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Measuring the

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Haub Program in Business and Sustainability, York University ... Trust = integrity, competence and benevolence. Shared norms and reciprocity builds trust ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Measuring the


1
Measuring the Business Value of Stakeholder
Relationships
Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary June, 2001
2
Topics
  • Overview of Research Project
  • Definitions and Assumptions
  • Key Benefits
  • Proposed Stakeholder Model

3
Research Partners
  • Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants
  • Haub Program in Business and Sustainability, York
    University
  • Centre for Innovation in Management, Simon Fraser
    University

4
Research Program
  • Phase One - review existing research, develop
    model and measures
  • Phase Two - case study research with 6 Canadian
    companies
  • Completion by March 2002

5
Research Questions
  • How do stakeholder relationships create business
    value?
  • What organizational attributes help to create
    positive stakeholder relationships?
  • What measures are most useful in
    assessing the quality of stakeholder
    relationships?

6
Defining Stakeholders
  • Individuals or groups who can affect, or who are
    affected by, a firms actions
  • Primary stakeholders - shareholders, employees,
    customers, suppliers, communities

7
Defining Relationships
  • Relationships are mutually defined and negotiated
  • strong relationships add to the stability,
    adaptability and coherence of the
    larger unit
  • strong relationships provide access to
    information and resources
  • strong relationships have high levels of
    social capital

8
What is Social Capital?
  • the stock of active connections among people
    the trust, mutual understanding and shared values
    and behaviors that bind the members of human
    networks and communities and make cooperative
    action possible.
  • Cohen and Prusak, 2000

9
Dimensions of Social Capital
  • 1. Network (structural dimension)
  • 2. Trust, norms and reciprocity (relational
    dimension)
  • 3. Shared language and mutual
    understanding (cognitive
    dimension)
  • Nahapiet and Ghoshal, 1998

10
Network
11
Trust, Norms Reciprocity
  • Individuals and organizations draw on their
    social capital with others in their network who
    they trust
  • Trust integrity, competence and benevolence
  • Shared norms and reciprocity builds trust

12
Mutual Understanding
  • Shared language, mental models/ paradigms
  • For collaboration, extends to shared goals and
    aligned values

13
Benefits
  • Shareholder risk reduction
  • Innovation
  • Employee recruitment and retention
  • New markets and opportunities
  • Enhanced reputation and brand value
  • Social license to operate
  • Sustained business partnerships

14
Shareholder Risk
  • Lower costs (time and money) of
    monitoring internal practises and contracts
  • Lower advertising spending
  • Avoidance of excessive compensation claims
  • Avoidance of physical damage to property

15
Innovation
  • It doesnt matter how good the market research
    is, how bright the management team is, it is the
    quality of relationships among all people
    in the organization that has an enormous bearing
    on the quality of decisions and their
    execution.
  • Jeff Mooney, Chairman and CEO,
  • A W Food Services

16
Innovation (cont.)
  • Ability to access to new ideas and information
    ability of employees to work collaboratively to
    create value
  • Supply chain, partners, universities,
    associations
  • Access to technical info, new ideas, competitive
    intelligence

17
Recruitment and Retention
  • Ability to recruit and retain high quality
    employees
  • Low turnover rates, reduced severance costs,
    hiring and training expenses, retention of
    valuable organizational knowledge

18
New Market Opportunities
  • Ability to identify and take advantage of new
    markets
  • Supply chain partners in distant locations, cross
    boundary networks with non-traditional groups
  • Access to global market intelligence, referrals
    to local contractors and resources

19
Reputation and Brand Value
  • Ability to establish strong emotional connection
    with customers
  • Customers, suppliers, investors, opinion leaders
  • Positive widespread mention, word of mouth,
    commentary

20
Social License to Operate
  • Ability to manage social risk and make valuable
    contribution to community
  • Local government, community leaders, NGOs,
    regulators
  • Faster permitting, grace period during crisis,
    favorable interpretation of regulation

21
Partnerships and Alliances
  • Ability to understand and respond quickly to
    changing partner requirements
  • Supplies and services obtained at lower cost and
    more quickly
  • Crises handled more effectively

22
Stakeholder Model
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