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How to Accelerate HR’s Role in
Sustainability:
The Next Big Step!
December 9, 2015
Impact Hub NYC
Jeana Wirtenberg, Ph.D.
Transitioning to Green, LLC
Building a Culture for Sustainability
Introductions
Transitioning to Green, LLC
Your connection between sustainability and success.
We assist every organization we partner with to…
• Align corporate strategy and operations with financial
resources, risks and profitability.
– Adapting your Purpose for Prosperity.
• Responsibly manage supply chains, material resources,
facilities and products.
– Respecting natural systems.
• Engage employee passions for creativity, innovation
and inspired performance.
– Nurturing your people to thrive.
Purpose for today
• Educate and inspire leaders and managers in every
function in how to mainstream sustainability into all
aspects of your corporate culture.
• Play a pivotal role in unleashing talent in service of a
sustainable future
• Create a purpose driven, conscious, connected workforce,
and help steward a shift toward total employee involvement
in sustainability
• Embed eight essential elements for creating authentic
sustainability cultures
Brief Introductions
Introduce yourself:
Name, affiliation, background in sustainability
What brought you here today?
“Enough …for all …forever”
African Delegation to Earth Summit II Rio +10, 2002
Envisioning a Sustainable World, 2050
Systems
thinking
Core Sustainability Concepts
Intergenerational
responsibility
Socio-economic
justice
Enough … … for all … … forever.
People Make Sustainability Happen!
Human Resources and Sustainability/CSR
Perfect Together?
Engage Employees in Sustainability
Modern Survey’s “Spring 2012 National Norms Survey.”
• Companies with engaged employees
grew profits 3 X faster than competitors
(Corporate Leadership Council)
• Highly engaged organizations have 87% less staff
turnover and 20% better performance than
average (Corporate Leadership Council)
• Operating income of companies with engaged
employees improved by 19% in one year vs. a
decline of 33% for companies with low levels of
employee engagement (Global survey by Tower Perrins-ISR,
involving an 664,000 employees in 50 companies)
• 59% of engaged employees say their job brings out
their most creative ideas vs. 3% for disengaged
employees
Engagement Drives Results
WBCSD, “People Matter – Engage: Inspiring Employees about Sustainability,” August 2010.
Five Talent Elements to Align with
Sustainability and CSR
1. Attracting Talent
2. Recruiting Talent
3. Developing Talent
4. Engaging Talent
5. Retaining Talent
“It’s the talent that
makes it all happen!”
Making an Impact Increases Satisfaction
Net Impact’s “Talent Report: What Workers Want in 2012,” June 2012,
Based on a survey of 1,726 senior university students and employed graduates. .
Employees who say they have the opportunity to make a direct social and
environmental impact through their job report higher satisfaction levels than those
who don’t, by a 2:1 ratio.
CSR & Engagement Matter
CBSR and Hewitt Associates, “Engaging Employees Through CSR” webinar, Jan 2010
CSR and Engagement
From a slide used by Jay Dorio, Kenexa, at a UNEP FI meeting, March 31, 2011. Based on Kenexa’s
WorkTrends 2010 data base from 10,000 U.S. employees surveyed.
• Tie Sustainability education to the company’s
mission and goals
• Make it relevant to job performance
• Make Sustainability outreach personal and
voluntary
• Focus employees on community outreach
• Focus on key impact areas and set
improvement goals
• Make learning easy and fun!
Engaging Talent: Best Practices
Source: Dan Pink, Drive, 2011
DRIVE: The Surprising Truth About
What Motivates Us
Retaining talented people:
Why does it matter?
Soaring costs
• Experts agree that the cost of replacing
workers can easily be two times their
annual salary…
• And that’s not including the “hidden”
costs of lost tacit and explicit knowledge
• Other costs are impact on morale,
increased stress and inefficiency
Retaining talented people:
Why does it matter?
More Soaring Costs
• Add on direct costs of replacing talent, such as
advertising, interviewing, and sign-on
bonuses, and the hard to measure costs of
orientation, training, putting work on hold,
lost productivity, and lost customers, and the
total is staggering!
Retaining Talented People:
How can you keep them?
As a manager, you ask:
• How can I make work more satisfying for my
people?
• How can I better understand their career
ambitions?
• How can I better respect the work-life issues
they face?
• How can I bend the rules to support them?
Retaining Talented People:
How can you keep them?
As a manager, you:
• Tell them where they stand
• Tell them where they need to improve
• Have fun and encourage [respectful and
appropriate] humor in the workplace
What is the Manager’s Role?
“Managers need to step into their roles as
managers and spend time learning about their
employees and their career aspirations and help
craft development opportunities as part of the day-
to-day work.”
Edie Goldberg, 2012
Associate Engagement
Starts with asking and listening
• Listening doesn’t mean you have to make any promises
or commitments….just listen
• Questions to ask:
– Do you feel recognized for your accomplishments?
– Do you feel challenged in your work?
– Are you getting enough feedback?
– Is the training you want available to you?
– Do you see a fit between your career goals and the
opportunities available to you?
– What can I do to support your goals?
– What are you struggling with?
– What would make your life easier?
Employee Initiatives to Engage in
Sustainability
• Launching “Green Teams”
• Providing opportunities for Employee Volunteerism
• Developing “green” products and services
• Greening your supply chain
• Conducting life-cycle analysis of your products
• Reducing your carbon footprint
Communications: Creating an
Ennobling Conversation for the
Future
Craft a compelling and inspiring sustainability
story…Make it inclusive and widely shared inside and
outside the organization.
Engage the entire organization in a conversation
designed to give rise to a vision of what’s possible, with
sustainability being the fuel that unleashes everyone’s
energy, exciting and ennobling them by giving new
meaning to their work and bringing whole new
possibilities into being.
Wirtenberg, 2010
Learning and Development:
Embed Sustainability Training in All Functions
• Fundamentals of
Sustainability
• Marketing,
Communications, &
Social Networking
• Human Resources
• Strategy and Metrics
• Operations/Facilities
• Finance
• Supply Chain
• Greening Information
Technology
What if?
Every employee
had goals
around
sustainability,
working in
concert with the
business’ goals
to solve some of
our most
intractable
problems? And every employee could articulate what that
means to them personally?
Sustainability happens when…
Managers make
decisions and take
actions every day that
take sustainability
gain and harm into
account.
Sustainability Pyramid Framework
The Next Big Step in Sustainability is
CULTURE.
BUILDING A CULTURE FOR
SUSTAINABILITY:
PEOPLE, PLANET, AND PROFITS
IN A NEW GREEN ECONOMY
Jeana Wirtenberg, Ph.D.
President, Transitioning to Green and
Co-Founder/Senior Advisor, Institute
for Sustainable Enterprise, Fairleigh
Dickinson University
* Purpose of the book
– and at all stages…from those
just starting their journey to
sustainability to those who are
seeking to accelerate and
deepen their positive impacts on
people, reduce their
environmental footprint, and
enhance their financial bottom
line in the short, medium, and
long-term.
*Megatrends 2013-2050
• Growth of the Middle Class
• A Resource Crunch
• Persistent inequality
• Major demographic changes
• Urbanization
• Growing human health vulnerability
• Growing connectivity
Source: Richard Wells, “To Build Long Term Sustainability, Envision the Future First,” GreenBiz, 2013.
*Building a Culture for Sustainability:
Nine In-depth Company Case Studies tell the story…
*How do we get there?
• The good news is that culture is
fungible. It can change, and
business leaders and managers can
help shift the balance to sustainable
mindsets and behaviors by
influencing their own and others
belief systems and behaviors.
*How do we get there?
• Companies don’t need to resort to top-
down command and control, coercion,
or even peer pressure because…
• People already care about these issues.
• Companies need to offer the enabling
environment, encouragement and
reinforcement for people to contribute
what already resides within them!
WHAT DOES A CULTURE FOR
SUSTAINABILITY LOOK LIKE?
Essential Elements of a
Culture for Sustainability
• Sustainable Values
• Sustainable Mind-Set
• Leadership for sustainability
• Visionary
• Employee engagement
• Multi-disciplinary
• Diversity, inclusion, social
justice
• Wisdom
Essential Elements of a Culture for Sustainability
• Sustainable Values; sees organization in context of
community, society, and earth
• Sustainable Mind-Set; systems thinking
• Leadership for sustainability; leads with purpose and
authenticity
• Visionary: Envisions the future we want to create
• Employee engagement; builds agility and resiliency;
engages imagination; fun
• Multi-disciplinary; Embeds sustainability throughout
learning and development
• Diversity, inclusion, social justice; deep caring for all
people
• Wisdom: emotional, social, and ecological intelligence
Essential Elements of a
Culture for Sustainability
Exercise
• Sustainable Values
• Sustainable Mind-Set
• Leadership for sustainability
• Visionary
• Employee engagement
• Multi-disciplinary
• Diversity, inclusion, social
justice
• Wisdom
COMPANY EXAMPLES
AND BEST PRACTICES
A NOBLE VISION THAT EXCITES PEOPLE:
“We’re going to connect the unconnected world. We’re
going to make sure the 2 billion people with no access to
communication services for health care, for life, for
education, for learning have all that in the next 20 years.”
Employees find meaning, passion, and inspiration
in the company’s vision—“to realize the potential
of a connected world.”
They incorporate sustainability thinking into every job
function they perform, whether in procurement, facilities,
product development, network design, marketing, finance, or
Human Resources.
• “Engage”: Maximizing
Communication
through Social Media
• Collaborating across
Stakeholders and
Industries
Systems approach is the “Verbund”
concept, which permeates every function,
facet, and operation of the organization.
Verbund is an
interconnected system of
relationships generating
greater value than the
sum of its parts
BASF’s global people strategy is a comprehensive
approach to creating and maintaining a culture of
sustainability
• The global people strategy was
developed through future forecasting
and mapping the gap
• The strategy is organized around 3 categories:
1. Excellent people
2. Excellent place to work
3. Excellent leaders
Corporate Communications Programs for
Engaging People
• “We Create Chemistry
World Tour”
• Simply Dare!
Case Example:
BASF Market Customer Focus Teams
• Action learning mode: “Anchor in the work that people
do and give them space to practice new behaviors.”
• Seattle Mariners, member of Green Sports Alliance,
pledged to divert 85% of waste from landfills.
• BASF team leveraged its material technology to create
100% compostable snack bags, made from BASF’s
Ecoflex.
• Created successful new product line using biopolymer
technology, now marketed to Universities and sports
teams worldwide.
• It’s all about Mind-set
• Respecting and Learning
from Failure
• Reporting the Bad with the
Good
• Integrating sustainability
into the way it does
business
• Manifesting it in how
everyone approaches the
work they do every day
• Instilling a sustainability
mind-set internally
• Helping customers
become more sustainable
• Capturing Employees’ Hearts and
Minds Through Employee-
Centered Initiatives
– Green Teams and Certification
– Sustainability Champions Drive
Change
– One STEP Forward – Personalizing
Sustainability
– Values: From Home to Workplace
– Life-Cycle Thinking
• Creating and Sustaining
Customer Value
– Segmenting the Marketplace
– Creating a Green Portfolio
through Open Innovation
– Outcome-Driven Innovation
– Applying ODI to Sustainability
Challenges at Ingersoll Rand
– Ingersoll Rand’s Green Portfolio
Building a culture_for_sustainability_dec_9_2015
Sanofi’s 4 CSR Pillars
“The key to a culture for sustainability
is full participation, to make everyone
feel they are part of something
greater and bigger.”
‒John Spinnato, VP of CSR,
N. America
“Because of Wyndham’s
massive reach and ability to
influence change, we know
it's important to inform and
educate our guests, investors,
employees and business
partners about being green.”
-- Wyndham’s website
HOW TO GET THERE
• Creating a grand vision
• Making the business
case: Sustainability is a
business imperative
• Starting at the top
• Embedding
sustainability in the
organization’s DNA
• Setting priorities and
making commitments
• Communicating with
authenticity and
transparency
• Recognizing
accomplishments and
disclosing areas for
improvement
BASF’s culture for sustainability is
relationship and people-driven
• Take the passion for problem solving, bring it to
sustainability and make that the focus of the
business.
8 ELEMENTS:
• Changing Mind-Sets
• Getting Close to Customers
• Finding solutions to Intractable Problems
• Letting Science Decide
• Making the Shift from Functional to Solutions-Driven Strategy
• Integrating Sustainability into Everyone’s Goals
• Creating Sustainability Champions
• Igniting Contagious Passion
• Take a Strengths-Based Approach
• Build Partnerships
• Recognize the link between Sustainability
and Premier Performance
• Tie Sustainability to the Company’s Brand,
Promise, Vision, and Purpose
• Create a Rallying Point and a Focus
area for Alignment
• Translate Sustainability into
Customer Value
• Set a Small Number of Strategic
Priorities
Evolving CSR/Sustainability
• Passion to help people
• Environmentalism
social consciousness
innovation
• Fostering a culture of
innovation
• Connect with
employees in every
function
• Tie Sustainability to
Innovation
• Integrate
Sustainability Fully
into Company
Strategy
Employee Giving Fund
and Volunteerism
• Volunteer
opportunities
• Partnerships with
NGOs
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Integrated Thinking
Core Capacities
1. Systems Thinking
2. Strategy Development
3. Collaboration and Teamwork
4. Integrating the Bottom Line
Do it yourself  Can’t do it alone
You
Kindred
Spirits
Their
Networks
Whole
Company
Whole
Industry
All
Industries
The
World
“Never doubt that a small group of
thoughtful, committed citizens can
change the world; indeed, it's the only
thing that ever has.”
― Margaret Mead ―
“Give me a lever long enough and a
fulcrum on which to place it, and
I shall move the world.”
― Archimedes ―
Common Attributes of Collaborative Cultures
 Promote frequent, cross-functional interaction
 Leadership and power are spread through organization
 People are accessible regardless of their level
 Mitigate fear of failure; failures are turned into
opportunities
 Encourage broad input into decisions
Common Attributes of Collaborative Cultures (continued)
 Provide opportunities for cross-pollination of people
 Support spontaneous or unscheduled interaction
 Structured and unstructured interaction, as
appropriate
 Formal and informal mentoring
 Available tools fit work objectives
3 Challenges to Collaboration
1. People hold back from contributing
their best work
2. Inadequate conflict-handling skills
3. Poor communication skills abound
Appreciation not blame…
Encourage the expression of diverse viewpoints
and opinions
Discuss and assess their relevance, fit, and overall
importance
Judge well and often – in regard to input, actions
and outcomes
Go with the best overall decision, given the
information at hand – including the assessment
of risk and consequences
Recognize the value of the work different people
contributed
Cultivating Collective Intelligence
“A life-affirming leader is one who knows how to rely
on and use the intelligence that exists everywhere in
the community, the company, the school, or the
organization. A leader these days needs to be a
host—one who convenes people, who convenes
diversity, who convenes all viewpoints in creative
processes where our intelligence can come forth.”
--Margaret Wheatley
Collaboration is holistic and personal
www.collaborateup.com
About Collaboration
It is not unlike dancing. In collaboration, one must
pay attention to the whole of the project and the
whole of the team…Anything less is mechanical, a
going through of the motions of a process someone
else set up, check-listing a set of activities
asynchronously, rather than creating cohesively
something of value.
David Coleman and Stewart Levine
Collaboration 2.0. Technology and best practices for collaboration
Self-Interest Mutuality
The Team Dynamic of Self-Interest and
Mutuality
Attributes of
High-Performance Teams
(especially for sustainability)
Participative
leadership
Shared
responsibility
Aligned on
purpose
High
communication
Future
focused
Focused on
task
Creative
talents
Rapid
response
Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
Five Dysfunctions of a Team
Inattention
to
RESULTS
Avoidance of
ACCOUNTABILITY
Lack of
COMMITMENT
Fear of
CONFLICT
Absence of
TRUST
Based on the work of
Patrick Lencioni
Example: A threat to Group Effectiveness
• Groupthink
– “a mode of thinking that people engage in when
they are deeply involved in a cohesive in-group,
when members’ strivings for unanimity override
their motivation to realistically appraise
alternative courses of action.”
Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
Symptoms of Groupthink
Invulnerability
Inherent
morality
Rationalization
Stereotyped
views of
opposition
Self-censorship
Illusion of
unanimity
Peer pressure Mindguards
Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
Groupthink Research
and Prevention
• Groups with a moderate amount of
cohesiveness produce better decisions
than low- or high-cohesive groups.
• Highly cohesive groups victimized by
groupthink make the poorest decisions,
despite high confidence in those decisions
Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
Three Big Tipping Points
1. Co-Creation
2. Bottom-Up
3. Long View
Lessons
Learned
• Create a shared focus on
solving a global problem—
such as the dilemma of the
digital divide.
• Make use of frameworks
and tools that have already
been proven and that work
Lessons Learned
• Culture change is a team sport
• Linking sustainability to business success brings
along even the hard core skeptics.
• Systems approach (e.g., Verbund) supports
embedded sustainability
Conclusion: People, Planet, and Profits in a
New Green Economy
Critical Issues and Challenges that Must be
Addressed
Company Conundrums in Addressing
Sustainability-Related Challenges
• People-Related Challenges
– Changing Mind-Sets and Behavior
– Filling the Pipeline from STEM Disciplines
– Overwhelming Workloads and Competing Priorities
– HR Needs to Step Up to the Plate
Company Conundrums in Addressing
Sustainability-Related Challenges
• Planet
– Consumer Perceptions that Green Costs More, and
Finding a Workable Trade-Off
– Being Sustainable versus Touting It
– Tree Hugging, Cutting Edge, or Bleeding Edge?
Company Conundrums in Addressing
Sustainability-Related Challenges
• Profits
– Measuring ROI of Sustainability Initiatives
– Dealing with Short-Termism
– Working with Different Measurement Systems and
Methods around the Globe
Promote Well-Being
by Cultivating
Sustainability-Inspired
Habits and Practices
• Silent Reflection
• Mindfulness
• Listening generously
• Both-And
• Being, Satisfaction
• Caring, Compassion, and Service
• Gratitude
• Collaboration
• Balance
Building a culture_for_sustainability_dec_9_2015
Thank You!
Jeana Wirtenberg Ph.D.
jwirtenberg@transitioningtogreen.com
Phone: 973-335-6299
@Trans2Green
@jeanawirtenberg
Transitioning to Green
www.transitioningtogreen.com
Transitioning to Green Foundation
www.TTGFoundation.org
Institute for Sustainable Enterprise
FDU www.fdu.edu/ise

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Building a culture_for_sustainability_dec_9_2015

  • 1. How to Accelerate HR’s Role in Sustainability: The Next Big Step! December 9, 2015 Impact Hub NYC Jeana Wirtenberg, Ph.D. Transitioning to Green, LLC Building a Culture for Sustainability
  • 2. Introductions Transitioning to Green, LLC Your connection between sustainability and success. We assist every organization we partner with to… • Align corporate strategy and operations with financial resources, risks and profitability. – Adapting your Purpose for Prosperity. • Responsibly manage supply chains, material resources, facilities and products. – Respecting natural systems. • Engage employee passions for creativity, innovation and inspired performance. – Nurturing your people to thrive.
  • 3. Purpose for today • Educate and inspire leaders and managers in every function in how to mainstream sustainability into all aspects of your corporate culture. • Play a pivotal role in unleashing talent in service of a sustainable future • Create a purpose driven, conscious, connected workforce, and help steward a shift toward total employee involvement in sustainability • Embed eight essential elements for creating authentic sustainability cultures
  • 4. Brief Introductions Introduce yourself: Name, affiliation, background in sustainability What brought you here today?
  • 5. “Enough …for all …forever” African Delegation to Earth Summit II Rio +10, 2002 Envisioning a Sustainable World, 2050
  • 8. Human Resources and Sustainability/CSR Perfect Together?
  • 9. Engage Employees in Sustainability Modern Survey’s “Spring 2012 National Norms Survey.”
  • 10. • Companies with engaged employees grew profits 3 X faster than competitors (Corporate Leadership Council) • Highly engaged organizations have 87% less staff turnover and 20% better performance than average (Corporate Leadership Council) • Operating income of companies with engaged employees improved by 19% in one year vs. a decline of 33% for companies with low levels of employee engagement (Global survey by Tower Perrins-ISR, involving an 664,000 employees in 50 companies) • 59% of engaged employees say their job brings out their most creative ideas vs. 3% for disengaged employees Engagement Drives Results WBCSD, “People Matter – Engage: Inspiring Employees about Sustainability,” August 2010.
  • 11. Five Talent Elements to Align with Sustainability and CSR 1. Attracting Talent 2. Recruiting Talent 3. Developing Talent 4. Engaging Talent 5. Retaining Talent “It’s the talent that makes it all happen!”
  • 12. Making an Impact Increases Satisfaction Net Impact’s “Talent Report: What Workers Want in 2012,” June 2012, Based on a survey of 1,726 senior university students and employed graduates. . Employees who say they have the opportunity to make a direct social and environmental impact through their job report higher satisfaction levels than those who don’t, by a 2:1 ratio.
  • 13. CSR & Engagement Matter CBSR and Hewitt Associates, “Engaging Employees Through CSR” webinar, Jan 2010
  • 14. CSR and Engagement From a slide used by Jay Dorio, Kenexa, at a UNEP FI meeting, March 31, 2011. Based on Kenexa’s WorkTrends 2010 data base from 10,000 U.S. employees surveyed.
  • 15. • Tie Sustainability education to the company’s mission and goals • Make it relevant to job performance • Make Sustainability outreach personal and voluntary • Focus employees on community outreach • Focus on key impact areas and set improvement goals • Make learning easy and fun! Engaging Talent: Best Practices
  • 16. Source: Dan Pink, Drive, 2011 DRIVE: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us
  • 17. Retaining talented people: Why does it matter? Soaring costs • Experts agree that the cost of replacing workers can easily be two times their annual salary… • And that’s not including the “hidden” costs of lost tacit and explicit knowledge • Other costs are impact on morale, increased stress and inefficiency
  • 18. Retaining talented people: Why does it matter? More Soaring Costs • Add on direct costs of replacing talent, such as advertising, interviewing, and sign-on bonuses, and the hard to measure costs of orientation, training, putting work on hold, lost productivity, and lost customers, and the total is staggering!
  • 19. Retaining Talented People: How can you keep them? As a manager, you ask: • How can I make work more satisfying for my people? • How can I better understand their career ambitions? • How can I better respect the work-life issues they face? • How can I bend the rules to support them?
  • 20. Retaining Talented People: How can you keep them? As a manager, you: • Tell them where they stand • Tell them where they need to improve • Have fun and encourage [respectful and appropriate] humor in the workplace
  • 21. What is the Manager’s Role? “Managers need to step into their roles as managers and spend time learning about their employees and their career aspirations and help craft development opportunities as part of the day- to-day work.” Edie Goldberg, 2012
  • 22. Associate Engagement Starts with asking and listening • Listening doesn’t mean you have to make any promises or commitments….just listen • Questions to ask: – Do you feel recognized for your accomplishments? – Do you feel challenged in your work? – Are you getting enough feedback? – Is the training you want available to you? – Do you see a fit between your career goals and the opportunities available to you? – What can I do to support your goals? – What are you struggling with? – What would make your life easier?
  • 23. Employee Initiatives to Engage in Sustainability • Launching “Green Teams” • Providing opportunities for Employee Volunteerism • Developing “green” products and services • Greening your supply chain • Conducting life-cycle analysis of your products • Reducing your carbon footprint
  • 24. Communications: Creating an Ennobling Conversation for the Future Craft a compelling and inspiring sustainability story…Make it inclusive and widely shared inside and outside the organization. Engage the entire organization in a conversation designed to give rise to a vision of what’s possible, with sustainability being the fuel that unleashes everyone’s energy, exciting and ennobling them by giving new meaning to their work and bringing whole new possibilities into being. Wirtenberg, 2010
  • 25. Learning and Development: Embed Sustainability Training in All Functions • Fundamentals of Sustainability • Marketing, Communications, & Social Networking • Human Resources • Strategy and Metrics • Operations/Facilities • Finance • Supply Chain • Greening Information Technology
  • 26. What if? Every employee had goals around sustainability, working in concert with the business’ goals to solve some of our most intractable problems? And every employee could articulate what that means to them personally?
  • 27. Sustainability happens when… Managers make decisions and take actions every day that take sustainability gain and harm into account.
  • 29. The Next Big Step in Sustainability is CULTURE.
  • 30. BUILDING A CULTURE FOR SUSTAINABILITY: PEOPLE, PLANET, AND PROFITS IN A NEW GREEN ECONOMY Jeana Wirtenberg, Ph.D. President, Transitioning to Green and Co-Founder/Senior Advisor, Institute for Sustainable Enterprise, Fairleigh Dickinson University
  • 31. * Purpose of the book – and at all stages…from those just starting their journey to sustainability to those who are seeking to accelerate and deepen their positive impacts on people, reduce their environmental footprint, and enhance their financial bottom line in the short, medium, and long-term.
  • 32. *Megatrends 2013-2050 • Growth of the Middle Class • A Resource Crunch • Persistent inequality • Major demographic changes • Urbanization • Growing human health vulnerability • Growing connectivity Source: Richard Wells, “To Build Long Term Sustainability, Envision the Future First,” GreenBiz, 2013.
  • 33. *Building a Culture for Sustainability: Nine In-depth Company Case Studies tell the story…
  • 34. *How do we get there? • The good news is that culture is fungible. It can change, and business leaders and managers can help shift the balance to sustainable mindsets and behaviors by influencing their own and others belief systems and behaviors.
  • 35. *How do we get there? • Companies don’t need to resort to top- down command and control, coercion, or even peer pressure because… • People already care about these issues. • Companies need to offer the enabling environment, encouragement and reinforcement for people to contribute what already resides within them!
  • 36. WHAT DOES A CULTURE FOR SUSTAINABILITY LOOK LIKE?
  • 37. Essential Elements of a Culture for Sustainability • Sustainable Values • Sustainable Mind-Set • Leadership for sustainability • Visionary • Employee engagement • Multi-disciplinary • Diversity, inclusion, social justice • Wisdom
  • 38. Essential Elements of a Culture for Sustainability • Sustainable Values; sees organization in context of community, society, and earth • Sustainable Mind-Set; systems thinking • Leadership for sustainability; leads with purpose and authenticity • Visionary: Envisions the future we want to create • Employee engagement; builds agility and resiliency; engages imagination; fun • Multi-disciplinary; Embeds sustainability throughout learning and development • Diversity, inclusion, social justice; deep caring for all people • Wisdom: emotional, social, and ecological intelligence
  • 39. Essential Elements of a Culture for Sustainability Exercise • Sustainable Values • Sustainable Mind-Set • Leadership for sustainability • Visionary • Employee engagement • Multi-disciplinary • Diversity, inclusion, social justice • Wisdom
  • 41. A NOBLE VISION THAT EXCITES PEOPLE: “We’re going to connect the unconnected world. We’re going to make sure the 2 billion people with no access to communication services for health care, for life, for education, for learning have all that in the next 20 years.”
  • 42. Employees find meaning, passion, and inspiration in the company’s vision—“to realize the potential of a connected world.”
  • 43. They incorporate sustainability thinking into every job function they perform, whether in procurement, facilities, product development, network design, marketing, finance, or Human Resources.
  • 44. • “Engage”: Maximizing Communication through Social Media • Collaborating across Stakeholders and Industries
  • 45. Systems approach is the “Verbund” concept, which permeates every function, facet, and operation of the organization. Verbund is an interconnected system of relationships generating greater value than the sum of its parts
  • 46. BASF’s global people strategy is a comprehensive approach to creating and maintaining a culture of sustainability • The global people strategy was developed through future forecasting and mapping the gap • The strategy is organized around 3 categories: 1. Excellent people 2. Excellent place to work 3. Excellent leaders
  • 47. Corporate Communications Programs for Engaging People • “We Create Chemistry World Tour” • Simply Dare!
  • 48. Case Example: BASF Market Customer Focus Teams • Action learning mode: “Anchor in the work that people do and give them space to practice new behaviors.” • Seattle Mariners, member of Green Sports Alliance, pledged to divert 85% of waste from landfills. • BASF team leveraged its material technology to create 100% compostable snack bags, made from BASF’s Ecoflex. • Created successful new product line using biopolymer technology, now marketed to Universities and sports teams worldwide.
  • 49. • It’s all about Mind-set • Respecting and Learning from Failure • Reporting the Bad with the Good
  • 50. • Integrating sustainability into the way it does business • Manifesting it in how everyone approaches the work they do every day • Instilling a sustainability mind-set internally • Helping customers become more sustainable
  • 51. • Capturing Employees’ Hearts and Minds Through Employee- Centered Initiatives – Green Teams and Certification – Sustainability Champions Drive Change – One STEP Forward – Personalizing Sustainability – Values: From Home to Workplace – Life-Cycle Thinking
  • 52. • Creating and Sustaining Customer Value – Segmenting the Marketplace – Creating a Green Portfolio through Open Innovation – Outcome-Driven Innovation – Applying ODI to Sustainability Challenges at Ingersoll Rand – Ingersoll Rand’s Green Portfolio
  • 54. Sanofi’s 4 CSR Pillars “The key to a culture for sustainability is full participation, to make everyone feel they are part of something greater and bigger.” ‒John Spinnato, VP of CSR, N. America
  • 55. “Because of Wyndham’s massive reach and ability to influence change, we know it's important to inform and educate our guests, investors, employees and business partners about being green.” -- Wyndham’s website
  • 56. HOW TO GET THERE
  • 57. • Creating a grand vision • Making the business case: Sustainability is a business imperative • Starting at the top • Embedding sustainability in the organization’s DNA
  • 58. • Setting priorities and making commitments • Communicating with authenticity and transparency • Recognizing accomplishments and disclosing areas for improvement
  • 59. BASF’s culture for sustainability is relationship and people-driven • Take the passion for problem solving, bring it to sustainability and make that the focus of the business. 8 ELEMENTS: • Changing Mind-Sets • Getting Close to Customers • Finding solutions to Intractable Problems • Letting Science Decide • Making the Shift from Functional to Solutions-Driven Strategy • Integrating Sustainability into Everyone’s Goals • Creating Sustainability Champions • Igniting Contagious Passion
  • 60. • Take a Strengths-Based Approach • Build Partnerships • Recognize the link between Sustainability and Premier Performance • Tie Sustainability to the Company’s Brand, Promise, Vision, and Purpose
  • 61. • Create a Rallying Point and a Focus area for Alignment • Translate Sustainability into Customer Value • Set a Small Number of Strategic Priorities
  • 62. Evolving CSR/Sustainability • Passion to help people • Environmentalism social consciousness innovation • Fostering a culture of innovation • Connect with employees in every function
  • 63. • Tie Sustainability to Innovation • Integrate Sustainability Fully into Company Strategy
  • 64. Employee Giving Fund and Volunteerism • Volunteer opportunities • Partnerships with NGOs
  • 66. Integrated Thinking Core Capacities 1. Systems Thinking 2. Strategy Development 3. Collaboration and Teamwork 4. Integrating the Bottom Line
  • 67. Do it yourself  Can’t do it alone You Kindred Spirits Their Networks Whole Company Whole Industry All Industries The World “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.” ― Margaret Mead ― “Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.” ― Archimedes ―
  • 68. Common Attributes of Collaborative Cultures  Promote frequent, cross-functional interaction  Leadership and power are spread through organization  People are accessible regardless of their level  Mitigate fear of failure; failures are turned into opportunities  Encourage broad input into decisions
  • 69. Common Attributes of Collaborative Cultures (continued)  Provide opportunities for cross-pollination of people  Support spontaneous or unscheduled interaction  Structured and unstructured interaction, as appropriate  Formal and informal mentoring  Available tools fit work objectives
  • 70. 3 Challenges to Collaboration 1. People hold back from contributing their best work 2. Inadequate conflict-handling skills 3. Poor communication skills abound
  • 71. Appreciation not blame… Encourage the expression of diverse viewpoints and opinions Discuss and assess their relevance, fit, and overall importance Judge well and often – in regard to input, actions and outcomes Go with the best overall decision, given the information at hand – including the assessment of risk and consequences Recognize the value of the work different people contributed
  • 72. Cultivating Collective Intelligence “A life-affirming leader is one who knows how to rely on and use the intelligence that exists everywhere in the community, the company, the school, or the organization. A leader these days needs to be a host—one who convenes people, who convenes diversity, who convenes all viewpoints in creative processes where our intelligence can come forth.” --Margaret Wheatley
  • 73. Collaboration is holistic and personal www.collaborateup.com
  • 74. About Collaboration It is not unlike dancing. In collaboration, one must pay attention to the whole of the project and the whole of the team…Anything less is mechanical, a going through of the motions of a process someone else set up, check-listing a set of activities asynchronously, rather than creating cohesively something of value. David Coleman and Stewart Levine Collaboration 2.0. Technology and best practices for collaboration
  • 75. Self-Interest Mutuality The Team Dynamic of Self-Interest and Mutuality
  • 76. Attributes of High-Performance Teams (especially for sustainability) Participative leadership Shared responsibility Aligned on purpose High communication Future focused Focused on task Creative talents Rapid response Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
  • 77. Five Dysfunctions of a Team Inattention to RESULTS Avoidance of ACCOUNTABILITY Lack of COMMITMENT Fear of CONFLICT Absence of TRUST Based on the work of Patrick Lencioni
  • 78. Example: A threat to Group Effectiveness • Groupthink – “a mode of thinking that people engage in when they are deeply involved in a cohesive in-group, when members’ strivings for unanimity override their motivation to realistically appraise alternative courses of action.” Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
  • 79. Symptoms of Groupthink Invulnerability Inherent morality Rationalization Stereotyped views of opposition Self-censorship Illusion of unanimity Peer pressure Mindguards Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
  • 80. Groupthink Research and Prevention • Groups with a moderate amount of cohesiveness produce better decisions than low- or high-cohesive groups. • Highly cohesive groups victimized by groupthink make the poorest decisions, despite high confidence in those decisions Source: Robert Kreitner & Angelo Kinicki, Organizational Behavior, Tenth edition, 2013
  • 81. Three Big Tipping Points 1. Co-Creation 2. Bottom-Up 3. Long View
  • 82. Lessons Learned • Create a shared focus on solving a global problem— such as the dilemma of the digital divide. • Make use of frameworks and tools that have already been proven and that work
  • 83. Lessons Learned • Culture change is a team sport • Linking sustainability to business success brings along even the hard core skeptics. • Systems approach (e.g., Verbund) supports embedded sustainability
  • 84. Conclusion: People, Planet, and Profits in a New Green Economy
  • 85. Critical Issues and Challenges that Must be Addressed
  • 86. Company Conundrums in Addressing Sustainability-Related Challenges • People-Related Challenges – Changing Mind-Sets and Behavior – Filling the Pipeline from STEM Disciplines – Overwhelming Workloads and Competing Priorities – HR Needs to Step Up to the Plate
  • 87. Company Conundrums in Addressing Sustainability-Related Challenges • Planet – Consumer Perceptions that Green Costs More, and Finding a Workable Trade-Off – Being Sustainable versus Touting It – Tree Hugging, Cutting Edge, or Bleeding Edge?
  • 88. Company Conundrums in Addressing Sustainability-Related Challenges • Profits – Measuring ROI of Sustainability Initiatives – Dealing with Short-Termism – Working with Different Measurement Systems and Methods around the Globe
  • 89. Promote Well-Being by Cultivating Sustainability-Inspired Habits and Practices • Silent Reflection • Mindfulness • Listening generously • Both-And • Being, Satisfaction • Caring, Compassion, and Service • Gratitude • Collaboration • Balance
  • 91. Thank You! Jeana Wirtenberg Ph.D. jwirtenberg@transitioningtogreen.com Phone: 973-335-6299 @Trans2Green @jeanawirtenberg Transitioning to Green www.transitioningtogreen.com Transitioning to Green Foundation www.TTGFoundation.org Institute for Sustainable Enterprise FDU www.fdu.edu/ise