Search
-
What is Driving Change: The role of stakeholder management
While the concepts that sit behind ESG are certainly not new - and have been at the centre of corporate strategy for decades - the growth and formalisation of ESG as an explicit mission have been catalysts for change. The impacts of this change are far reaching including how companies define, prioritise and manage their stakeholders. This is demonstrated by the rise of stakeholder capitalism, the notion that businesses no longer exist to create profit for shareholders/owners, but instead have a responsibility to create value for a much broader set of stakeholders.
-
Chief Value Creator? The changing role of the Chief Sustainability Officer (CSO)
Here we explore the changing role of the CSO and what this tells us about how organisations are responding to the challenges of ESG and sustainability.
-
Doing Well by Doing Good: Resilience, Risk and the Reputation Value of ESG
ESG creates opportunity, in particular, it helps to drive innovation. Its ‘sustainability lens’ forces businesses to think critically about the long-term value they create, and to identify new trends, business opportunities and partnerships. More broadly, ESG is an increasingly powerful tool to strengthen corporate reputations.
-
Navigating Social Issues: When and how to speak out
Five pieces of actionable guidance for corporate communication leaders as they determine what to speak out on and how, with a focus on maximising opportunities and limiting risk.
-
ESG: The Corporate North Star
The Purpose of purpose: having a clear vision about the kind of company you are is increasingly important in the ‘war for talent’, among generations who want to make a difference in their daily lives.
-
The Reputation Council Report - 2017
Our twelfth sitting explores how 127 communications leaders across 22 countries are responding to an increasingly fractured communications landscape.
This year's report examines issues ranging from the impact of Brexit, and tweets from @realDonaldTrump, to the rise of corporate activism, and the implications of Amazon’s Alexa giving Jeff Bezos a microphone into millions of living rooms.