Telling The Story of Corporate Social Responsibility

Companies have to start telling the story of corporate social responsibility. People have to be able to share stories about CSR. That’s how ideas become actions, and ideologies become movements.


I came across two blog posts today that made insightful and accurate assessments of CSR reporting. I tend to defer to the wisdom of the ever prolific @elainecohen on the matter of CSR reporting (and I strongly suggest you follow her blog if you want to learn everything there is to know about CSR reports and Chunky Monkey ice cream - don’t ask). Yet I thought both of these blogs made some excellent observations which coincide with recent developments in my own life (we're pretty excited about this recent announcement).

Dr Michael Groves, writing for accountancyage.com notes that ‘The ever-growing trend for companies to produce annual reports on their corporate social responsibility (CSR) or sustainability record, has created more questions than it answers.’ According to Groves, CSR reports are evolving, becoming more sophisticated utilizing standards of reporting that are both voluntary and statutory.

However, Groves believes that ‘the reports have in many ways become an expensive exercise in document creation and consultancy-speak. In other words, a communication tool that tries to please everyone and consequently pleases no one. If you want any proof of this, even the investment analysts find them boring!'

Ashley Jablow writes a blog that I follow on a regular basis: www.thechangebase.com. Today she also tackled the topic of CSR reporting having just spent the past four months of her MBA program examining best practices in CSR reporting. She was a bit surprised at her findings, and offers the following suggestions;


"A successful CSR report doesn’t just tell impact – it tells stories."

Having made a number of recommendations on "how to present content and provide context in ways that are engaging, interactive and customized for stakeholders" one of the executives had a question. “Why does it matter if we don’t tell people about what we do in sustainability. Isn’t it good enough that we do something at all?” 

Ashley and her team answered with "an emphatic 'No'. It’s not enough to just do something."

"A fear of greenwashing is not an excuse to stop you from telling your sustainability story!"
Ashley believes, along with others, "that this concern about greenwashing has gone too far. In fact in some cases, greenwashing worries are actually holding companies back from saying anything at all about sustainability – mainly for fear that someone, somewhere will find something to criticize."

"By not focusing on the manner in which it told its sustainability story, our client company had inadvertently left very real value on the table."

According to Ashley, "that value was instead being captured by competitors who had done a tremendous job on both the reporting and storytelling fronts."


Read Ashley's full article here.


Dr Michael Groves offers some suggestions on how to tell the stories of Corporate Social Responsibility:

Figure out how people want to hear the story

"The business must then decide what the best methods are of communicating with the many groups interested in its CSR record – be they customers, regulators, investors, employees, local communities or suppliers."

Get creative and use multiple formats

"While it may be harder to do, I would venture to suggest that a combination of different communication methods would be most effective, be they web based (including social media tools), printed summaries, presentations, one-to-one meetings, debates, adverts, maps, graphs, exhibitions, postcards or tea towels."

Allow the storytelling to lead to genuine dialogue

"There is huge scope for businesses to be genuinely interesting in relation to CSR. If nothing else, it is about telling a story and responding to the resulting debate and questions. The digital world also allows the story to be told in real time, with video, blogging and graphics that show 
what is happening right now within the business and even across its supply chain."

Adopt social media or get left behind (that means lose your job)

"Adopting a greater level of CSR openness may be daunting to the “on message” communication control freaks out there, but I’m afraid they will just have to get used to it. In fact, they will either adapt or be trampled into the soil when future CEOs, CFOs and CIOs born into a social media-dominated world start to get their hands on businesses. It’s already happening, so come on you corporate suits, open yourselves up a little more."



Dr Michael Groves, owner of Great Circle, has advised companies in the clean tech, clean energy and geographic information sectors on marketing, branding and commercialisation.







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How Volunteering Changed My Life: An Interview With Chris Jarvis

Everyone has a story. Call it a journey, an explanation, the reason we are who we are, but one thing is sure: there’s always more to a person than can be seen from the outside. There is value in learning each other’s stories. Together, in the messiness of our lives, we can encourage each other to live further into who we’re meant to be.

More often than not, we would never have predicted where our stories take us. Realized Worth has evolved from more than 20 years of career choices that were far from what I’m doing now. Turns out, there’s a Toronto radio show that talks about just that - the complicated plot twists in the journey of a person’s career.

I recently had the opportunity to appear as a guest on the show. Its called Career Buzz and its hosted by Mark Franklin at the University of Toronto. I imagine that many of you are experiencing the evolutionary processes of your own careers and just might find yourselves encouraged by the topics on Career Buzz.

If you're interested in hearing some of my story, you can listen to it by clicking on this link: http://www.careercycles.com/career-buzz/2009-career-buzz-shows  (The show is called "Creating Moments of Epiphany.")

You can listen to the show regularly on Friday mornings, 11-12 EST, at CIUT 89.5 FM.

On the show with me is Dean Dwyer, author of the Quit Bit blog. He writes about the oft overlooked benefits of quitting. He’s a smart guy, and I encourage you to check out his blog and follow him on Twitter @deandwyer

Mark Franklin, our host for Career Buzz, is an outstanding interviewer. Mark is also a career counseling coach. You can find out more about him here: http://www.careercycles.com/

We'd love to hear from you!

Email Chris; chrisjarvis@realizedworth.com
Email Angela: angela@realizedworth.com
Cell phone 1-317-371-4435

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New Ideas For A New Year - What Do You Think?

It’s a new year, it’s a new decade and for Realized Worth it is bound to be the best one yet! For you, our friends and readers, we have gifts to bestow....

1: Video.

That’s right, we’re ready to let you see our faces. We’ve been so safe here behind the screen of this trusty macbook, but with the genesis of 2010 we are resolved to take risks. (It helps that we’ve been asked to join our name with some other CSR-obsessed types for this endeavor.) Our new and improved blog style will be ready for your viewing soon and will enlighten you with more and better corporate volunteering info than you’ve seen before. Keep an eye out! We’ll have more information soon. Very soon!

2: Webinar

Check it out: January 21 with VolunteerMatch.

This should be fun. I get to talk about parts of my recent series: “Bad, Better, Best.” I’m excited to hear from some of the non-profits and companies who have signed up - they’ll share a few of the good and not-so-good experiences they’ve had with the “Top 7 Requests.” Sign up, listen in, and then let me know what you think.

3: Blog

I figure, with all these crazy changes, I may as well polish up this blog. We get a few thousand visits a week, and I’m curious what you enjoy reading here - and what you would like to reading more of. Not to say that I won’t be completely selfish in my choosing, but you know, if we’re of a similar mindset, I just might enjoy catering to a few reader requests. So, write me an email or a comment and let’s see what we can learn from each other.

Looking forward to a great new year!

Email Chris; chrisjarvis@realizedworth.com
Email Angela at angela@realizedworth.com


C: 1-317-371-4435


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Corporate Volunteering: Top 7 Requests & the Bad, Better and Best Responses (4 of 7)

Companies want to engage their communities through employee volunteering programs. For most, this means calling a non-profit and scheduling an activity. But how should non-profits respond? Is there a “best” answer for everyone? (Part 4 of 7)

New realities necessitate new thinking
As employee volunteering leaps into popularity, the larger picture - Corporate Social Responsibility - presents the world of business with new realities. It is these realities that motivate corporations to find their way onto the band wagon.
There are two, in particular, that find their way into the spotlight this January 2010:
  1. Transparency. Reciprocity and transparency are the new currencies of value. If you are a corporation working in the community, it’s time to be open about your objectives while you contribute to the well being of those living there.
  2. Competition. There are distinct competitive advantages to be found in corporate social responsibility. This approach is not charity or enlightened philanthropy. CSR is a strategy; it is something sustainable and new. For companies savvy enough to take advantage, this growing trend presents a competitive upper hand.
(For an in-depth look at these concepts, check out the article 'Employee Volunteering and Social Capital: Contributions to Corporate Social Responsibility ' by Judy N. Muthuri, Jeremy Moon, Dirk Matten).

Across the board, the fact that employee volunteering is on the rise remains unquestioned. Quinn Bingham, a friend of mine and the Director of Corporate and Community Engagement at the Toronto United Way, remarked that he has seen interest in corporate volunteering grow throughout 2009 and does not expect it to show signs of stopping.

That’s both good news and bad news (Corporate Volunteering Becomes Popular: There's Good News & There's Bad News). Many non-profits are beginning to feel a bit overwhelmed. Companies who are so motivated to find their way in the world of CSR, tend to show up with some severe presuppositions. The requests they make, however, can fit into a simple, 7-category list. We’ve listed these seven typical requests and the 3 types of responses that can go along with them: Bad, Better, and Best. With this blog series, we plan to make it easy for you to be constantly armed with the “best” response.

The 7 typical requests by businesses of non-profits:

The “Ideal” Volunteer Experience....

  1. ...can be undertaken in a day
  2. ...can be done together as a team
  3. ...has intrinsic value
  4. ...does not clash with other objectives
  5. ...enhances the skills of their employees
  6. ...coincides with the company’s chosen cause
  7. ...coincides with what their employees want to do

(These 7 requests have been adapted from material provided by www.volunteeringaustralia.org and can be found here as part of a very helpful slide presentation).And here we are on #4....

4. “We want an activity that does not clash with other objectives”

Admittedly, companies are wont to throw out some ridiculous requests. But this one? Well....this one is perfectly reasonable. If a company has any sort of corporate social responsibility strategy in place, it is essential that the work they do in the community does not undermine the overall objectives of their employee volunteering program. This is simply good thinking.

Of course....I’m assuming here that the objectives of the company are, in fact, good. But what if they’re not? What if the company wants your activity to fit with objectives that are uninformed, unrealistic, or...just plain dumb?

Well, let’s take a look at a real life example:
Imagine a company who is excited about their new commitment to being active in  the local community. They have been working together for several weeks to determine the best area for their employees to volunteer and finally, because of strong connections to the food manufacturing industry, they decide to focus on food banks.

Now, a number of these employees happen to lead extreme-health lifestyles. They are committed to fitness (including yoga and clean eating) and thus have some strong opinions about food banks. They wanted to do some research before diving into the food banks project. As they studied, they learned that families affected by poverty have diets that are high in sugar and carbohydrates because those types of foods are cheaper and usually easier to store. Armed with this shocking information, they steered the project toward a focused goal: Improving the nutrition of people reliant on food banks.

It was a simple shift. The decision was made to regularly collect and donate large amounts of canned soy beans, chick peas, and lentils. They reasoned that these products were easy to store, long-lasting, and carry a high level of nutrients for effectively improving the quality of the consumer’s diet.
It’s a great story, and I applaud this company for their commitment to approaching CSR with the respect it deserves.

Unfortunately, there was a major flaw in their nutrition-focused plan. The research did not tell them about the lives of the people who would be receiving the food. Not only do people affected by poverty eat unhealthy foods because they’re cheap and long-lasting, but because they’re familiar. High-protein legumes are a luxury of the middle class. This is, of course, a generalization, but in the case of the “Nutrition-focused Food Banks Project” can after can of soy beans, lentils, and chick peas were tossed into the bushes on the way out of the food bank. Volunteers went out afterwards to pick them up, perplexed. Finally, a forthright community member explained: “What the hell are we supposed to do with those?” The project was soon re-evaluated.

Bad, Better, and Best Responses:

BAD: Enable bad objectives

Ultimately, the food banks project was well-intentioned, but uninformed. Facilitating a company’s naive goal may not appear harmful in some cases, but enabling bad objectives is always bad for the community. When the champions of communities do not make a marked effort to inform simplistic or uninformed ideas or assumptions, they end up catering to self-indulgence. Making volunteers ‘feel good’ without actually doing any good for the community is simply a waste of potential. Your community deserves better.

This kind of enabling is bad for the NPO, too. When companies don’t take the time to understand the context, goals, and priorities of non-profits, they demonstrate a type of entitled ignorance. The thing is, they may actually not know any better. In may cases, they’re just anxious to do something, get active, see a change. Right now! It’s not a bad thing to be excited to help, but indulgence without guidance limits the potential of the relationship. Help the company gain the knowledge that will make their “help” more effective, and you’ll end up with a long-term, lucrative connection.

Don’t forget - the company doesn’t want to be enabled either. Not really. The project may not clash with other objectives, but it may not fit either. Accommodating easy volunteer activities that do not actually fit the company’s goals is just lazy. It will leave the company without measurable accomplishments - not to mention an unsuccessful employee volunteer program. I hope it goes without saying, this is a bad for the company.


BETTER: Determine a good fit

An acceptable option is to find an activity that fits with the other objectives of the company’s CSR agenda. This may require some effort by the NPO to learn those objectives. Here are some ideas for how to do that:
  • Ask for a copy or link to the company’s “CSR Report.” Read through and try to gauge their priorities - both stated and then acted upon.
  • Meet with the employee’s responsible for the company’s CSR strategy. Have a conversation. In the process, find out what types of volunteer efforts they have enjoyed most in the past, and why.
  • Invite key stakeholders of the program to visit your non-profit and take a quick tour. Make sure they understand what your organization is about, including the issues facing your community.
  • Offer a pilot project. Instead of looking for a long-term relationship up front, take your time. Join together in a short-term project to determine the compatibility of each group’s objectives.

BEST: Develop joint objectives

The best scenario is when a company and non-profit form a partnership around shared objectives. In order for this to happen, both the business and the non-profit must be committed to the mutual benefit of each other. These peer partnerships are growing in popularity, but are still not entirely common. Here are some of the best practices in partnerships between corporations and non-profits:
  • The partnership fits the brand of both organizations
  • The values and attitudes of both organizations are aligned
  • The resources and skills of the company add value to the non-profit
  • Both organizations take time to ‘vet’ prospects before making a commitment
  • Both organizations create teams to advocate for the partnership and meet together
  • The teams are able to institutionalize the partnership so that it is not dependent on personalities from either organization
  • Planning and execution are done in conjunction with each other

This option takes a little extra work initially, but promises the best of all worlds for non-profit, business, and community. Their combined knowledge, expertise and resources hold the promise of real solutions to mitigating and prevailing issues facing our neighborhoods. And after that initial effort is completed, partnerships are (relatively) smooth-sailing. Check out volunteeringaustralia.org site or a little additional guidance. They're jammed packed with great resources and information for non-profits and companies alike.


We'd love to hear from you!

Email Chris; chrisjarvis@realizedworth.com
Email Angela: angela@realizedworth.com
Cell phone 1-317-371-4435

Join our Facebook Page
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Corporate Volunteering: Top 7 Requests & the Bad, Better and Best Responses (3 of 7)

Companies want to engage their communities through employee volunteering programs. For most, this means calling a non-profit and scheduling an activity. But how should non-profits respond? Is there a “best” answer for everyone? (Part 3 of 7)


If men are from Mars, and women are from Venus, then non-profits and businesses must be from opposite corners of the universe. Their shoes, memos and boardrooms may look the same, but let me tell you - they do not speak the same language.

Take, for example, the following: When a business says, “We want to help out for a day” the non-profits hears, “We want to give you a migraine.” Conversely, when a non-profit says, “We’d like a long-term relationship” the business hears, “We’d like to drain your wallets dry.”

Unfortunately, this debilitating language barrier exists between two groups who have the potential to significantly benefit one another. All that’s needed is a little translating....

And that’s what this blog series is all about. Thanks to Fabia Bates for initiating an interesting discussion on the newly launched www.i-volunteer.org.uk which effectively brings to light the communication issues to which I’ve referred. One writer from the Volunteer Center of South Derbyshire says she’d like to see longer-term, skills-based volunteering, but finds this concept difficult to sell to “CSR people with fixed ideas about why they are volunteering.” And so, we invite CSR people and Volunteer Centers alike to join us in this mutual effort to engage and understand each other....despite our differences.


The 7 typical requests by businesses of non-profits:


The “Ideal” Volunteer Experience....

  1. ...can be undertaken in a day
  2. ...can be done together as a team
  3. ...has intrinsic value
  4. ...does not clash with other objectives
  5. ...enhances the skills of their employees
  6. ...coincides with the company’s chosen cause
  7. ...coincides with what their employees want to do


(These 7 requests have been adapted from material provided by www.volunteeringaustralia.org and can be found here as part of a very helpful slide presentation).


3. “We want an activity that has intrinsic value”

First of all, um....what does that even mean?


Well, its something all companies want (whether or not you’ve heard them specifically use the term “intrinsic value.”) Basically, what they’re asking for is a way for people (both their employees and the community) to see an obvious value come from the investment of volunteering. An easy example of intrinsic value shows up with a group like Habitat for Humanity. When your group volunteers with them, the value is loud and clear at the end of the day in the form of a brand new house. Intrinsic value is built-in, visible, unquestionable.

Projects that offer this type (and it is not the only type) of intrinsic value are important for companies for 3 reasons: 1) recruiting volunteers is easy 2) showing what the company achieved for the community is easy 3) feeling a sense of satisfaction from the finished project is....well, easy.

When a company asks, in one form or another, for a volunteering project that has intrinsic value, there are a couple ways to respond. Let’s start with what not to do....

Bad, Better, and Best Responses:

BAD: Tell them: “You can make a difference.”

“You can make a difference.” You’ve heard it before. It’s a common refrain of the non-profit and community organization. Everyone wants to make a difference, right? Do good, feel important, leave a legacy? It’s a tempting carrot to dangle.....even if it’s a bit misleading.

And herein lies the problem with the idea of intrinsic value. Homelessness is a relatively visible problem and building a house is an obvious step toward a solution. When it’s finished, a volunteer feels that he or she has “made a difference.” An actual understanding of homelessness or the obstacles poverty places in the way of home ownership is not required. Volunteers will keep building houses because the value is intrinsic.

Let’s pause right here. Chances are, anyone reading this who represents an non-profit is already weighing the value of the work they do, against the value of building a home. Your non-profit may need volunteers to scrub a floor that’s going to be dirty again tomorrow, or spend time with an elderly person who won’t acknowledge their presence. The value of your work is hard to see, and people don’t always feel that they’ve made a difference. You run into this challenge over and over: How do we convince volunteers that this work is important?

Well, you don’t. Don’t try and convince them. Sometimes the value of the work will be immediately clear, sometimes it will take time. But whatever you do, don’t merely “tell” people why a project or cause is important. You will risk stealing from them the opportunity to understand and thus internalize its true value.

In fact, telling volunteers why the work is important to other people tends to keep them from considering how the issues and solutions effect (or should effect) them personally. When we do this, we run a high risk of objectifying the people we hope to help by creating two groups: the “haves” and the “have nots.” The “haves” are the group that are able to fix the problem of the “have not’s.” This artificial dichotomy enables volunteers to look down on the communities being served. It’s not intentional, but telling volunteers how they are making a difference (without any further guidance) leads to this objectification.

(For further discussion please read: Want Good Volunteers? Dump The Altruistic, Find The Self-Interested.)

There is a way to guide volunteers to an understanding of the value of their work - and we’re getting to that. But first, let’s look at some additional reasons why just telling them its valuable, is bad for everyone involved.

Let’s start with this is bad for the non-profit. Ever wonder why so many companies feel they have the answers to make your non-profit organization better? It has a lot to do with the attitudes that result from the message, “you can make a difference.” Everything is externalized, objectified and simplified. The volunteers immediately see themselves as experts who possess the means to make a difference. Therefore, when they see something they don’t understand about your organization, the same mental schema is applied and they determine to....uh, make a difference. (Or offer you solutions for problems they don’t yet understand.) Doing things to others lacks the mutual reciprocity necessary for respect and transformation. In an effort to sell a project’s intrinsic value, we only create external objectification and relational distance.

It’s bad for the company too. Trying to convince employee-volunteers that there is value in the volunteer experience tends to inoculate them against discovering what it holds for them personally. This, in turn, keeps companies from understanding what motivates their employees to volunteer in the first place, and they miss the potential of corporate volunteering to transform their company. This will inevitably result in low participation rates, and little to no effect in morale or employee satisfaction.

I hope it goes without saying that the objectification which results from misleading volunteers is bad for the community. When volunteers leave community organizations believing that people who are unlike them are a problem to be solved, the systemic issues are being perpetuated, rather than addressed. Which brings us to a better way to provide a valuable volunteer experience....

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Reporting On Corporate Social Responsibility? You Need More Than Just A CSR Report

Realized Worth is proud to be the Canadian provider of 3BL Media. Reach the most comprehensive network of thought leaders, influencers and professionals from the media communication and financial communities with theCSRfeed. We're betting we can help you more than you know for less than you think.


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Email Chris; chrisjarvis@realizedworth.com
Email Angela: angela@realizedworth.com

Cell phone 1-317-371-4435

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