What new generations brings!!

What new generations brings!!

Good news!

October, nearly 200 CEOs met at the Business Roundtable to discuss the role of business in creating a better society. Around the table were CEO’s from companies such as CVS, General Motors, Pepsi, and Johnson & Johnson around the conversation about how purpose informs the future of business.

Since 1978, they have periodically issued their principles of corporate governance, offering guidance and best practices “to uphold high ethical standards and deliver long-term economic value.” Since 1997, this document has supported the notion that corporations needed to "move away from shareholder primacy,” looking more widely at the value they can offer.

But this meeting marked a new urgency for these organizations -- a new need to acknowledge and define their responsibility to society.

The roundtable’s new Statement of Purpose proclaims that “While each individual business has its own corporate purpose, we share a fundamental commitment to all of our stakeholders.”, the document goes on to define this commitment across five critical areas:

.- value to customers

.- investing in employees through fair compensation, important benefits, training, education, inclusion, dignity and respect

.- dealing fairly and ethically with suppliers

.- giving back to the local communities and embracing more sustainable business practices

.- transparency and effective management with shareholders.

The message is clear: CEO’s are thinking harder about the future of people and the planet. It’s a wide departure from the mentality that existed for the last 50 years or so that above all, an organization’s purpose was to build profit for shareholders.

This new statement better reflects the way corporations can and should operate today.

While the Harvard Business Review has reported that purpose-driven companies outperform the market by 5%–7% per year, the question remains: What happens when a purpose-driven decision conflicts with an organization’s short-term revenue? How will these organizations execute on this new manifesto?

Critics say the roundtable has said nothing about lowering the pay gap between executives and front-line employees or how companies should face the demands from the public to take an ethical behavior.

Still, “They’re responding to something spiritual,” Nancy Koehn, a historian at Harvard Business School told. “They perceive that business as usual is no longer acceptable. It’s an open question whether any of these companies will change the way they do business.”

So, the Statement of Purpose is a step.

Major employers are investing in their workers and communities because they know it is the only way to be successful over the long term. These modernized principles reflect the business community’s unwavering commitment to continue to push for an economy that serves all people

What, then, do Apple, Accenture and Amazon have in common?

For now, they have all put a stake in the ground, proclaiming their commitment to something more meaningful and widespread. But beyond their signatures, it remains to be seen: how will these CEO’s transform their organizations to put purpose at the very center?

And given the emphasis today’s younger workers—and tomorrow’s leaders—place on values, purpose and a meaningful mission, what will this mean for companies in the future?

#vadepersonas

Articulo basado en KF newsletter y Harvard Business Review

Íñigo Sánchez-Cabezudo, SHRM-SCP🇺🇸🇪🇸

I help individuals and organizations become lifelong learners| Keynote Speaker, Executive Coach, Strategic Learning consultant, |Purpose |Masterminds| Learning experiences |Founder of Iñigo Learning

1y

Koldo Lasala Urrutikoetxea, seria interesante que le dieras credito al autor del Golden circle a Simon Sinek. Que es quien realmente democratizo el concepto de #Proposito como lo conocemos ahora.

Like
Reply

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Koldo Lasala Urrutikoetxea

  • Minutos de juego

    Minutos de juego

    Desde hace no mucho se ha generalizado en nuestros deportes de competición el uso de esos “sujetadores” que miden…

  • Reimaginando el trabajo

    Reimaginando el trabajo

    El mercado de trabajo ha cambiado, al menos las expectativas de las personas y con ello, la atracción y fidelización…

  • Organizaciones grandes, ¿grandes organizaciones?

    Organizaciones grandes, ¿grandes organizaciones?

    Mola trabajar en organizaciones grandes, ordenadas, con procesos y claras asignaciones de responsabilidades..

    1 Comment
  • ¿Ascensos?, no gracias.

    ¿Ascensos?, no gracias.

    La promoción ha sido durante décadas el principal fidelizador con el que hemos contado las organizaciones: nuestras…

    2 Comments
  • ¡Que comience el espectáculo!

    ¡Que comience el espectáculo!

    Ángel había pasado toda su vida en el equipo del circo, limpiando los desechos de los animales..

  • ¿En que nos centramos?

    ¿En que nos centramos?

    Estamos pasando de una era de líderes individuales a una era de equipos de liderazgo que dirigen la organización. El…

  • Fast lap.

    Fast lap.

    A finales de la década pasada, la permanencia media de un empleado en el Reino Unido era de cinco años. Pero el mercado…

    2 Comments
  • Empresas de trabajo temporal o trabajo temporal en empresas.

    Empresas de trabajo temporal o trabajo temporal en empresas.

    Recuerdo hace algunos años, en un momento de intensa incorporación de profesionales a la empresa en la que trabajaba…

  • Ser y deber ser.

    Ser y deber ser.

    Comienza el curso y con él un nuevo plan de acción; empresarial y personal. El de nuestra organización y el nuestro…

  • makerSPACE

    makerSPACE

    A principios de este año la administración de Estados Unidos puso en marcha una iniciativa para llevar espacios maker a…

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics