Join me at the Engage CSR 2010 virtual conference next week: by Fabian Pattberg

This is a cross post of Fabian Pattberg's blog found at http://www.fabianpattberg.com. Fabian writes his blog as a resource for practical information on the topics of Sustainability, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and the use of Social Networking for business and individuals.

Next Wednesday I (Fabian) will be moderating a very interesting panel on the topic of Social Media and CSR at the PR Newswire’s first Virtual Conference and Expo.

The panel will specifically discuss the role of content in this busy and noisy world of Sustainability/CSR. Sustainability/CSR content nowadays is available at a click of a button but how do you actually find the most interesting content? Our aim with the panel is to provide as much practical advice and tips and tricks for you and your organization on how to find, analyze and use the right content in a way that fits your needs.

We will have examples from Suzanne Fallander representing Intel, Chris Jarvis from 3blMedia and Julie 
Urlaub from Taiga Company.

prnewswire Join me at the Engage CSR 2010 virtual conference next 
week

Here are the details for the panel:
 
Panel 2 – Social Media and CSR, 1:30-2:15 ET
 
Topic: Social Media and CSR – Exploring the use of content to accelerate business as a change agent for progress. What roles do each play in content delivery, and what places do they have in advancing business as a change agent?

Participants:
  • Julie Urlaub, The Taiga Company
  • Suzanne Fallender – Intel
  • Chris Jarvis – 3BLMedia (and Realized Worth of course)
  • Moderator – Fabian Pattberg – SustainabilityForum.com
The Twitter hashtag for this virtual conference  will be: #CSRExpo

I really hope you will be able to join us. Registration is free. So what more can you ask for. :-)

See you there!

________________________________________________________

ABOUT FABIAN


Fabian Pattberg is a sustainability/Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and social media professional with many years experience in the sustainability and social media field. His expertise includes managing the production of multiple sustainability/CSR reports, planning and coordination of stakeholder engagement campaigns, advising companies on their CSR strategy/ implementation and the use of social media for companies to promote their sustainability credentials.
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PwC's 3-Tiered Strategy for Community Investment (USA)

How to Make a Difference: PwC & the Gangs of Chicago

The corporate world is on a bandwagon. It’s growing and gaining speed and everyone seems to be jumping on board. What do we call this rolling and sometimes rickety phenomenon? It’s known as “Corporate Social Responsibility” and there are a few – an important few - companies on board that have earned a moment to be recognized.

This month, we can’t stop talking about PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) USA

PwC USA has a solid track record of significant community investment. In recent years, under the insightful leadership of Shannon Schuyler, they have addressed a variety of issues threatening students living in difficult circumstances across the nation. But when a gang fight broke out at the recent programs, some executives wondered if things had gone too far.

But wait - let me back up….

The Five Millions Kids Initiative

Earlier this year, PwC launched a partnership with Operation HOPE to teach financial literacy and empowerment. The Five Million Kids Initiative (5MK) would require PwC to commit it’s 525 intern volunteers to work on some of the toughest high school campuses across the country. For many young students, math and money have little connection. The 5MK initiative makes education feel relevant to students through practical lessons in the "language of money.” It is meant to be a key aspect in curbing soaring high school drop-out rates in some of the most economically affected areas across the United States.

An initiative like this presents notable risks - it is not something to jump into unprepared. Shannon explains that the partnership is an extension of a strategic focus that PwC has been building over the years.

PwC’s 3-Tiered Strategy for Community Investment

1. The Right Perspective.

It takes effort to see from a perspective other than our own, but its necessary when the desire to “make a difference” is genuine. PwC shifted their corporate view to that of the students in low-income school districts. What are their lives like? What difficulties do they face? Why do they struggle with learning? One basic need became clear: they’re hungry.

PwC employed the help of Feeding America and provided breakfast for children who would otherwise spend the day distracted by a growling tummy.

2. The Right Foundation.

When they started with the right perspective, PwC was able to consider another basic issue: by the time kids in low-income schools get to high school, they have already missed years of essential training in the foundational concepts of math and money. Without a strong base, the difficulty of learning financial literacy is multiplied.

PwC decided to provide the right foundation by engaging the MIND Research Institute, which uses innovative techniques to engage student’s visual reasoning abilities to solve multi-step problems. By the time these kids reach high school, they are primed to learn math for life skills.

3. The Right Partner.

The choice to focus their community investment initiatives on math and money came naturally to PwC.  Shannon Schuyler explains, “Money is the core of what we do. Our people can teach this because we know it. ” The alignment of business strengths and resources with community solutions makes sense for PwC.

Money, however, wasn’t the only area of expertise required for the PwC’s initiative. They also needed a direct line to the appropriate schools and students who could use their help. The only way to find this direct line was by securing the right partnership – which is where Operation HOPE comes in.

When the time came to implement 5MK, Operation HOPE found the right schools, put together the (award winning) financial literacy curriculum Banking on Our Future and trained the 525 PwC interns. In turn, PwC found and hired the interns and committed the time, resources, volunteers, financial support ($50,000 for the 2-week program) to make it all happen.

This is a true partnership. Both organizations were able to draw on the unique expertise and resources of the other for mutual benefit.

"PwC is committed to taking a leadership role in developing the next generation of leaders who will ensure a sustainable marketplace," Shannon explains. "We believe the core to that effort is a focus on math proficiency and financial literacy. Our involvement with Operation HOPE provides our interns a unique opportunity to impact students across the US with life-lasting skills and experience the satisfaction of making a difference in the life of a child."

PwC & the Gangs of Chicago

Unfortunately, no amount of good planning can prevent an unexpected crisis. It can however, find you poised to respond to it with grace and candor – which is exactly what PwC needed one peaceful afternoon in Chicago.

The session was taking place as normal. Interns and students were working together through the Banking on Our Future curriculum, when a crescendo of activity began to build. In only moments, a full-fledged gang fight broke out and needless to say, the PwC interns were scared out of their minds. To mitigate the danger, the fire alarm was pulled and the group was told to evacuate the school and go home.

Once outside the building, a group of interns began to protest the easy exit. “These kids don’t have the same options we do,” they explained. “This is their life - they don’t get to choose to walk away.” But the risks were high for a company like PwC and the situation needed to be discussed.

The conversation found it’s way to the executive level of PwC within days. What if something happens to a student on our watch? What about the interns? Should a company the size and stature of PwC really take the kinds of risks this program requires? But the words of the interns did not fade easily. “The kids in the schools don’t get to walk away; this is their life….and they still need our help.”

In the end, canceling the program was never really an option. “Our interns wanted to continue their work and our leadership felt that it was the right thing to do,” Shannon told us. So, a few days later, PwC returned to the school – this time with a long line of busses. They gathered the students and brought them all to the Chicago office of PwC where they continued the classes. In this space, the students were not only able to focus on their studies - they also found the opportunity to initiate a discussion about the effect of gangs on their lives.  Both student and intern – not to mention other PwC staff - were moved and educated.

We created quite a buzz in the office,” Shannon says. “People began to ask questions about the program and somehow it all became a bit more real.”

More Than a Bandwagon

We at Realized Worth have dozens of conversations each week with companies who want to get active in their communities. Many of them express their desire to make a difference – and to that end, they’re willing to put up the cash, resources and time. Rarely, however, do we speak with companies who are willing to put real skin in the game. This is understandable, but it’s also the reason the bandwagon is full of people whose stories will never be told.

Since interviewing Shannon a month ago, we’ve been sharing about PwC’s 5MK initiative at conferences and with clients as an example of a “best practice” of community engagement. The 5MK program and PwC’s 3-tiered strategic approach is to be commended – and their guts are to be emulated. Because of their genuine commitment to make a difference and their willingness to take risks, PwC under the leadership of Shannon Schuyler, has become a leader in Corporate Social Responsibility. 

About Shannon Schuyler



Shannon Schuyler has been with PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) for twelve years and is currently the Corporate Responsibility (CR) Leader and a member of the board for the firm’s foundation. She oversees the actions, programs and initiatives for the firm's internal strategy around PwC’s four CR pillars: Marketplace, Community, People, and Environment.

Be sure to watch for Shannon's own blog posts on Huffington Post. She'll be attending and writing at the National Conference on Volunteering and Service, the world's largest gathering of volunteer and service leaders from the nonprofit, government and corporate sectors. Follow NCVS on Twitter and read the NCVS Blog here.




   
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For My Daughter: The Transformative Power of Volunteering

Volunteering might be just the thing to help you remember who you are; this is the transformative power of volunteering.
I believe in the power of volunteering. I see it as an incredibly accessible and formative activity. It is not, however, the act of doing something on behalf of someone else without pay that’s transformative - It’s the context in which volunteering exists that matters.

The power of volunteering is found in the places that volunteering takes us: homeless shelters, the devastated neighborhoods of New Orleans, the local nursing home, your town’s summer fair. Transformation occurs in places that are far away from our safety, comfort and ownership. They are outside our known experience.

Cash vs. Volunteering


Since before my kids could walk, they came along with me to volunteer in these kinds of transformative places. For most of the last 15 years my two boys and two girls have helped (or gotten in the way of) handing out meals at community meals and mens shelters. This has been a way of life for us for a long time.

But now my second oldest is planning on traveling to the Ukraine. She is going there to work with children who have special needs. Previously, the Soviet Union denied these children’s very existence. Now, they have limited access to state schooling, poor medical care, and minimal transportation. Tragically, they are often neglected and isolated by society.

Some folks I talk to wonder if it isn’t a better use of funds to send over the cash that it takes to fly a bunch of Americans over to “help out” for a week. It’s a fair criticism. But cash isn’t really what volunteering is about. And it’s definitely not why trips and experiences like this are essential for all of us.

Remembering Our Humanity

Volunteering moves us to find ourselves. It takes us to places within ourselves that we would never have occasion to discover otherwise. Life is full of obligations and practicalities. We live with the constant threat of losing our humanity under the tyranny of our schedules.

This is Katie’s last year of High School. High School is a place that screams, “be prettier, be faster, be funnier, be more.” Katie’s a smart girl. She knows how the game is played and that the scores are fixed. But still, when the roar of the audience is screaming for a better performance, it’s easy to forget you’re not just an actor playing a part.

It’s easy to forget your humanity.

It’s easy to neglect the discovery of who you’re becoming.

I know many of you reading this are experiencing your own version of what I’m describing. But you’re not in High School. You’re at work. You’re trying to figure out how to be a dad or a mom. You’re looking after ailing parents. Life’s demanding more, and you’re wondering if you’ll ever be enough.

Going to unexpected places and giving your time might be just the thing to help you remember who you are. Serving others who need you to be just who you are is the transformative power of volunteering. We transition from a role and an obligation to a unique and essential piece of the human experience. We begin to realize a worth in ourselves that can only be discovered in seeing the worth of those around us.

For My Daughter


That’s what I want for Katie. She’s had numerous volunteering experiences, but this time it’s a bit different. This time she’ll go deeper into who she is and discover a value that we all need her to share with us.

If you can help me send her toward this life changing experience, I will be grateful and count you as members of my tribe who helped raise my children. For those for whom it’s just not possible, join us in taking (or continuing to take) these journeys to unexpected places to discover our true selves.

Click here for more info including how to give. There's also a widget at the top of this blog called "For My Daughter."



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How to Start a Volunteer Program - Inc. Magazine

Chris Jarvis of Realized Worth talks with Inc. Magazine about the value of corporate volunteering. "In terms of the war for talent, a number of businesses use (corporate volunteering) as a core strategy." Read the article here.


Realized Worth helps companies connect with their communities. We do this through corporate volunteering and social media. Together these 2 elements give companies the power and relevance of action and dialogue; involvement and storytelling; "the walk and the talk."

Recently, we had a chance to talk with Issie Lapowsky at Inc. Magazine about "How to Start a Volunteer Program." There are a few basic ideas every organization ought to have in mind as they embark on this adventure such as the advice Nikki Korn from Cause Consulting gives: "Start with what you want to accomplish," Korn says. "You don't have to build a gym to change a school, but you do need to be respectful in pairing what you have with the organization's needs." 

Read more from me (Chris Jarvis), Nikki Korn, Erika Edwards from LUSH cosmetics, Liz Brenna from Ben and Jerry's and more here: Inc. Magazine: How to Start a Volunteer Program. 
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