ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

The shift in Corporate Social Responsibility

11. December 2009 13:29
In the past decade, there has been a significant shift in the way the private sector has addressed corporate social responsibility (CSR) – from inserting an environmental section to their annual financial report and only reacting to issues when it hit the media to being pro-active and embedding CSR as part of their day-to-day business operations. Bill Greenhalgh, in his recent article on CSR in the Financial Post, mentioned Nestlé’s work in the milk districts in India as “the ultimate example of altruistic self-interest” by continuously implemented initiatives that have improved the quality of life of the communities around its factories. Over the past 50 years, Nestlé has developed artificial insemination programmes for cattle, subsidised farmers’ purchase of milking machines and helped procure loans for the community. In addition, company veterinarians and agronomists supervise the milk routes and advise farmers on the most appropriate feed for the herds and milk storage facilities have been set up in close location to the farmers.  Corporations need to change the way they manage “people, planet, and profit” and embrace CSR as the way they do business.

Comments

1/28/2010 12:07:49 PM #

Good to see a discussion, however brief, on CSR on a Nestle website.  However, pity that CSR is buried in a discussion on rural development.  This is just one aspect of a strategic approach to CSR.  Shared Value is an interesting concept but implies charity and not structural change..the notion came from Michael Porter who, like all gurus (including this minor one) has a blind side to the systems thinking linked to business strategy implied in CSR.

michael hopkins | Reply

2/2/2010 1:54:45 PM #

Michael, thank you for your comment.

I would like to point out that creating shared value (CSV) concept (first coined by Michael Porter) does not imply charity. CSV is Nestlé’s approach to corporate social responsibility (CSR). By this we mean simultaneously creating value and sustainable growth for all of its stakeholders – from shareholders to the societies where we operate. We are embedding this concept of CSV within all our operations “from farm to fork”.

Rural development is just one focus area of Nestlé’s approach to CSV, the others being nutrition and water.

Susan Steinhagen | Reply

3/2/2010 5:44:35 PM #

Fantastic, thanks for posting!

panama | Reply

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