The Brain and Soul of Capitalism
by Nancy Koehn
In 1970 the economist and Nobel laureate Milton Friedman called corporate social responsibility “hypocritical window dressing,” saying that businesspeople inclined toward it “reveal a suicidal impulse.” How times have changed. Some executives still take a Friedmanesque view, but most accept social and civic responsibilities as indispensable to doing good business; their enterprises won’t survive if those responsibilities are ignored.
Invest in people above all. A company’s most important assets—mission, reputation, and people—are not on the balance sheet. Schultz is deeply invested not only in Starbucks’s 200,000 partners (employees) but also in its global coffee bean farmers. Whether offering stock options and health coverage to part-time U.S. workers, hosting “family partner forums” for employees’ parents in Beijing and Shanghai, or donating cows to coffee farmers in Rwanda, he sees enlightened decision making as smart business: Health benefits and parent engagement build trust among employees; cows for coffee farmers strengthen loyalty and productivity. “To be a benevolent organization, you have to make a lot of profit,” he told Fortune in 2011. “But if your sole goal is to maximize profit, you’re on a collision course with time.”
Live the adage “From those to whom much is given, much is required.” Starbucks and Unilever may have a resource advantage, but they use their brand, visibility, and scale to blend capitalism with activism to influence change. Polman tackles global malnutrition; Schultz addresses other big-picture issues such as job creation and political disunion. And people respond. When Schultz called on major corporations to halt all political campaign contributions until the U.S. government solved the budget deficit, nearly 200 top executives of major companies signed on. He’s resolute: “Business leaders cannot be bystanders.”
Starbucks and Unilever use their brand, visibility, and scale to blend capitalism and activism to influence change.
Schultz and Polman represent a growing corps of 21st-century leaders who are demanding bigger, bolder things of business—not primarily as a moral obligation (although that’s very important) but as an imperative for enduring organizational success. In the next decade we’ll see others forge their own models, just as we’ll see the decline of companies that cannot summon the moral courage demanded by principled leadership.
Unilever’s goal is to “stay close to society to guarantee our future.” Polman says that what he’s doing is “nothing special.” But if his and Schultz’s actions motivate others to follow, the impact will be extraordinary.
I WOULD LIKE TO BECOME YOUR CONSULTANT!
BASIL VENITIS
MANAGEMENT CONSULTANT AND FINANCIAL STRATEGIST
Basil Venitis identifies the highest-value opportunities, addresses the most critical challenges, and transforms management and financial strategies.
The customized approach of Basil Venitis combines deep insight into the dynamics of industries with close collaboration of the client, in order to achieve sustainable competitive advantage.
Venitis seeks to be the agent of change for his clients. He grounds each solution in how his client actually works and positions in the marketplace.
0 komentar:
Post a Comment