Summary

The Tomorrow’s Global Company Inquiry examined what it would take for the global company of the future to survive and prosper. One key theme it found was that, as a way of providing cohesion in a diverse global organisation, successful companies should define clear shared values. These must be clearly communicated and people’s behaviour held accountable for matching them.

 

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posted by Admin  on June 10, 2008
A checklist for board members who wish to integrate corporate responsibility into their business.
     

posted by Admin  on July 29, 2010
 The 2007-2009 financial crisis was a perfect "black swan" event: unexpected, a rarity, with broad and deep impacts; and, with the benefit of hindsight, it was also retrospectively rationalised by many "experts". We got it all "sensationally" wrong: bankers (like myself), policy-makers, supervisors, auditors, research analysts, economists, civil society itself. And even as the crisis was unfolding, many initially did not consider its seriousness. We saw dangers of shocks, but underestimated the confluence and impact thereof.  
     

posted by Admin  on July 11, 2008
Developed in February 2002, Timberland has demonstrated a commitment to ensuring that its Code of Conduct is implemented across all its supply chain.
     

posted by Admin  on June 19, 2008
Date: July 2007A snapshot on how the Principles for Responsible Investment came about, and views of leading thinkers in the field of sustainable finance and responsible investment.
     

posted by Admin  on December 15, 2010
This brief will lay out the structures of the World Peace Partnership (WPP) and World Peace Festival. It will detail the potential platform created for corporate sponsorship, where companies will not only be able to showcase their Corporate Social Responsibility and sustainability programmes, but also to demonstrate their integrity and relevance.
     

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embedding values
As Steve jobs, the co-founder of apple computer puts it forth, “the only thing that works is management by values. Find people who are competent and really bright, but more importantly, people who care exactly about the same things you care about.”
People are the most important asset of an organization is a well heard statement. Yet how many organizations act as if they really believe these words? Not many. These words are the clear expression of a value, and values are visible through the actions people take, not their talk.
Values form the foundation for everything that happens in the workplace. If you are the founder of an organization, your values permeate the workplace. You naturally hire people who share your values. Whatever you value, will largely govern the actions of your workforce.
Behind the most successful brands and businesses there are always values – explicit principles that guide attitudes and behaviour - to ensure that promises made are delivered. Values make an impact on all stakeholders, internal and external; and they have never been examined more carefully and taken more seriously as a measurement of the core strength of a business.

Inside the company they are the touchstone for leaders, who want to create a performance culture, critical to the process of driving through change. Among customers, once stated they are an unequivocal basis for trust – brand loyalty depends on them. They shape relationships with suppliers are increasingly examined by shareholders and they form the foundations of Corporate Responsibility policy. Values are, therefore, of fundamental importance; an asset. But not one that can be bought or easily imported; they come from within. Live by them and you enhance the worth of your business. Fail to, and you undermine it. They are relatively easy to write and hard to deliver. And once they are posted above the door there are no hiding places, because we are what we do, not what we say we will do.

Organizational values are more important today than at any other time in history because the personal and societal context within which business operates is changing. Who you are as an organization, and what you stand for, are becoming just as important as what you sell.

Effective organizations identify and develop a clear, concise and shared meaning of values/beliefs, priorities, and direction so that everyone understands and can contribute. Once defined, values impact every aspect of the organization.
Management should support and nurture this impact or identifying values will be a wasted exercise. People will feel fooled and misled unless they see the impact of the exercise within your organization.

If one wants the values one identifies to have an impact, the following must occur.
• People demonstrate and model the values in action in their personal work behaviors, decision making, contribution, and interpersonal interaction.
• Organizational values help each person establish priorities in their daily work life.
• Values guide every decision that is made once the organization has cooperatively created the values and the value statements.
• Rewards and recognition within the organization are structured to recognize those people whose work embodies the values the organization embraced.
• Organizational goals are grounded in the identified values.
• Adoption of the values and the behaviors that result is recognized in regular performance feedback.
• People hire and promote individuals whose outlook and actions are congruent with the values.
• Only the active participation of all members of the organization will ensure a truly organization-wide, value-based, shared culture.

Clearly, the organization's values must be in line with its purpose or mission, and the vision that it is trying to achieve. So to summarize, articulated values of an organization can provide a framework for the collective leadership of an organization to encourage common norms of behaviour which will support the achievement of the organization's goals and mission.
Posted By : Tushita Rath
Posted on : November 23, 2009

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