Title: Business Value and Sustainability
1Business Value and Sustainability
- David Wheeler
- Erivan K Haub Program in Business and
Sustainability
2The SVA - sustainability paradox
- The test of a first class mind is the ability to
hold two opposing ideas in the head at the same
time and still retain the ability to function - F Scott Fitzgerald
3Shareholder Value Model
Tomorrow
Innovation Repositioning
Growth Path Trajectory
SVA
Internal
External
Profit Risk Reduction
Reputation Right to Operate
Today
4Sustainable Value Model
Drivers
Tomorrow
Drivers
Sustainability Lens
Sustainability Lens
Innovation Repositioning
Growth Path Trajectory
SVA
Internal
External
Profit Risk Reduction
Legitimacy Right to Operate
Sustainability Lens
Sustainability Lens
Drivers
Drivers
Today
5Sustainable Value Model
Tomorrow
Drivers
Drivers
Ballard Honeywell
Grameen HP
Growth Path Trajectory
Innovation Repositioning
Internal
External
Profit Risk Reduction
Reputation Right to Operate
3M DuPont
Suncor Placer Dome
Drivers
Drivers
Today
6Drivers of change in stakeholder relations
- The shifting sands of taxation and fiscal policy
- internalisation of environmental and social costs
- ecotaxation and fiscal reform
- stakeholders need for assurance
- attitude of investors
- the governance issue
- changing societal and workplace values
- the rise of the gold collar worker
- the rise of the intelligent consumer
- technology, e-commerce and e-communication
- competition and competitiveness
7Sources of wealth creation and competitive
advantage
- 20th Century
- production inputs
- access to capital
- market domination
- proprietary information
- 21st Century
- knowledge
- innovation
- competencies
- intellectual property and social capital
- brands
- reputation
- relationships
8Descriptive typology of approaches to stakeholder
management
- defensive (relationships avoided)
- top down (risk and liability reduction)
- interactive and innovative (trust-based,
opportunity driving)
9 Reconciling sustainability and corporate
social responsibility
10Historical examples of stakeholder inclusion in
US corporate strategy
- General Electric - 1930s
- Shareholders
- Employees
- Customers
- General Public
- Sears - 1950s
- Customers
- Employees
- Community
- Stockholders
11William Ford on stakeholders
- We want to find ingenious new ways to delight
consumers, provide superior returns to
shareholders and make the world a better place
for us all. We can do well for employees,
customers and shareholders, and we can do good
for society. - William C Ford Jr, Chairman, Ford Motor Company
- 13 May 1999
12The business case for investing in stakeholder
relationships
- Eighteen mostly US companies with 50-100 year
track records all demonstrated a strong
commitment to people development and knowledge
sharing. These companies built to last
outperformed comparator companies stock price 15
fold and average share prices 70 fold. - James Collins Jerry Porras, Built to Last
13The business case for balancing stakeholder
relations
- Over an eleven year period, established US
companies which balanced the interests of
customers and workers with those of owners
demonstrated sales growth four times and
employment growth eight times that of companies
which followed a shareholder first strategy. - James Kotter John Heskett, 1991
14The business case for social capital
- US companies lose on average 50 per cent of
their customers every five years, 50 per cent of
their employees every four years and 50 per cent
of their investors every year. But the most
successful US companies have lower turnover
rates. - Frederick Reichheld, The Loyalty Effect
15The business case for reputation and protection
of brand value
- Coca Cola
- Microsoft
- IBM
- General Electric
- Ford
- Disney
- Intel
- McDonalds
- Marlboro
- Nescafe
- 83.8 billion
- 56.6 billion
- 43.8 billion
- 33.5 billion
- 33.2 billion
- 32.3 billion
- 30.0 billion
- 26.2 billion
- 21.0 billion
- 17.6 billion
- Interbrand, 1999
16Eco-efficiency
The Potential
10 AAA vs. 10 CCC companies in
EcoValue 21 Top and Bottom Rated Companies1998
Total Return
- aerospace defense
- specialty chemical
- chemicals
- communication equipment
- electric companies
- electronics (semiconductors)
- health care
- iron and steel
- paper, forest products, etc.
- petroleum
17Social capital and the new economy
-
- Volatility and virtuality erode relationships -
its that simple - which is why managers must
learn to invest in social capital. - Laurence Pruzak Don Cohen, HBR June 2001