The Paine of Measurement
Hello Measurement Fans,
We’re devoting this issue of The Measurement Advisor to measuring the value of corporate social responsibility (CSR). I’ll introduce you to our nine exciting articles in a moment, but first, here’s why CSR is important for you…
Anita Roddick says “Stuff the shareholders!”
A generation ago, I was introduced to the concept of social responsibility at a Social Venture Network conference. I’d founded The Delahaye Group a few years earlier and was invited by a fellow entrepreneur to participate in the three-day celebration of entrepreneurship and progressive ideas.
I found myself pitching my concept of measuring PR to an assortment of CEOs, including Tom Chappel, founder of Tom’s of Maine, and Ben Cohen of Ben & Jerry’s. A few hours later, I found myself holding hands and singing “Kumbaya” with Bruce Katz, founder of Rockport Shoes, and Gun Denhart, founder of Hannah Andersson, while Raffi kept us in tune.
The keynote speaker was Anita Roddick, founder of The Body Shop, who was at the time the second richest woman in England, after the Queen. She described her then radical ideas of refusing to test her products on animals, and buying her ingredients exclusively from “sustainable” sources. An audience member asked how her shareholders responded, and she replied in her quintessentially British accent: “Stuff the shareholders!”
Sustainability was part of her core beliefs and essential to her brand. What her investors thought was irrelevant to her decision making. Even in that crowd, it was a revolutionary statement.
Needless to say it all made an impression on this fledgling business woman. When I got back home I threatened to fire our accounting firm for not using recycled paper, and insisted that all the wood in our new building had to be harvested sustainably. (None of our builders even knew what that meant!)
Today, CSR is part of your job
Fast forward a few decades, and boy, have things changed. What was originally the purview of a handful of left-leaning business types is today a staple of investment decision making. Today, companies tout their records on environment, social, and governance (ESG) in their earnings calls. Entire mutual funds build their portfolios on companies that perform well on ESG criteria.
It’s not hard to see why. A company with a good ESG track record is less likely to be subject to lawsuits, boycotts, and other reputational crises. And when it comes to attracting and retaining talent, a reputation for being socially responsible is a necessity.
Once upon a time CSR was seen as part of the “charitable” wing of an organization. But not today; CSR is a vital part of survival. As a result, more and more organizations are placing it squarely in the middle of corporate communications.
Which brings us back to this issue, and its focus on measuring the value of CSR. Now that CSR is right there on the communicator’s tool belt, alongside PR, social, and digital communications, it must be evaluated like any other tactic. Which is why we’ve come up with a handful of tips, a guide to metrics, five case studies, and plenty of background on the topic:
- How to Get Started Measuring CSR—Our special correspondent Sam Ruchlewicz provides a pep talk and advice to get you going in a hurry.
- Lost in the Woods of Social Responsibility Lingo? Here’s a Guide—We sort out the forest of confusing acronyms and definitions.
- An ESG Score Primer… Plus: 4 Tips for Adding ESG to Your Dashboard—Environmental, social, and governance are three basic criteria on which public companies are now rated and ranked.
- 6 Quick Tips on Measuring CSR from the Cone CSR Study—Two decades of data back up this grandmother of all CSR research.
- Evaluating Your CSR? Here Are the Activity Measures and Outcome Metrics You Need to Use—A handy table to help you design your program.
- CSR Pays Off: 5 Well-Measured Case Studies—Heros of CSR, with the data to prove it.
- Yes, CSR Is Still a Thing—Research you can use from the IPRRC.
- Carol Cone and Cone Communications Are the Measurement Mavens of the Month—CSR’s champion.
- The 12% Who Still Use AVEs Are the Measurement Menaces of the Month—Includes a special offer of educational materials to those ready to convert.
** And if you’d like to read the index to our coverage of how to measure CSR, see this page. **
Happy measuring,