shared value & lincs co-op phil considine [email protected]
TRANSCRIPT
Changing Times
• A major change in the perception of business and its role in creating value
• Investor Owned Firms (IOFs) tend to view value creation as short term financial optimization with little thought of supplier viability or impact on communities who are central to their sustainability
• The operating context is changing– Big society
– Shareholder revolts
– Public mistrust
Shared Value
• Shared value has been defined as ‘policies and operating practices that enhance the competitiveness of a company whiles simultaneously advancing the economic and social conditions in the communities in which it operates’ (Porter 2011).
• Can be done by redefining the concept of value – not simply the difference between costs and revenue
• Reconceiving products & markets, redefining productivity in the value chain, building industry clusters.
Friedman
• The Social Responsibility of Business is to increase profits‘The only social responsibility of business is to use its resources to engage in activities
designed to increase profits as long as it stays within the rules of the game’ (New York Times Magazine 13 September 1970)
• The global recession has shone a light on this worldview and found it wanting – organisations of all sizes are believed to be prospering at the expense of society.
• the standard operating model of businesses consists of an outdated perception of how they create value and indeed of what constitutes value.
• How organisations can create shared value is key to the redefinition of what capitalism means in the 21st century and how it might evolve into a system that meets the needs of its stakeholders in the widest sense.
What is a Co-op?
• Consumer Co-op– Provide consumption goods at the best price and value making income
go further– Can include housing, utilities, health, leisure, financial services
• Producer Co-op– Enables self employed small orgs and family businesses to gain the
strength needed to survive in the market– Can include shared services, retailers
• Worker Co-op– Provide what ILO calls ‘decent work’– Can include labour only co-ops to large complex organisations
Source Johnson B (2009)
Lincs Co-Op
• Owned by its members and members elect a board of board of directors who appoint the Chief Executive who appoints a management team.
• Each member has a single vote and any member is eligible to stand for election as a director.
• Ensure that the needs of the community and the best interest of the membership are fundamental to the organizational goals
Methodology: Grounded Theory
• Introduced in 1967 by Glaser & Strauss and developed further by Strauss & Corbin among others
• Needed as a reaction against positivism in social research• GT offers a middle ground between extreme empiricism
and extreme relativism• Based on constant comparison and theoretical sampling• Develops theory inductively• Eschews a priori hypotheses and theory• Focuses on research and discovery via direct contact with
social world
What GT is not
• Not a methodological holy grail
• Suitable in some instances not in others
• Works well when trying to understand how meaning is constructed out of intersubjective experience or where no explicit hypothesis exists
• Does not work well when examining objective reality
III. Adopt a cause
Charity of the year
Community Projects
I. Strategic CSR
Before Profit
Supply Chain Activities
Motivational for staff
Reputational benefit
IV. After profit activities
Donations
Sponsorship
II. Relevant Activities
Supporting themes
Donations of IT kit
Work with relevant charities & NGOs
Low Integration High
High
Affiliation
Low
IOF Model of CSR
Questions
• What values underpin Lincolnshire co-operative ?
• What does ‘doing the right thing’ mean to Lincolnshire Co-operative?
• Consider non business activities that Lincolnshire Co-operative support (or encourage employees to support) that you consider important – why are these important?
• How do you show leadership in doing the right thing?
• How does being a co-operative impact the above and why is it different from investor owned firms ?
• How does Lcoop create value in its supply chain
Values
• Community• Engagement• Members interest• Ethical retail• Doing good is in our DNA• Benefits to members• Local perspective• Respect• Sustainability• Develop local community and businesses
Sample Open Codes : from interviews were coded
A trusted brand, Linking innovation and environmental concerns, Empowerment and ethical decision making, Services to schoolsForming alliances with external partiesEnsure activities are aligned with the business strategy, Beauticians working in hospicesLifelong learningCommunity grantsBuilding environmental sustainability into products, Risk assessment and decision making, Stories of heroes – cutting wasteStories of heroes – making profitsStories of heroes – helping the communityBenefit stacking, enlightened self interestConcerns about costsBalancing economic and environmental issuesKnock on effects of empowerment and creativity, Benefits of increased social capitalBeing a coop definitely impacts the valuesImportance of trust and honestyClimate change overrides all else
Traditional Values reinforced by managersReporting to members focuses the mind Sources of power in the business, Generating power on siteImportance of organisational cultureEmbeddedness of the culture Community links – part of the community not an adjunctLocal productsDeveloping staffNeed to educate people about the environment, Aligning business agenda and initiatives,Senior management live the values Challenge of climate changeTranslating and communicating the issuesDeveloping values and trustCustomers expectations and trustDo the right thing (DNA) Go the extra mile, do more than neededMake a profit but not at any priceTreat each other wellRespectA trusted brandLinking innovation and environmental concerns
I: Values Based
• Healthy Communities• Leaders model the way• Services to schools• Business in the Community• you can tell them about the values and what we stand for
Community Initiatives link us back to our owners• the structure helps with community involvement• Every day is different I hadn’t realised until I came here just how
involved in the community we are• we don’t just get to a stage in your development and say well that’s it
– we want you to improve• Staff development is central to our business• It helps with recruitment ?
I: Values Based - Community
• we’ve put XXX and another of our local suppliers together so that they can purchase some of their ingredients together so that they can both get a financial gain but also in a cooperative way of working together. That’s a clear one. So not only are we helping them out, increasing their purchasing power and using our knowledge and experience but we are developing the cooperative message as well.
• I’m the local contact and get enquiries from local producers who are not ready to take the step at this stage but who want advice and so we do that – it’s free and we use that time to look at their packaging or how they are going to get the stage of being big enough and get in to a chain. So some of them will become suppliers and some will not but we give that time
II: Relevant Activities
• Community grants• Someone like AN Other retailer – they don’t
have the same values they’re not Lincs focused
• It’s part of what we do it guides us – but I don’t spend the day worrying about what’s going on with dictatorships
• Volunteering• Local initiatives
III. Adopt a Cause (IOF)
• It felt like we were not lining shareholders pockets • You genuinely felt you were doing something • My targets are financial, so that’s what I do. This was
different – it was giving something back • Community activities tend to be reactive – ‘we were
phoned up by a local charity….’ • I think we did Children in need and it was fun• Charity of the year?• There are some national activities that happen but I’m not
overly certain what they are.
III. Develop Relationships
• Bringing new businesses on by supporting their development
• Supporting local initiatives and charities not just financially
• Giving our time and expertise over a long period
IV. After profit activities
• It’s good to see that we make these donations
• I think we sponsor local football teams
• It’s just something we do
• I think there’s tax breaks or something (IOF)
• We find it difficult to measure any real benefit (IOF)
III. Develop relationships
Charity of the year
Community Projects
Long term alliances
Support of local social enterprises
Time and expertise
I. Values based
Local Community
Develop local capacity
Develop people
Support the movement
Structure reinforces values
IV. After profit activities
Donations
Sponsorship
II. Relevant Activities
Healthy eating projects
Partnering with PCT
Educations (school/FE/HE)
Supply chain activities
Low Integration High
High
Affiliation
Low
……It’s not all just financial.
JS Tesco Morrison Lincs Coop
Staff 152,000 519,671 131,207 2769
T/O £22bn £72bn £17bn £285m
Gross per employee
£5190 £7669 £9275 £30,335
Pre tax per employee
£5256 £7380 £7217 £7439
Sense Making
• Retrospective (Weick)• Social Process• Gaining an understanding of what people
want and ascribing meaning• Relates to complex issues not everyday
problems• Important where facts interact with beliefs
values and norms
Sense Making And Shared Value
• Shared Value is complex
• Sits on the intersection of facts, beliefs, values and norms
• Is a social process
• Is not retrospective
• It is prospective sensemaking
• It creates a shared vision of a desirable future
What is Lincs Co-op
• Is it a consumer Co-op – Yes
• Is it a producer Co-op - It helps to develop local supply chain
• Is it a worker Co-op - Interviews suggest that ‘decent work’ a core value
• A new triple bottom line?
Shared Value
• Shared value has been defined as ‘policies and operating practices that enhance the competitiveness of a company whiles simultaneously advancing the economic and social conditions in the communities in which it operates’ (Porter 2011).