The Strategic Position Strategic Purpose and CSR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 59
About This Presentation
Title:

The Strategic Position Strategic Purpose and CSR

Description:

The Strategic Position Strategic Purpose and CSR Corporate social responsbility EFBL L5, 04/12/013 Prof. Jovo Ateljevic * * * n lizir u i d finici ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:251
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 60
Provided by: efbl
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Strategic Position Strategic Purpose and CSR


1
The Strategic PositionStrategic Purpose and CSR
Corporate social responsbility
  • EFBL
  • L5, 04/12/013

2
Learning Outcomes (for today)
  • New terms and definitions
  • Identify the components of the governance chain
    of an organization
  • Understand differences in governance structures
    and the advantages and disadvantages of these
  • Identify differences in the corporate social
    responsibility stances taken by organizations and
    how ethical issues relate to strategic purpose

3
Expectations and Purposes - Outline
  • Corporate governance
  • Organisational stakeholders
  • Stakeholder mapping
  • Ethical issues
  • Culture
  • Cultural web
  • Communication of organisational purposes

4
Role of People
  • Complex role that people play in strategy
    development
  • Strategy is about
  • what people expect an organisation to achieve
  • what influence people can have over an
    organisations purposes

5
Some key questions whom should the
organisation be there to serve and how should the
direction and purposes of an organisation be
determined?
  • Kome jedna org. treba da služi i na koji nacin bi
    trebali da se odrede svraha i pravac iste?

6
Expectations and Purposes
Exhibit 4.1
7
Stakeholders?
  • Stakeholders are those individuals or groups who
    depend on an organisation to fulfil their own
    goals and on whom, in turn, the organisation
    depends.
  • Stakeholder Any individual or group who can
    affect or is affected by the actions, decision,
    policies, or goals of the organization
  • Under the narrowly defined version, stakeholders
    appear to be those who are instrumental, one way
    or another, to the firm and its well-being.

8
what is a stake?
  • .an interest or a share in an undertaking, or a
    claim. A claim is more than an interest it is an
    assertion to a title, or to a right.
  • The concept of a stake, can range from a simple
    interest to the extreme of a legal claim of
    ownership and all the value between 

9
Exhibit 4.7 Stakeholders of a Large Organisation
10
Corporate Governance
  • The governance framework
  • whom the organisation serves
  • how the purposes and priorities should be decided
  • how an organisation should function
  • how power is distributed among stakeholders

11
What is Corporate Governance?
  • Corporate governance is concerned with the
    structures and systems of control by which
    managers are held accountable to those who have a
    legitimate stake in an organisation.

12
Corporate governance (CG)
  • CG exists at a complex intersection of law,
    morality, and economic efficiency.
  • ...sometimes refers to the way that Boards
    oversee the running of a company by its managers,
    and how Board members are held accountable to
    shareowners and the company.
  • Good corporate governance practices instil in
    companies the essential vision, processes, and
    structures to make decisions that ensure
    longer-term sustainability. More than ever, we
    need companies that can be profitable as well as
    achieving environmental, social, and economic
    value for society. Rachel Kyte Vice
    President, Business Advisory Services, IFC

13
  • Šta je K?rp?r?tivn? upr?vl??nj??
  •   sist?m k??im s? preduzece usm??r?v? i
    k?ntr?liš?...struktur? k?rp?r?tivn?g upr?vl??nj?
    ?dr?du?? r?sp?d??lu pr?v? i ?b?v?z? izm?du
    r?zlicitih sub??k?t? unut?r pr?duz?c?, k?? št? su
    cl?n?vi upr?v?, ?kci?n?ri i drug? lic? k??? su
    int?r?sn? p?v?z?n? s? pr?duz?c?m i d?finiš?
    pr?vil? i pr?c?dur? z? d?n?š?nj? p?sl?vnih ?dluk?.

14
konkretnije
  • Korporativno upravljanje (KU) je skup odnosa
    izmedu menadžmenta kompanije, njenih odbora,
    akcionara i drugih stakeholdera.
  • KU se odnosi na strukturu sistema kontrole gdje
    su diirektori odgovorni onima koji imaju intres u
    p.
  • KU egzistira u kompleksnoj interakciji ZAKONA,
    MORAL A i EKONOMSKE EFIKANOSTI
  • Pitanje odgovornosti i održivosti tu nastaju
    problemi (kako usaglasiti sve koji su u
    upravljackoj strukturi ili LU..pravila postoje
    ali i prostor za diskreciju ..kao izbjeci konflit
    interesa, kojim mehanizmon

15
Prednosti sistema korporativnog upravljanja
  • Unaprijeden proces donošenja odluka
  • Izbalansirani centri donošenja odluka
  • Ispunjava zahtjeve regulatora i poboljšava
    reputaciju
  • Osigurava efikasnu strategiju i strateške
    smjernice i monitoring
  • Informacije o poslovanju su lako dostupne svima
  • Pomaže svim stakeholderima (interesnim grupama)
  • Ohrabruje investitore
  • Eliminiše mogucnosti korupcije

16
Upravljacki Lanac kao mehanizam korportaivnog
upravljanja
  • U(L)anac predstavlja sve interesne grupe koje
    imaju uticaj na organizaciju kroz njihovu
    direktnu ukljucenost bilo u vlasništvu ili
    upravljanju
  • Kako UL funkcioniše?
  • U malim firmamo odnos investitora i agenta je
    jednostavan dok u vecim (privatnim i mješovitim)
    kompleksan sa puno pojedincanih lanaca u UL

17
Lanac korporativnog upravljanja
18
This chain represents all those groups that have
influence on an organization's purposes through
their direct involvement in either ownership or
management of an organisation
U(L)anac predstavlja sve interesne grupe koje
imaju uticaj na organizaciju kroz njihovu
direktnu ukljucenost bilo u vlasništvu ili
upravljanju
19
Razlozi nesavršenog funkcijonisanja upravljackog
lanaca
  • Krajnji korisnici nemaju jasne/tacne informacije
  • Neadkvatna/nejednaka distribucija moci
  • Razliciti nivoi ili selektivan pristup
    informacijama
  • Licni interes medu agentima direktorima
  • Mjerenje rezultata i poslovnih ciljeva su u
    skladu sa licnim iteresima direktorima a ne
    krajnjim korisnicima

20
Modeli korporativnog upravljanja
  • Potreba za reformom KU
  • Anglo-saksonski- tržišna orjentacija, veliko
    ucešce akcinara -limitira moc pojedinca i jacanje
    zastupnika
  • Germanski (Rhine)- striktna procedura...veci
    uticaj kljucnih akcionara
  • Japanski višeslojni proces odlucivanja, banke
    su cesti dionicari, važnost dugorocnih ciljeva,
    veliki uticaj tradicije
  • Latinski uticaj države, veliki politicki
    uticaj na odlucivanje po pitanju prioriteta
    ekonomskog razvoja

21
Primjer Enron cor. Skandal
  • Electricity, gas, paper and communication company
  • 21000 zaposlenih
  • 100 milijarde. US dolara promet 2000. godine
  • 2001 izvještaj otkriva financijske probleme,
    prevara
  • Naduvana vrijednost kompanije, fabrikovan
    izvještaj
  • 4000 radnika gubi posao, racunovodstvene firme
    Arthur Andersen (Pet velikih) odlazi u stecaj
  • Otkriveno 25 milijarde dolara prevare
  • Mnoge firme i institucije su bile umiješane
    banke, advokatske kuce itd.
  • 2002, 16 top menadžera završava u zatvoru

22
Principal-agent (examples)
  • owner manager
  • insurance company insured
  • creditor debtor
  • firm salesmen
  • voters government
  • investor portfolio manager

23
Strengths and Weaknesses of Governance Systems
Source Adapted from T. Clarke and S. Clegg,
Changing Paradigms The transformation of
management knowledge for the 21 century,
HarperCollins Business, 2000, Table 6.5, p. 324.
st
Exhibit 4.3a
24
Strengths and Weaknesses of Governance Systems
Source Adapted from T. Clarke and S. Clegg,
Changing Paradigms The transformation of
management knowledge for the 21 century,
HarperCollins Business, 2000, Table 6.5, p. 324.
Exhibit 4.3b
25
Governing Bodies Influence on Strategy
  • Implications of board involvement
  • Need to operate independently of management
  • Must be competent to scrutinise managers
    activities
  • Need time to do job properly
  • Importance of softer issues, e.g. trust, respect

26
Forms of Ownership (1)
  • Ownership has fundamental effect on
    organisational purpose and strategies
  • Private/public ownership of equity
  • Public equity often required for growth
  • Sale of all or part of the company
  • To a more suitable corporate parent
  • Target for acquisitions
  • Compare offer with expected future returns

27
Forms of Ownership (2)
  • Ownership has fundamental effect on
    organisational purpose and strategies
  • Mutual ownership
  • Customers are owners rather than shareholders
  • Privatisation
  • Market forces, customer needs, access to capital

28
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Imperfections in governance chain
  • Unequal division of power
  • Differing access to information
  • High profile cases of fraud or poor governance
  • Committees established for reform
  • Risk management
  • EU (problem in some member states)
  • More strategic approach is needed to corporate
    governance reform
  • How to create an optimal balance in the
    principle-agency structure, the key challenge

29
Exhibit 4.3 Benefits and Disadvantages of
Governance
30
External Stakeholders 3 types regardings their
realtionship with the org. and how they
influasnce STRATEGY ,
Stake-holders Examples Influence
Market environmnet Suppliers, competitors, distributors, shareholders Economic/value creation
Social/p olitical Policy makers, regulators, government agencies Social legitimacy
Techno- logical Key adopters, standards agencies, owners of competitive technologies Diffusion of new technology/ adoption of industry standards
31
Conflict of Expectations
  • Short-term profitability versus growth
  • Family control versus professional managers
  • Financial independence versus share/loan funding
  • Public share ownership demands openness and
    accountability
  • Cost efficiency may mean job losses
  • Mass markets may compromise quality
  • Mass public service provision versus specialist
    services
  • Multinational division loyalty versus host
    country loyalty

Adapted from Exh. 4.4
32
Stakeholder Mapping the Power/Interest Matrix
Source Adapted from A. Mendelow, Proceedings of
the Second International Conference on
Information Systems, Cambridge, MA, 1991.
Exhibit 4.5
33
Use of Stakeholder Mapping
  • Do actual levels of interest and power reflect
    corporate governance framework? (e.g.
    non-executive directors, community groups)
  • Who are key blockers and facilitators of a
    strategy? (e.g. In terms of education or
    persuasion)
  • Is repositioning of stakeholders
    desirable/feasible? (critical in the public
    sector)
  • Which are the key stakeholders whose interest and
    power must be maintained to support the strategy?

34
Stakeholder mapping at Tallman GmbH
Tallman GmbH was a German bank providing
both retail and corporate banking services
throughout Germany, Benelux and France. There
were concerns about its loss in market share in
the corporate sector which was serviced from two
centres Frankfurt (for Germany and Benelux) and
Toulouse (for France). It was considering closing
the Toulouse operation and servicing all
corporate clients from Frankfurt. This would
result in significant job losses in
Toulouse, some of which would be replaced in
Frankfurt alongside vastly improved IT systems.
35
Two power/interest maps were drawn up by
the company officials to establish likely
stakeholder reactions to the proposed closure of
the Toulouse operation. Map A represents the
likely situation and map B the preferred
situation where support for the proposal would
be sufficient to proceed. Referring to map A it
can be seen that, with the exception of customer
X and IT supplier A, the stakeholders in box B
are currently opposed to the closure of the
Toulouse operation. If Tallman was to have any
chance of convincing these stakeholders to change
their stance to a more supportive one, the
company must address their questions and, where
possible, alleviate their fears.
36
Stakeholders mapping at Tallman GmbH (1)
37
Stakeholders mapping at Tallman GmbH (2)
38
Sources and indicators of power
Exhibit 4.6
39
Sources of Power
Within organisations External stakeholders
Hierarchy (formal power) Control of strategic resources
Influence (informal power) Involvement in strategy implementation
Control of strategic resources Possession of knowledge (skills)
Possession of knowledge and skills Through internal links
Control of the environment
Involvement in strategy implementation
Adapted from Exh. 4.6
40
Indicators of Power
Within organisations External stakeholders
Status Status
Claim on resources Resource dependence
Representation Negotiating arrangements
Symbols Symbols
Adapted from Exh. 4.6
41
Business ethics the societal expectations of
organisations (1)
  • Macro level
  • Range from laissez faire to shapers of society
  • Ethical stance of organisation in society
  • Extent an organisation exceeds its minimum
    obligations to stakeholders and society
  • Corporate social responsibility
  • Specific ways to exceed minimum obligations
    imposed by legislation/corporate governance
  • Reconcile conflicting demands of stakeholders

42
Four Possible Ethical Stances
Exhibit 4.7
43
Business Legal vs. ethical issues
  • Legal law is enacted by govt developed thru
    case procedures (common law) its a rule
    governing the act
  • If person break a rule, its an illegal act and
    will be punished by the legal system
  • Ethics is dealing with what is considered to be
    right and wrong
  • Globalisation and the Internet open up an
    increasing number of new and unregulated
    activities

44
Business Ethics and values
  • Organisation values - to embed a set of ethical
    values into the organisations goals and
    strategies and the way it seeks to do what it
    does
  • Ethical behaviour - to provide guidance and
    support to staff for making decisions and
    carrying out their work in a way that is
    compatible with the organisation's ethical values
    and standards
  • Corporate Culture - to consolidate and strengthen
    a culture of integrity and openness so as to
    facilitate a sustainable business
  • Reputation - to create trust among stakeholders
    and to facilitate business success

45
Kantian approach to (business) ethics
  • Philosopher, deontologist (1724-1804), moral and
    ethical theorists
  • Respect for persons -the key Kants Moral
    philosophy principles
  • Kant argued that the highest good was the good
    will (as an act of duty)- it is an intention
    behind the action rather than its consequences
    that make that action good (Bowie, N. 1999)
  • acts are inherently good or evil, regardless of
    the consequences of the acts (deontology)
  • This principle applies to business ethics today
  • True moral being honest is right (e.g.
    businessman is not genuinely honest if he/she
    earns it to gain reputation)

46
Moral and duties two kinds of human duties
  • Persons of good will do their duty because it is
    their duty and for no reason
  • 2 types of duties (imperatives)
  • a Hypothetical- human sometimes do things to
    achieve goals (e.g. study to get good grade)
  • b) categorical per se duties (no ifs, ands and
    buts) fundamental principle of ethics
  • Kant believed that reason provided the basis for
    the categorical imperative, thus the categorical
    imperatives of morality were requirements of
    reason

47
The business firm as a moral community The main
principles
  • 1 The business firm should consider the interests
    of all the affected stakeholders in any decision
    it makes.
  • 2 The firm should have those affected by the
    firms rules and policies participate in the
    determination of those rules and policies before
    they are implemented.
  • 3 It should not be the case that, for all
    decisions, the interests of one stakeholder
    automatically take priority.
  • 4 When a situation arises where it appears that
    the interest of one set of stakeholders must be
    subordinated to the interests of another set of
    stakeholders, that decision should not be made
    solely on the grounds that there is a greater
    number of stakeholders in one group than in
    another.
  • 5 No business rule or practice can be adopted
    which is inconsistent with the first two
    formulations of the categorical imperative.
  • 6 Every profit-making firm has a limited, but
    genuine, duty of beneficence.
  • 7 Every business firm must establish procedures
    designed to ensure that relations among
    stakeholders are governed by rules of justice.
  • A Kantian views an organization as a moral
    community. Each member of the organization stands
    in a moral relationship to all the others.

48
The role of business organizations in society?
  • Are companies money machines for shareholders?
  • Should companies take responsibility for the
    effects of their actions beyond what the law
    requires?
  • What they should do? (e.g. donate to charity
    build public schools, health care facilities,
    infrastructure, employ marginalized groups)
  • What rules corporate behavior laws or business
    ethics? The role of stakeholders?

49
Global corporate jets and their power
  • New world is centered around multinational
    corporations, global financial markets and a
    highly concentrated system of technological
    research and development
  • The number of global corporations in the world
    has increased from 7.000 in 1979 to 40.000 in
    1995.
  • These corporations and their 250.000 foreign
    affiliates account for most of the worlds
    industrial capacity, technological knowledge and
    international financial transactions.
  • Global companies hold 90 percent of all
    technology and product patents worldwide and are
    involved in 70 percent of world trade.
  • While the world economy is growing by 2 and 3
    percent per year, the biggest global companies
    are, as a group, growing at a rate of 8 and 10
    percent.

Karliner, J.1997, 5
50
  • the Global 2000 companies now account for 36
    trillion in revenues (up 12), 2.64 trillion in
    profits (up 11), 149 trillion in assets (up 8)
    and 37 trillion in market value (down 0.5).
    These firms also employ 83 million people
    worldwide.
  • http//www.forbes.com/global2000/

51
Corporate behaviour how ethical they should be?
  • According (Milton) Friedman a corporation is the
    property of its stockholders
  • The question is should it spend the stockholders
    money for purposes regarded as socially
    responsible? Friedmans answer is NO corporate
    executives must make as much many as possible for
    their shareholders..,
  • Peter Drucker arguments are in line with the
    above he believes that CSR is dangerous
    distortion of the business principle if you find
    an executive who wants to take on social
    responsibilities, fire him.
  • The part of the above arguments are supported by
    the fact that corporate are created by law
    therefore law dictates what their directors /
    managers can or cannot or must do (Henry Ford
    example)

52
Friedman places primary importance on profit
maximization as the role of business
  • There is one and only one social responsibility
    of businessto use its resources and engage in
    activities designed to increase its profits so
    long as it stays within the rules of the game,
    which is to say, engages in open and free
    competition without deception or fraud.
  • (Milton Friedman, 1979 p.126)

53
Organisational Culture
The basic assumptions and beliefs that are
shared by members of an organisation, that
operate unconsciously and define in a basic
taken-for-granted fashion an organisations view
of itself and its environment
Schein 1997
54
Organisational Culture
Exhibit 4.10
55
The Cultural Web
Exhibit 4.11
56
The Cultural Web some useful questions
Exhibit 4.12
57
Communicating Organisational Purposes
  • Corporate Values
  • Core values, the principles guiding actions
  • Vision/Mission
  • Statement of overriding direction and purpose of
    organisation
  • Objectives
  • Statement of specific outcomes to be achieved
  • Financial, market-based
  • Sometimes measurable
  • Relevant

58
Key Points (1)
  • Expectations and purposes influenced by
  • Corporate governance, stakeholder expectations,
    business ethics and culture
  • Corporate governance
  • Whom organisation serves, how purposes/priorities
    decided
  • Stakeholders power and influence
  • Stakeholder mapping
  • Ethical stance
  • Corporate social responsibility

59
Key Points (2)
  • Culture
  • Levels of cultural frames of reference
  • Layers of values, beliefs, behaviours and
    taken-for-granted assumptions
  • Cultural web
  • Communication of organisational purposes
  • Values, mission, objectives
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com