade and the steps that leading companies will need to take to arrive at an optimal outcome: Dominic Barton , Managing Director, McKinsey & Company Michael T. Duke, President and Chief Executive Officer, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Christina A. Gold , President and Chief Executive Officer, The Western Union Company John H. Hammergren , Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, McKesson Corporation Charles O. Holliday Jr., Former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, DuPont Klaus Kleinfeld , Ph.D., Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Alcoa Inc. Marilyn Carlson Nelson , Chairman, Carlson Duncan L. Niederauer, Chief Executive Officer, NYSE Euronext
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Steve Gunderson , President and CEO, Council on Foundations Robert Harrison , CEO, Clinton Global Initiative Megan Hoot , Assistant Director, Independent Sector Stephen Jordan , Senior VP and Executive Director, Business Civic Leadership Center Georg Kell , Executive Director, United Nations Global Compact Michael Klein , former Vice Chairman, Citigroup Peter T. Knight , President, Context America, Inc. Mark Kramer, Founder and Managing Director, FSG Social Impact Advisors Stanley S. Litow, VP for Corporate Citizenship and Corporate Affairs, IBM, and President, IBM International Foundation Daniel Litvin , Director, Critical Resource Mindy S. Lubber, President, Ceres Kellie McElhaney, Co-Faculty Director, Center for Responsible Business, Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley Bill Meehan , Director Emeritus, McKinsey & Company, and Lecturer, Stanford University Graduate School of Business Noa Meyer, Program Manager, Office of Corporate Engagement, Goldman Sachs Bo Miller, Director of Corporate Citizenship, Dow Chemicals, and President, Dow Chemical Company Foundation Jane Nelson , Senior Fellow and Director, Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Arata Onoguchi, Business Development Officer, International Finance Corporation Howard Paster, former Chair and CEO of Hill & Knowlton, a PR firm owned by the WPP Group Plc. Michael Porter, Bishop William Lawrence University Professor, Harvard Business School Steve Rochlin , Senior Partner and Director, AccountAbility Daniel Runde, Head of Partnership Development, IFC Thomas Schick , Executive VP Corporate and External Affairs, American Express Company, Chairman, American Express Foundation Sonal Shah , Director, White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation Dave Stangis, VP of Corporate Social Responsibility, Campbell Soup Company Dafna Tapiero, Manager of The Oil, Gas and Mining Sustainable Community Development Fund (CommDev), International Finance Corporation Becky Tarbotton , Global Finance Campaign Director, Rainforest Action Network Luis Ubias, President, The Ford Foundation Stephen B. Young, Global Executive Director, Caux Round Table
special Thanks
CECP would like to extend its utmost gratitude to McKinsey & Company for its contribution of a dedicated team of consultants. Over a six-month period, they conducted the CEO interviews, provided expert input into the poll question design, developed the fact base, and co-led the analysis on which this report is based. We are grateful for their partnership and their commitment to bringing new ideas to light in this field.
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Photography credits: Above: Abbas Hussain, GSK's President of Emerging Markets, visiting with a patient with lymphatic filariasis (LF) Photo courtesy of GlaxoSmithKline plc Inside front cover: A multi-talented participant at the Humana Healthy Kids Zone program sponsored by The Humana Foundation. Photo courtesy of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
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