1 / 20

Sustainability and Innovation

Sustainability and Innovation. Professor Ray Amtmann. The Reality of Sustainability. There is no alternative to sustainable development. Yet companies worry about their competitiveness

lucio
Download Presentation

Sustainability and Innovation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sustainability and Innovation Professor Ray Amtmann

  2. The Reality of Sustainability • There is no alternative to sustainable development. • Yet companies worry about their competitiveness • Businesses in developed countries feel at a disadvantage compared to businesses in non-developed countries without environmental regulations • Therefore, “executives treat sustainability as social responsibility divorced from business objectives” • This creates opinions that regulation must be needed because businesses will not enforce sustainability voluntarily

  3. Reality cont. • But this is not really true • “Sustainability is a mother lode of organizational and technological innovation that yield both bottom-line and top-line returns..” Resulting in • Lower cost • Less input • New products • The search for sustainability becomes transformative • Innovation can be a key to success and profitability especially in tough economic times

  4. Five Stages of Sustainability • Viewing Compliance as an opportunity • This can be complicated and vary by area • Complying with the strictest standards early on gives a company a lead position for the future • Can turn regulators into allies • Making Value Chains Sustainable • The drive for efficiency shifts to the supply chain and resource conservation • Consider waste reduction • Packaging • Returned products

  5. Five Stages cont. • Large companies like Walmart set standards and timelines their suppliers must meet • Life cycle analysis • Operations procedures • Walmart and their trucking analysis • FedEx with new efficient aircraft • UPS trucks try to only make right turns • Create energy efficient workplaces 3. Designing Sustainable Products and Services • Meet consumer’s eco-friendly desires • May provide competitive edge

  6. Five Stages cont. • Analyze products for environmental impact • Proctor & Gamble • Figured out their detergents needing hot water cost billions of kilowatt hours of electricity • Developed cold water detergent saving 80 billion kilowatt hours of electricity and 34 million tons of carbon dioxide 4. Developing new business models • Executives must learn to question existing models and act entrepreneurially to develop new models of delivery

  7. Five Stages cont. • FedEx acquired Kinko's and now instead of shipping companies documents across country they digitally send them and then print locally • Customer gets more preparation time • Better quality printing • FedEx is viewed as more eco-friendly • FedEx costs shrink 5. Creating Next-practice platforms • Can we change the current paradigms • Another words innovation • Example of the “Smart Grid” using digital resources to manage power usage

  8. So how do you make it happen? • It takes leadership and buy in at the top of the organization • Examples • Walmart • GE • P&G • What about entrepreneurial businesses? • The owner / entrepreneur sets the tone or culture in any business • You have to be the change agent and have to lead by not only words but actions every day

  9. Lubin and Esty • In Harvard Business Revue for May 2010 they make a case that Sustainability is a “Megatrend” • They feel it is important for companies to realize this and to take note of previous Megatrends such as • Globalization • Quality Management • Information Technology

  10. How to Respond • They point out that many companies are “flailing around launching a hodgepodge of initiatives without any over arching vision or plan.” • They attribute this to companies thinking they are “facing an unprecedented journey.” • They point out there is a roadmap from previous Megatrends

  11. Response cont. • They illustrate how companies which missed the boat on Total Quality Management (TQM) and Information Technology (IT) paid a heavy price • These trends were Game Changers for companies who adopted them • Quality was initially looked at to reduce defects • It however when viewed Holistically • Drove changes across the business spectrum • Reducing • Costs • Waste • Risk

  12. They agree with Prahalad • They agree with the five stages we have discussed above • They also feel it is crucial to not only have the vision correct but to get the execution correct in five critical areas • Leadership • Methods • Strategy • Management • Reporting

  13. Leadership • Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) need to commit to this type of leadership at the corporate level with a Chief Sustainability Officer (CSO) • For an Entrepreneur that means you! • You need to work within the company at all levels and with • Suppliers • Customers • Stakeholders

  14. Methods • You need to be able to quantify your • Benefits • Risks • If you can’t measure it you can’t manage it • Companies are setting targets and goals with timelines • These have to be realistic or a company will be accused of “Green Washing” when they fail

  15. Strategy Development • Companies such as Walmart have created “Sustainable Networks” within their companies • These networks focus on strategic issues • They are often composed of company employees and external players from • Government • NGOs • Academics • They are open source and seek transparency

  16. Management Integration • You need to fully integrate sustainability into day to day management • Some companies integrate sustainability goals into compensation • Use technology to support sustainability

  17. Reporting and Communication • Your company needs to share information • Internally • At all levels • Externally • Government Regulators • Customers • Public • Transparency is a must • You need to share the good and the not so good

  18. Four types of Companies • Losers • Put in place only modest initiatives for • Cost • Risk • Waste • Risk losing their positions • Defenders • Go Slow Approach • Can work, but can be overcome by other competitors who move fast and or innovatively

  19. Four Types cont. • Dreamers • Let vision and ambition get too far ahead of capacity • Can’t fulfill their promises and get accused of “Green Washing” • Ford made promises it could not keep under Bill Ford • Did not have the capacity or technology • Now under Alan Mullaly they have moved foreword and are competing well • Winners • Made strategic moves • Provide transparency • Deliver what they promise • Establish Best Practices

  20. Works Cited • Lubin, David, A.; Esty, Daniel, C.; The Sustainable Imperative, Harvard Business Review (May 2010) • Nidumolu, Ram; Prahalad, C. K.; Rangaswami, M. R.; Why Sustainability is Now the Key Driver of Innovation, Harvard Business Review (Sept 2009)

More Related