It's great to see my
partners, MartinJenkins, and
their clients in New Zealand making strides
forward.
It is progress when communications and CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility)
teams unite under the purpose banner*. But to deliver sustainable success for
all, it is critical that executive teams and their Boards grasp the initiative
and hot-wire purpose into the core of their business strategy. When that
happens, purpose is elevated and given the status it requires to affect real
change. It subsumes old-school, generic mission/vision statements and becomes
the Single Organising
Idea
(SOI), of the business and the ecosystem it both influences and relies
upon.
The positive impact of an SOI is tangible and, in some parts of the ecosystem,
almost immediate. For example, internally, staff sense being part of a new and
meaningful
movement
that matters not only to the wellbeing of the business but to their own personal
wellbeing. Externally, ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) factors
aligned with an SOI, designed to deliver sustainable value for all stakeholders,
attracts interest from long-term institutional
investors.
Meanwhile, admiration of the SOI sparks interest from the most motivated in the
employment market; and game-changing innovations that align with the SOI arrive
via new, dynamic partnerships and enhanced collaboration with existing ones in
supply chains and elsewhere.
It’s all very positive and, of course, all very possible, but to make any of
this happen, we need the 'activist
CEOs'
referenced in publications such as the Harvard Business
Review and CEO
Magazine to
show up, get involved and start delivering.
This does not mean speaking out or standing up for 'cherry-picked' causes.
That is just cynical, short-term brand management, dressed up as CSR or ‘shared
value,’ with an eye on the perceived brand
preferences
of Millennials.
No. This is about radical realignment and organisational development that will
deliver practical outcomes. It's about fundamentally redirecting the businesses
they lead to deliver actions at scale that will save planet and people.
The tools are there to activate and achieve such a transformation, as
demonstrated during, for
example, SparkLabs in New Zealand; in the
US, with Sustainable Brands; and in the
UK at Business Fights Poverty in the
last four months. But according to the experts, the time
to use them is fast running out.
This post first appeared on
LinkedIn
on July 22, 2019.
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Neil Gaught is a business and brand strategist, based in London.
Published Jul 25, 2019 9am EDT / 6am PDT / 2pm BST / 3pm CEST