A new brand of entrepreneurs has arrived on the business scene,
carrying with them a whole new set of values. They possess a sense
of mission ? to be socially responsible, protect the planet, and do
the right thing for all of their stakeholders. Rather than focus
exclusively on financial gain, they aim to achieve a balance
between profits and one or more causes of their choosing. In fact,
they view for-profit entrepreneurship as a vehicle for social
change. The authors call these pioneers "values-centered"
entrepreneurs.
Some of the values-centered entrepreneurs have been around a few
decades. In recent years, however, the numbers have proliferated
and the nascent movement has started to make a true impact. These
entrepreneurs? approach to management questions our basic
assumptions about how businesses should be run and what their role
should be in society.
Several of these entrepreneurs have attained high visibility.
Yvon Chouinard of sportswear manufacturer Patagoina has been a role
model for integrating environmental protection to every aspect of
Patagonia's business operation. Howard Schultz of Starbucks has
been able to build one of the strongest brands in the world while
being the first retailer to offer comprehensive health benefits and
stock options to its part-time employees. Paul Newman, legendary
actor and racecar driver as well as a leading maker of salad
dressings, gives 100% of Newman's Own brand's profits to
charity.
This book explores how these highly unorthodox leaders have
built their profitable and socially responsible business
enterprises, and what lessons can be learned for the next
generation of entrepreneurs. The authors examine a group of over 40
entrepreneurial companies and how each balanced the profit
objective with social responsibility in key aspects of their
business operation ? from their initial company formation, through
growth, to exit ? to build successful triple bottom-line companies.
Choi and Gray particularly focus on how these firms? commitment to
values affected their company missions, hiring and organizational
policies, marketing strategies, financial practices, exit options,
and giving programs, and vice versa. In some cases, the authors
find that the entrepreneurs? social objectives have actually
strengthened, not weakened, their business enterprises. Based on
their extensive studies of these companies, he authors have
distilled a set of commonalities. The book presents ten of the most
dominant and interesting of these commonalities with a focus on
those policies and decisions that appeared to depart from
conventional business practice.
In addition to devoting chapters to each of the core principles
learned from these companies, the authors also include in-depth
case studies of four of the ventures featured in their study.
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