Table of Contents
Table of Contents. 2
I Declaration. 6
II Motivation. 6
1 Corporate Social Responsibility 8
1.1 Definition 8
1.2 History 9
1.3 Corporate Social Responsibility in Austria. 10
1.4 “Implicit and “Explicit Corporate Social Responsibility. 11
1.5 The Two Pillars of CSR 13
1.6 Prominence of CSR. 14
1.7 Why to Behave in Socially Responsible Ways? 15
1.7.1 Motivation for CSR. 16
1.7.2 Advantages of CSR 17
1.8 Limits of CSR. 17
2 Organizations. 19
2.1 What is an Organization? 19
2.2 Natural Adaptation: Herbert Spencer. 20
3 Strategy. 23
3.1 Mintzberg. 23
3.2 Social Responsibility in Strategy. 25
3.2.1 Drivers of Implementation 25
3.2.2 Intstrumental and Intrinsic CSR 26
3.2.3 Comparison Between the Instrumental and Intrinsic Form of CSR to
Explicit and Implicit CSR. 27
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3.3 Image and Reputation 28
4 Theories Behind CSR 30
4.1 Theory of Contingency 30
4.2 Theory of Consistency. 31
4.3 Congruency and Culture - 7-S Framework McKinsey. 32
McKinsey ’s 7-S Framework 34
4.3.1 Objective and Application 34
4.3.2 Hard 36
4.3.3 Soft S 36
5 Values and Attitudes 38
5.1 The Role of Personal Values and their Impact on our Behaviour 38
5.1.1 Universal Values 39
5.1.2 Personal Values. 39
5.2 Values and Organizational Behaviour 40
5.2.1 Value Systems 41
5.2.2 The Impact of Values on Organizations 42
5.2.3 Example of BDO Stoy Hayward 43
6 Change on Values and Consumer Behaviour 45
6.1 From Material to Post Material Values. 45
6.2 Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs 47
6.3 Herzberg’s Motivational Theory 49
6.4 Maslow, Herzberg and CSR today 51
7 Stakeholder Theory. 53
7.1 Definition 54
7.2 Stakeholder-Perspectives. 55
7.2.1 Inside-Out Perspective. 56
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7.2.2 Outside-In Perspective. 56
7.3 Importance of Stakeholders. 57
7.4 Three Approaches of Stakeholder Theory. 58
7.5 Shareholder Value vs. Stakeholder Value 59
8 Institutionalized Organizations 61
8.1 Isomorphism 62
8.1.1 Does Isomorphism Legitimate? 64
8.1.2 Practical Examples: Shell and Nike 65
8.2 Importance of Ethics and Social Responsibility for Organizational Effectiveness
67
8.3 Institutionalism and Corporate Socially Responsible Behaviour. 68
9 Corporate Culture. 71
9.1 Definition 72
9.2 Applied Levels of Corporate Culture. 74
9.3 Consequences of a Strong Corporate Culture. 76
9.3.1 Strong and Weak Cultures. 76
9.3.2 Corporate Identity 77
9.4 Benefits and Positive Effects 77
9.5 Corporate Culture - The Key to Success? 78
10 Discussion. 81
11 Case Study Palfinger 84
11.1 Introduction to the Company. 84
11.2 External Activities 86
11.3 Background 87
11.4 Palfinger’s Solidarity Network 87
11.4.1 Why to Act in a Socially Responsible Way? 88
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11.4.2 Why Focusing on the Solidarity Network? 90
11.4.3 Intention 90
11.4.4 Palfinger’s Solidarity Network under the Aspect of Institutionalism. 91
11.5 Corporate Culture of Palfinger 92
11.5.1 Palfinger’s Core Values 94
11.5.2 Palfinger’s Values Management 95
11.5.3 Explicit or Implicit CSR? 100
11.6 The Role of Stakeholders at Palfinger 100
11.7 Conclusion. 102
III Literature. 104
IV Sources from the Internet 115
V Table of Figures. 116
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II Motivation
Today, ethics gain more and more importance in our economy and the often-heard statement “Global capitalism, local values” underlines the trend to make money with the help of local values. From that aspect, capitalism does not seem to appear that ignoring and barbarous but shows us that in deed that human values and ethical standards are anchored in the acting of huge, successful multinational concerns. The role of values in that case is crucial as they affect our everyday life. Everything we do and the way we think is guided by values which we got communicated from our families, people that seem to be important for us or from institutions that accompanied us for a period of our life. Values and behaviour are some kind of indicators that form generations and decades.
When talking about values and ethics, the upcoming importance of corporate socially responsible behaviour in form of CSR projects can not be disregarded. It is definitively the buzzword of the early 21 st business century. Nearly every huge company has to face corporate social responsibility activities in order to behave in a way its customers and society in general want them to. So the role of external pressure should not be underestimated. As an actual example, I want to mention the cooperation of the nappies producer Pampers and Unicef, the children funds of the United Nations. Consumer advertising provides that with every bought package of
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nappies from Pampers, one dose of tetanus inoculation can be offered to a poor child.
Another example is McDonald’s. The 40 billion US-dollar concern continuously implements CSR programs but does not behave in a socially responsible way when talking about the firm’s employees and working conditions. Work at Mc Donald’s is low-skilled, hard and most of the time unrelenting, as one of the company mottos suggests: “… if there is time to lean there is time to clean” (Royle, 2005, p.45). Bad working conditions like underpayment and endless night shifts make Mc Donald’s to appear in another light in the minds of its employees and customers, after the motto “We sold them a dream and paid them as little as possible”.
If participating companies mean these activities really serious is often doubtful. Also the question if these activities really fit to the corporate culture of the organization stays unanswered. So organizations implement projects like that in order to be legitimated by society, but when we take a look behind the organization’s curtain, it can be recognized that the CSR activity is only a facade of legitimating. Nevertheless, CSR is the buzzword of the 21 st century and seems to become more and more fashionable term which is connected with a huge marketing strategy behind. But when we take a closer look on the meaning and concept of CSR behaviour, we recognize that it occurred as an advancement of lots of long-existing theories. In this thesis, I want to give an overview over the different theories CSR generates from to discuss its cornerstones of existence. In order to show how theses theories can be applied in an organizational context, the second part of my work is a case study focusing the multinational concern Palfinger in Austria.
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1 Corporate Social Responsibility
1.1 Definition
The concept of corporate social responsibility does not excel in clarity. There is plenty of cross-national evidence that Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) varies in terms of its underlying meanings and the issues to which it is addressed. From a growing body of literature, various meanings and interpretations of CSR emerge, making the definition not that easy. On the one hand side, the issue is a dynamic phenomenon (Caroll, 1999) which is internally highly complex and has open rules for application. (Matten & Moon, 2008). On the other hand side, it is an “umbrella term”, as the authors characterize it, which is overlapping with lots of synonymous (Matten & Moon, 2008, p.405) and is highly connected with terms such as corporate responsibility, corporate citizenship, accountability, transparency, triple bottom line management, sustainability and reputation management (Kokko, 2002). Definitions range from improving relationships with stakeholders to a balance between people, planet and profit as well as being transparent or developing a clear policy on the basis of stakeholders’ requirements (Cramer, Jonker & van der Haijden, 2004). Additionally, various alternative terms and synonyms have appeared, such as corporate citizenship, sustainability, sustainable development or corporate responsiveness (Pater and Lierop, 2006).
Following Matten and Moon (2008), the main idea of CSR activities is the reflection of social imperatives and the social consequences of business success. So CSR and the synonymous behind it consist of clearly defined and articulated policies and practices of corporations that reflect business responsibility for some of the wider societal goods, whereas the precise manifestation and direction of responsibility lie at the discretion of the particular corporation.
The European Commission defines corporate social responsibility as enterprises’ contribution to sustainable development. In the field of cooperation, there are numerous examples of enterprises very closely engaged in sustainable development that apply very strict ethical codes to their regular options. Following de la Cuesta
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and Valor (2003), corporate social responsibility is the ethical and legal compromises and duties of the enterprise with their groups of interest. These mentioned compromises and duties come from the impacts of the enterprise’s activity over the social, labour, environmental and human rights ambits. Other researchers as Coors and Winegarden (2005) define corporate social responsibility as “the alignment of business operations with social values. (It) consists of integrating the interest of stakeholders- all of those affected by a company’s conduct- into the company’s business policies and actions” (Coors & Winegarden, 2005, p. 10). The growing interest in the field of corporate social responsibility resulted in an increased production of papers and regulations both national and international organizations und institutions such as the European Commission, the United Nations, OECD and ILO. Also some rules occurred such as AA-1000 (Institute of Social Ethical Accountability) and SA-8000 (Council of Economic Priorities) (Carrasco, 2007).
1.2 History
To give a short overview affecting the history of CSR, it has to be mentioned that the explicit interest in CSR began to grow in the middle 1990s due to the consumer’s fall in trust in enterprises. Because of financial scandals and environmental conditions consumers mistrusted companies and human values moved towards postmaterialism. From that time on, the new human values area began which is associated with solidarity, quality of life and consideration of the environment. Companies recognized that consumers not only require high quality products, but also demand certainty that the products and processes huge companies offer follow ethical standards. So the product itself was placed more in the background whereas the processes and the organizational behaviour in general came in the fore. Client satisfaction no longer ends with the quality of goods and services (Carrasco, 2007). So we can see that even though CSR is becoming very popular, the idea behind it is not a new one. This can also be documented with the famous Scottish philosopher and economist, Adam Smith, who talked about what must be an ethical trader’s
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behaviour. Before Smith (1982) proposed his famous idea of the “invisible hand” in the Wealth of Nations in 1776, he had written about the necessity of maintaining ethical behaviour in order to maximize long term growth and showed that honourable behaviour has a commercial logic. In his Lectures of Jurisprudence (pp. 327-328), Smith presented his idea that “honesty is profitable”. As example, he explains that when a salesman makes a commercial deal, his goal is not to maximize the benefit as but to obtain a maximum of the total deal. So lying or cheating could make future deals decrease. So the search for self interest could be seen as a means for common well being.
Until recent times, CSR has been seen as an additional business cost factor that made the financial equilibrium more difficult to maintain. Following that idea, Friedmann (1962) saw CSR as a “subversive doctrine” and he also mentioned that the sole responsibility of the business is to increment profit. This neoclassical idea put CSR into a more or less bad light. On the corporate level, CSR has been understood as a cost additional element and as a charge for the firm’s financial viability. But as other studies demonstrate, sustainability is a crucial factor with a positive influence on a company’s financial outcome (Garz, Volk & Gilles, 2002).
1.3 Corporate Social Responsibility in Austria
In Europe, the academic debate about CSR is relatively young and because of the implementation of CSR into management education, CSR tools have become widespread relatively recently (Matten & Moon, 2004). But while research provides rich descriptions of national and regional specifics of CSR, still the question remains how and why CSR differs among national settings. In this paper, the focus of CSR in Austria and German-speaking countries in particular is chosen, that’s why this question won’t be answered.
In 2002, the Austrian government passed the Austrian strategy of sustainability to postulate objectives and different approaches for sustainable future
(www.nachhaltigkeitsstrategie.at/strategie.php3) . As a result, CSR came to the fore and became a major theme of public interest. With the end of 2002, the initiative
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“CSR Austria” was launched with the aim to strengthen the consciousness for CSR and to foster the dialogue between economy, state and society. In 2003, the overall concept of CSR of the Austrian economy was published. In June 2005, “CSR Austria” and the “Austrian Business Council for Sustainable Development” were brought together and a central platform for sustainable and societal responsible acting in Austria was generated. “respACT Austria” and “NeSoVe” (Netzwerk Soziale Verantwortung) exist since spring 2006 (Konrad, 2006). To anchor CSR in our heads, it has to be made „visible“. Also the idea of the exchange of experiences has to be offered. These functions achieve prizes for responsible acting like TRIGOS, which is awarded in Austria since 2003, ASRA, the Austrian Sustainability Reporting Award, TRIGOS Tirol on federal state level as well as several other regional initiatives (Konrad, 2006).
Especially the amount of print media and online magazines which proliferated rapidly in the last years like the Journal für Nachhaltigkeit and the Glocalist Magazine as well as the Glocalist Review and the respACT Austria news, establish the CSR theme in the heads of responsible persons and makes them to think about that issue as well as the Austrai CSR Day which was launched in 2006 by respect Austria. This year, the CSR Day took place for the second time.
Additional evidence for the extent on which Austria’s economy deals with the issue of CSR is on the one hand the fact that the Austrian chamber of commerce (WKO) has founded the working team “ARGE pro Ethik” and on the other hand the fact that not long ago, respACT Austria celebrated its 100 th member.
1.4 “Implicit” and “Explicit” Corporate Social Responsibility When having a look on the actual literature concerning CSR, the differentiation between explicit and implicit CSR catches the reader’s eye. Some companies use their socially responsible behaviour for marketing purposes and to attract the view of the public by denouncing their CSR strategies in media, on homepages etc. Other
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companies behave in a more quite way even if their responsible behaviour is much stronger. They have anchored their commitment toward CSR into their core values which is not obvious for the clients and do really live those ideologies. As we can see, different forms in behaviour affecting the exposure to CSR exist. Matten and Moon (2008) define Explicit CSR as “corporate policies that assume and articulate responsibility for some societal interests. They normally consist of voluntary programs and strategies by corporations that combine social and business value and address issues perceived as being part of the social responsibility of the company” (Matten & Moon, 2008, p. 409). Furthermore, the authors sate that explicit CSR may be responsive to stakeholder pressure. But it also may involve partnerships with governments and non-governmental organizations. Fact is that explicit CSR is connected with corporate discretion rather than it reflects either governmental authority or broader formal or informal institutions.
So companies practicing explicit CSR do that more or less because of public and image reasons. They promote their socially responsible behaviour to make money out of it. That is why their CSR commitment is articulated obviously. On the other hand side, we read about the term Implicit CSR. By implicit CSR, the authors refer “to corporations’ role within the wider formal and informal institutions for society’s interests and concerns. Implicit CSR normally consists of values, norms and rules that result in (mandatory and customary) requirements for corporations to address stakeholder issues and that define proper obligations of corporate actors in collective rather than individual terms” (Matten & Moon, 2008, p. 409). In that case, CSR is anchored very deeply into the culture of a company. The interest in CSR can be found in the lived and postulated values and norms. Hereby, the idea of CSR seems to be more informal and with less pressure. Companies showing implicit CSR behaviour are supposed to do that not because of marketing and image reasons but because of conviction.
To sum up, the main difference between explicit and implicit CSR lies in the style CSR is communicated. Those companies practicing explicit CSR usually use the language of CSR when they communicate their policies and practices to heir
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stakeholders whereas companies practicing implicit CSR normally do not describe their activities in that way. At them, CSR is expressed much more in values and norms, so in a much more informal way. Implicit CSR can be seen as a kind of reaction or reflection on the company’s institutional environment. Lots of implicit CSR elements occur in a form of codified norms and rules or laws but are not described and named explicitly as CSR (Matten & Moon, 2008). Explicit CSR on he other hand is more a result of deliberate, voluntary and often strategic decision of a company (Porter & Kramer, 2006).
The figure below indicates the predicting factors defining the nature of CSR. Explicit and Implicit CSR compared
1.5 The Two Pillars of CSR
The Dutch Social Economic Council (SER) introduced a two pillar system, on which CSR activities are built. The first pillar refers to responsibility which means value creation by the organization across economic, social and environmental dimensions. The second pillar refers to responsiveness. In that sense, organizations must be
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receptive to stakeholders’ demands and maintain a degree of transparency towards them.
Another viewpoint of CSP stresses its procedural aspects. Matten (2004) developed the view corporate social responsiveness in order to identify how organizations respond to societal expectations. On the one hand, organizations can develop a reactive attitude towards society and ignore or deny any social responsibility activities. On the other hand, they might adopt a kind of proactive attitude to exceed current societal expectations. So the perspective of CSP is not very much concerned with the definition of how the organization interacts with societal groups and responds to their expectations. In general, one can say that responding to expectations, i.e. from its stakeholders, is indeed in the interest of organizations. The CSR concept in general extends the traditional stakeholder paradigm. Following Pater and Lierop (2006), it argues that an exclusive focus on profit maximisation is too limited as it neglects the firm’s responsibilities towards other stakeholders.
1.6 Prominence of CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility has never been more prominent on the corporate agenda than nowadays. At recent World Economic Forum (WEF) meetings it has been one of the leading topics, as a report from the WEF observes. This assumes, that the three key pressures of “corporate competitiveness, corporate governance, and corporate citizenship, and the linkages between them, will play a crucial role in shaping the agenda for business leaders in the coming decade”. It continues: “In the face of high levels of insecurity and poverty, the backlash against globalization and mistrust of big business, there is growing pressure on business leaders and their companies to deliver wider social value. This calls for effective management of the company’s wider impacts on and contributions to society, making appropriate use of the stakeholder engagement” (WEF, 2003, p.2)
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According to authors such as Berthoin, Dierkes, MacMillan & Marz (2003), the issue of CSR has recently had three significant developments. Firstly, huge international organizations have launched CSR activities like the Global reporting Initiative (GRI) and the EU Green Paper in order to promote socially responsible behaviour and social reporting. Secondly, the concept of triple bottom line (TBL) was launched that organizations do not only focus the economic value they add with their actions but also the environmental and social value they add and destroy. The third development was the realization of investors that the value of their investment portfolio may fall if companies act in a socially irresponsible manner. Out of these three developments, we can infer that there is a growing need for companies to incorporate CSR into their strategy and everyday business behaviour.
The debate about CSR has shifted: it is no longer about whether to make substantial commitments toward CSR, but how?
1.7 Why to Behave in Socially Responsible Ways?
A case in point is that only little theoretical attention has been paid on the question why and when companies behave in social responsible ways (Rowley & Shawn, 2000; Ullmann, 1985). For instance, Williamson’s (1985) classical transaction costs approach rests on the assumption that individuals and the firms they run act in an opportunistically way. That means that they act with self-interest and guile whenever possible and, therefore, not always trustworthy. In that approach, corporate social behaviour is not mentioned. Hereby, the pursuit of profit plays the main role. Ethics and social responsibility have become hot topics with great importance. Companies of all sizes strive to adopt codes of ethics, and most of them are also developing policies and structures that encourage ethical conduct. More and more, organizations get into trouble when failing to pay attention to ethical issues in their blind pursuit of making money. As examples, BASF AG from Germany and Hoffmann-LaRoche from Switzerland can be mentioned, two huge and multinational concerns that recently pleaded guilty because they didn’t behave in a socially responsible way. The two companies raised and fixed the prices for their vitamins
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which are used in nearly every American household and which are also added to bread, milk and breakfast cereals. For that, BASF AG will pay a $225 million fine, and Hoffmann-LaRoche has to pay $500 million, which is the largest federal criminal fine that was ever imposed on a company (Jones, 1995). As we see, companies become more and more forced to behave in an ethical and social responsible way, otherwise they get punished. There are plenty of examples of firms that exhibited all sorts of socially irresponsible corporate behaviour because of the pursuit of profit. So deceiving customers and swindling investors as well as exploiting and even brutalizing employees, putting customers at risk and cheating the government were actions in doing, so Vogel, (1992). So we can see that many corporations do not act in a social responsible way.
But on the other hand, we find examples where companies put a special emphasis on social responsible behaviour. A growing number of multinational and national companies are on the way to demonstrate their commitment toward high standards and attitudes of ethics and social responsibility. In fact, some go to great lengths to do so, by giving money to charities, supporting community activities, treating their customers and workers decently and generally maintaining standards of honesty and integrity (Campbell, 2007).
1.7.1 Motivation for CSR
As researchers have found out, corporate social responsibility in a comparative and cross-national context has again, as noted above, important institutional implications. Maignan and Ralston’s (2002) study of companies in France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States of America examined public commitments to socially responsible behaviour of 100 firms. The researchers found out that firms reported three motivations for social responsible behaviour: 1.) Managers valued such behaviour in its own right,
2.) Managers believed that a behaviour like this enhanced the financial performance of their firms, and
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3.) Stakeholders like community groups, customers, and regulators put pressure on firms to behave in social responsible ways.
Variations in nationally specific political, cultural, and other institutions may have been responsible for variations on the degree to which stakeholders can influence managers (Campbell, 2007).
1.7.2 Advantages of CSR
More often, the advantage of CSR activities is not directly measurable in a financial way. Direct and indirect advantages range from an increase in productivity and efficiency because of higher motivation and employee-loyalty leading to cost reduction because of decreasing employee turnover and absenteeism up to an improvement of the working climate (Hutter & Scheunemann, 2007). Especially when talking about products with a minor difference in quality, a clean image and reputation of a company is very important. In that case, investing into the corporate culture implicates a direct gain in trust and image which leads to higher customer retention and strengthens both the market position and the competitive advantage. But an economic advantage can also result from an increasing attractiveness on financial markets because investors ask more and more for ethic assessments or rather directly by an increasing share price (Resel, 2003).
1.8 Limits of CSR
„CSR ist ein spannendes Thema - aber es ist wahrscheinlich nicht der Stein der Weisen, mit dem die Welt gerettet werden kann- Denn es stößt auch an seine Grenzen“ (Resel, 2003).
The term of social efficiency contains making corporate activities more and more social compatible to reduce costs at the same time. In general, a company continuously improves its activities in serving social benefits. But the question if a company also makes a contribution to the general inequality concerning the
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allocation of goods and services in the sense of social effectiveness can not be answered. It can be assumed, that the social efficiency can be improved with CSRactivities but the social effectiveness stays disregarded (Resel, 2003). Furthermore, it seems to be illusory, that CSR should be done by all companies as long it is based on voluntariness, as Resel (2003) adds. So a voluntary selfcommitment of companies is not enough, there have to be clear instructions. It would make sense to introduce an obligated designation of the CSR level of several companies, as Hradecsni (2007) declares.
But in my opinion, it would not make sense to make detailed arrangements because they would hamper a company’s creativity and the ability to cooperate. These are two important characteristics for companies because they make them unique and help to distinguish from other organizations in consideration of the sustained competitive advantage companies wish to aim.
Having now talked about CSR in detail, still the question of its emerge remains. We know that some companies are really anxious to implement corporate socially responsible behaviour, while others do not. We also know that sometimes there comes pressure from outside requiring certain behaviour from an organization. Also the competitive advantage and image play certain roles when talking about that term. But to have a look on the theories that stand behind CSR and from which CSR arose, we have to start at the early beginning by having a look on what an organization really is.
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2 Organizations
2.1 What is an Organization?
“Organizations are hard to see”- we often hear that when talking about that and their proper definition. But exactly that difficulty shows us how diverse and different organizations can be. Nearly no one is similar to another. Organizations are vague and abstract and may be scattered among several locations. We touch organizations in our every day live while don’t recognizing that most of the times. Organizations are embedded in everything we do. We were born in hospitals, have our birth records registered in a government agency, we are educated in schools and universities, borrow money from banks, buy the things we need in shops, go to doctors when we are ill and we and go for work to be able to afford our live. Nearly everything we do has to do with organizations and institutions. This became so usual, that we don’t even think about that. Indeed, organizations are so common that we take them for granted.
The definition of organizations I want to use in this thesis is as follows: “Organizations are social entities that are goal directed, are designed as deliberately structured and coordinated activity systems, and are linked to the external environment” (Draft, 2001p. 12).
What we forget most of the times is that the key element of an organization is not a building or a set of policies and laws. Organizations are made up for people and their relationships with each other; they are highly interdependent end dynamic. An organization exists when human interaction takes place. People act with each other in order to perform essential functions that help reaching the goal of the organization. Also Human Resources gain more and more importance to be and stay competitive in a fast-changing environment and employees are seen as a crucial factor of economical success while managers tend to deliberately structure and coordinate their organizational resources to achieve its purpose and follow the defined strategy.
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Another factor that confuses our recognition of firms are local boundaries. They are becoming more flexible and diffuse as companies face the need to respond quite quickly to changes coming from the external environment. Having that in mind, we come to the conclusion that an organization cannot exist without interacting with customers, suppliers, competitors, and other elements of the external environment that are surrounding the corporation. Today, companies even tend to cooperate with their competitors and share information and technology for their mutual advantage because they recognize that cooperation with others often leads to more success than having only someone’s own success in mind (Draft, 2001).
At that point, the influence of the external environment and a company’s customers seems to be apparent. Obviously, environment and organization influence each other. So there is a kind of exchange between internal and external influences, ideas, flows etc. Having that and the fact that an organization is a diffuse construct in mind, we can determined that the whole CSR topic comes as an influence from outside into the organization as a result of the permanent adaptation between organization and environment.
2.2 Natural Adaptation: Herbert Spencer
Organizations are diffuse and dynamic systems that strive for adaptation to their environment to be competitive, as we have already heard before. In that case, similarities to Herbert Spencer come to my mind. Spencer’s statement “Survival of the fittest” which was first introduced in 1851 in his work “Social Statics” shows parallels to corporate socially responsible behaviour. Organizations are influenced by their environment. That’s why they try to adapt to the external circumstances in order to stay competitive what means survival on the global economic market. If we compare organizations with organisms, we find the similarity to Spencer. Are there great differences between organizations and organisms? Both are diffuse systems which are influenced by their environment, both consist of living creatures
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and both can’t survive without interaction. At that point, I want to compare organizations to organisms.
Herbert Spencer, considered as a Darwinist, coined the famous expression “Survival of the fittest” which is shorthand for a concept relating to competition for survival or predominance. With that statement Spencer wanted to express that the ones which are best adapted, have the best changes to survive, as it is described in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosphy (http://plato.stanfors.edu/entries/spencer). Today, we know that Spencer’s phrase is not consistent with the actual theory of evolution anymore, because it is a common saying that any organism which is able to reproduce itself will survive as a species, and not just the fittest ones, as biology taught us. However, “survival of the fittest” remains in our ears, nearly every pupil gets to know that already at school.
When we think about CSR and the reasons why is implemented into companies, we can easily discover parallels. An organization, in our case compared to an organism, wants to adapt to its environment for several reasons. On the one hand side, the organization feels responsible for its stakeholders and wants to make them feel good. But also shareholders claim for attention and they want that their main interest, profit of the firm, is regarded. Both groups can put pressure on the company. So pressure is an external influence to which an organization tries to react. Also society as a whole influence organizations its point of views, moral standards, values and expectations towards corporate acting. On the other hand side, organizations and companies in particular are anxious to react on other external changes, for example laws, political issues or environmental ones. Summarized, organizations behave like organisms when they adapt to their environment to survive. To set out from that point, I am tending to anticipate that CSR has its early roots already in Spencer’s Social Darwinism. Even if it is a biological theory, it can be compared with economy, as Spencer’s work shows by drawing parallels between his economic theories and Darwin’s biological ones. Spencer’s theory has to be regarded as an economical one, because “survival of the fittest” means not that only the strongest and corporally fittest survive having the most assertiveness, but those who
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are best adapted to their environment, those who are specialized and sensitized for external changes.
Let’s go back to biology and name an example everybody will understand: If we take the world of a butterfly, it is not to assume that the biggest and strongest butterfly will survive between its natural enemies. The difference is, that the best adapted butterfly will survive. For example the one whose wings are best adapted to the trunk trees, so he can’t be seen from its enemies.
It is the same with our topic, corporate social responsibility. If organizations refuse or forget to implement CSR into their strategy and general way of behaviour, they will be “eaten” by their competitors, as we can observe from media. Also society has no good impression from the company’s way of doing and mentality, and maybe as a result, clients will boycott their goods or services and switch to other suppliers. As we see, if CSR emerges as a trend and special need and want from society, as it is already now the case, organizations have to react sensitized and consider weather to implement or not. If they decide not to implement CSR, they have to be conscious about potential consequences.
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3 Strategy
Having talked about organizations we now come to a very important aspect that is very tightly connected with the structure of an organization: its strategy. Alfred Chandler (1962) defined the term strategy as a kind of adoption of measures and resource allocations. With his thesis „Structure follows Strategy“, the author shows that the organizational culture always tries to adapt to its formulated strategy. Today, the term strategy is generally defined as the way a corporation defines to reach its goals and to realize its mission. So strategic management is the process of making decisions to reach mission and goals and of how to choose and implement the proper corporate strategy. Because there are plenty of definitions concerning strategy, I have chosen the most common ones:
§ Strategies are measures assuring the long-lasting profit of a company (Bea & Haas, 2001, p.50)
§ Strategies are bunches of measures fort he planned goal achievement. (Speckbacher, 2003, p.4)
For the development of a solid corporate strategy it is important to observe and monitor the market with all its dynamics such as developments, chances and risks to be able to react in time. Again, we come upon the adaptation to the external environment. The intended reaction from a company is formulated in the corporate strategy giving the direction of the organization’s way of acting. With the help of a functioning risk management system like that, the accurately timed realignment of a company can be made much easier. Also the flexibility to react on certain external influences can be increased. (Hofmann, 2006, pp. 12)
3.1 Mintzberg
Strategies appear very capacious and can emerge and are seen from different perspectives. In order to present the different possibilities of strategy development, I want to mention Henry Mintzberg’s theory of the 5 Ps (1979, pp.22). Based on the
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Arbeit zitieren:
Katharina Ruschak, 2008, Corporate Social Responsibility, München, GRIN Verlag GmbH
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BWL - Unternehmensführung, Management, Organisation: Corporate Social Responsibility ist nun auf dem Buchmarkt erhältlich
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Katharina Ruschak hat einen neuen Text hochgeladen
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