goodworkpeople Avatar

Posts tagged social responsibility

Social Entrepreneurs! What Are Your Favorite Books?

We’re looking for your favorite strategic, motivational, or historical books that help you do good business.  In the comments below, write the title of the book, why you love it, and how it’s useful for other social entrepreneurs and socially responsible business folks. 

Then we’ll take your recommendations and create a Socially Responsible Reading List!

Volkswagen Expands Social Commitment In South Africa

“The Volkswagen Crafter will be traveling round Eastern Cape Province, giving children the chance to engage in sports and combining this with AIDS  prevention. The buses and their specialist teams will travel to over 100 schools, primarily in rural areas, and organize soccer training for boys and girls. These training sessions will also teach the young people through play about how to prevent AIDS, avoid violence and strengthen social skills. The programs will initially run until 2012 and will reach over 30,000 young people during this period.”

Wall Street's Do-Gooder Summer

“It is almost summertime in New York City, a season of Wall Street philanthropy, volunteerism and charity all over town. On Wednesday, June 16, JPMorgan has the first day of its Corporate Challenge road race in Central Park, promoting workplace fitness, goodwill, camaraderie and environmentalism.”

There’s no question that having run a private sector business and having gone to business school made me much more effective as a social entrepreneur; there are a lot of similar challenges. The important thing is not the private sector or public sector experience specifically; it is the experience of managing a business.
Gerald Chertavian, Founder, Year Up in “How he made the jump from business to social entrepreneur” by Ashoka US

The Timberland Company announced its Q1 2010 CSR performance report

Highlights from this quarter’s performance are organized by Timberland Four CSR Pillars: energy, product, workplace, and service.

Here’s the score: Striving to do more good is associated with greater profitability, equity and asset returns, and shareholder value creation.
Umair Haque, Director, Havas Media Lab in “Why Betterness is Good Business

Buckets for the Cure: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

Like most people, when I first saw that Komen for the Cure had partnered with KFC to create Buckets for the Cure, I thought it was a joke.  And then I sort of wanted to throw up in my mouth a little.  (To figure out your own reaction, watch this 15 second video below).

But then I started feeling a bit of guilt.  Was I just being an elitist snob?  A brand purist?  If KFC is prepared to give the single largest donation to Komen in history (they’ve already pledged more than $2.5 million at the time of this posting), why was I being such a jerk about it?

When I started looking for validation online, I discovered a heap of reactions that I’ve rounded up below.  These are excellent thought pieces that highlight the opportunities, potential pitfalls, and subtleties of cause marketing today.  (To see what people are saying about Buckets for the Cure on Twitter right now, click here).

Breast Cancer Action: Think Before You Pink

“We started Think Before You Pink to pull back the curtain on the surge in pink cause marketing. We are deeply concerned about the implications of KFC’s and Komen for the Cure’s new ‘Buckets for the Cure’ campaign.  KFC = Komen Fails Communities”

Getting Attention: How a Nonprofit Brand Goes Bust — Komen’s KFC Pink Buckets for the Cure

“My disappointment is a shadow of what you’d feel on discovering your spouse has been having a long-term affair, while you and the rest of the family carried on based on the assumption that s/he was in. The person you thought you knew is really someone different, which kills your trust of him/her across the board.”

Selfish Giving: Komen’s Cause Marketing Program Isn’t Fingerlickin’ Good

“This is America where money can justify any crime, wash away any guilt, sanitize any reputation and rationalize any bad idea.  As a cause marketer who loves to win and close deals, I understand why Komen wanted to work with KFC. The lure of seven-figures. The promotion. It’s intoxicating. You talk yourself into it. Would I have advocated a similar partnership within my organization? Maybe. But thankfully my colleagues and superiors have better judgement than I do. Komen, at least in this instance, has been blinded by its ambitions.”

Rally the Cause: Cause Dissonance — KFC and Komen Buckets for the Cure

“While the website is impressive and puts the focus on the cause, it’s full of cause dissonance. That’s problematic as we become increasingly interconnected.  From the same web browser I viewed the campaign website, I did a few quick searches to learn more about the nutritional information of KFC buckets of chicken and the role of obesity in cancer.”

Geoff Livingston: Dancing With the Devil — Cause Marketing for Nonprofits

“In reality, while there is a mismatch in this partnership, the fault actually lies with Komen and not KFC. This represents a larger issue where nonprofits consistently choose money over strategic partnerships, dancing with the wrong partner and degrading their brand value.”

Three Ninety Eight: When Charity is a Marketing Stunt

“Corporations are creating unneccessarily unhealthy products and are mass marketing them to children and low-income communities, resulting in the highest rates of obesity and diabetes that this country has ever seen. Corporate social responsibility campaigns like the one that KFC launched with Susan G. Komen for the Cure appear to be an attempt to placate consumers and draw attention away from any negative associations with their products — rather than a genuine effort to help anyone.”

CNN: Activists Call Foul on KFC Bucket Campaign

New York University professor Marion Nestle tells CNN, “The goals of food companies, alas, are not the same as the goals of public health. Food companies are businesses that must sell expanding numbers of products. While it seems possible that their goals and those of public health could overlap, they rarely do. Buckets for the Cure gets money for whatever it does. KFC sells more buckets. Sounds good, if you don’t think about it too much.”

Beanstockd: New KFC Buckets for the Cure Campaign Gives You Excuse to Eaet Fried Chicken

“Although many have boycotted this idea, we say go for it! It’s fairly obvious that in America, where the obesity rate is over 30%, people are going to eat what they want to eat — we might as well raise some money in support of something along the way.”

fitsugar: KFC’s Buckets for the Cure: Cool or Not?

“On a very basic level, fried chicken is not the healthiest menu choice and can lead to obesity. And many doctors agree that obesity puts a woman at higher risk for developing breast cancer, since many breast cancers are fueled by estrogen, a hormone produced by fat tissue.”

What Does Business Owe the World?

If you haven’t seen the “What Does Business Owe the World?” blog on the Harvard Business Review website, now is the time to check it out. Great line up of contributors and it’s just getting started!

Take a look at the world’s most valuable brands.   Sustainability, social responsibility, and trust were among the key  concerns in driving brand loyalty.
Read more here.

Take a look at the world’s most valuable brands. Sustainability, social responsibility, and trust were among the key concerns in driving brand loyalty.

Read more here.