Is your company facebook-worthy?

(3BLMedia/theCSRfeed) April 21, 2010 – In one of his speeches business expert and author Tim Sanders talks about the War For Talent. He argues that companies will need a social offering (purpose, cause, mission) to become Facebook status-worthy – and win. People, especially the Millennials, won´t post an employer on their Facebook profile who they are ashamed of. And, besides: when you’re proud of the company you work for, you work harder without being asked. Your paycheck (so long as it takes care of the rent) isn’t nearly as much a point of contention. You don’t mind a few extra hours. You step outside your job description not as a renegade, but to be helpful and lend your skills where they might be useful. 

CSR is a way to help building a lasting relationship with your employees. Done right, it can even improve morale among employees and help companies build trust in a brand from within. But doing it right usually means doing lots of things that aren’t part of your daily business. Tedious, complicated things. To this end, www.ammado.com offers products and services that are set up in minutes, completely hassle-free and free of paperwork. They allow you and your employees to focus on doing good instead of loosing precious time and money with administration and organization.
 
Our new product Payroll Giving, for example, offers more than most payroll giving solutions provide today: it is secure, the first ever global system, highly flexible, cutting-edge technology and asks for a minimal amount of administration.
 
Get in touch with us on www.ammado.com to discuss how you can improve your investment in your most valued resource: your employees. Or write an email to kalbrecht@ammado.com

 AMMADO6182

Posted via web from 3BL Media, CSR News, and Emily

Business Sustainability in a Dynamic World

What is the future of sustainability in business? What does that future look like? As a sustainability  consultant, these are the questions I’m most commonly asked.  

 As we all evaluate the range of possible futures in these economic times, business sustainability is on the leading edge of strategic thinking. Leading businesses are acting now to prepare for the uncertain future.

 In a recent publication by Forum for the Future, the paper discusses 4 unique scenarios for the future of global business:

     · Global Interest: An effective globalized response to global challenges prompts increased resource productivity and low-carbon growth. Businesses have to play a greater role in supporting public services and infrastructure but reap the benefits. Successful companies have embedded sustainability management throughout their organization.

     · National Interest: Global businesses all but disappear in a retreat to nationalism and protectionism. Nations hoard their own resources and tighten their borders. Corporate and government agendas are closely aligned and sustainability for business means supporting the national interest.

     · Patched-up Globalization: Emerging markets rise as China stalls. Low carbon technologies, particularly bio fuels, thrive. Successful companies are multinationals with a local feel, helping to deliver local development needs.

     · Me and Mine, Online: A highly networked world undermines individual countries and companies. Products and services are delivered in a way we would barely recognize. Successful companies are now more like branded hubs, coordinating often temporary and short-lived supplier relationships to deliver customized products. Trust and transparency are key, and trends come and go swiftly – anyone with a motive and the ability to mobilize a groundswell of opinion can exert a powerful influence.

 There is no doubt that the landscape of business will continue to change.

 Taiga Company‘s sustainability consulting interfaces with businesses that are taking proactive sustainable action.  As sustainability consultants, we recommend a proactive approach rather than a reactive response to external factors. Decisive and immediate action to become a business sustainability leader is creating a competitive advantage and allowing businesses on the forefront to capture additional market share.

 Whether just getting started or are long-term pioneer of implementing sustainable concepts  into core business strategies, the time to act is now.

Plenary Session 1: The Convergence of Social Media and CSR

The Convergence of Social Media and CSR
Plenary Session 1 at CSR and Social Media 2010
Thursday, May 13, 2010, 8:45 am
Priority Code: 3BL1
Toronto

Featuring:
Celesa Horvath, Owner and Principal, Ventus Development Services Inc.

Social networking promises to change not only the way in which companies communicate and interact with their stakeholders, but also their behaviour and performance as corporate citizens. This context-setting presentation will explore social media’s game-changing potential and implications for CSR, including:

• how the accessibility of information will drive transparency and best practice in corporate social responsibility

• how the speed at which information and opinions are shared affects reputation management

• how the scope of, and level of trust in, social networks will transform stakeholder engagement practices

• how the shift from push to pull by user-determined needs will lead to more collaborative, open-source approaches

Celesa Horvath contends that, in the emerging “Attention Age,” the difference between risk and opportunity is a matter of perspective and strategy. Join Celesa as she explores how to leverage social media to enhance corporate responsibility performance and uncover fertile ground for innovation.

Celesa is experienced in developing and implementing sustainability strategies for business, and is founder of the Canadian CSR and SD Practitioners’ Network on LinkedIn.
Click here to find Celesa on her LinkedIn Page
Click here to follow Celesa on Twitter

For more information on this session, or to see a copy of the full agenda, please visit our web site, or contact Joel Elliott at elliott@conferenceboard.ca. Register Before April 18 to save $150! Please quote priority code 3BL1 when registering.

CBC5965

CSR Minute: 1/4/10 – Wainwright Bank’s GRI Sustainability Report; 3BL Media’s 3BL.me URL Shortener

Corporate Social Responsibility News: Wainwright Bank’s GRI Sustainability Report; 3BL Media’s 3BL.me URL Shortener

CSR Minute: 11/30/09 – IBM’s Business Survey of 224 Leaders; Team and a Dream’s Social Media Method

Corporate Social Responsibility News: IBM’s Survey of 224 Biz Leaders; Team and a Dream’s “Socially Sourced” Social Media Method

Social Networking is the Means to Achieve Workplace Collaboration

Social Networking is the Means to Achieve Workplace Collaboration

by Mark Drapeau

Yesterday I live-blogged a bit from the terrific Government 2.0 event produced by FedScoop.com at the Newseum in Washington, DC. I wrote a post about how collaboration was not the means, but rather an end made possible by the means of social networking tools. You can read my original writing and some initial comments here. Below, I expand a bit on these ideas.

My post was initially inspired by one speaker’s (WFED’s Chris Dorobek) notion, shared by some others (Justin Houk commented that, “Taxpayers don’t want to think about those in government sitting around on Twitter all day even thought that might be an effective way to collaborate.”), that social networking tools come across as too social or “fun” and that being social is not what people are truly doing (in the government) when they use them – they’re collaborating. Thus, when marketing Government 2.0 to wider audiences, he feels that a term like “collaboration tools” is more appropriate.

In my opinion, while this might sound better to a more traditionalist, untrained ear, I think it is factually wrong to say that things like Facebook or Intellipedia are collaboration tools. True, collaboration often happens with these tools. And perhaps one could argue that collaboration is mainly what people hope to accomplish with them in the workplace. Fair enough. But I think that collaboration is the end result of leveraging social networks, which is in actuality what the social networking tools are for.

In other words, social networks are a means by which to accomplish something. This something might very well be collaboration. It might also be putting together an office softball team, or a study group of employees all learning Arabic. Is arranging players on a softball team “collaboration”? I don’t think so. Is it an important part of a coherent, productive workplace? Perhaps. There are many important things that happen in workplaces based around social networks that are not strictly collaboration on work projects.

One big thing I’ve been thinking about lately is “leveraging social networks to accomplish important stuff” and no one can deny that personal relationships can influence collaboration. How well you know someone, how much you identify with them, how much you trust them, their level of reliability or transparency – all of these are values derived from social networking that then, when leveraged, can influence collaboration. Collaboration is not an end in itself, of course – it is a means to accomplish some end (finishing a draft report, etc.). So, social networking is a means to collaboration, which is a means to achieving some work or personal goal.

I also reject the notion that there is something wrong with having some fun at work. The idea that having fun with social software shouldn’t be allowed in serious workplaces is ridiculous. And of course, anyone who’s ever passed around a joke-of-the-week email, celebrated a colleague’s birthday with a cake in the break room, or ended work at 4pm for an informal happy hour with the office (i.e., effectively every government and corporate employee) would surely agree with me on this. Work can be fun and be productive, too. The director of the Office of Personnel Management recently visited Google for a reason.

So, briefly, I think social networking tools are not necessarily collaboration tools. They are social software that allows social networks to be leveraged to accomplish things you find important. That might be collaboration on a National Intelligence Estimate (protecting America, earning your paycheck), or arranging a carpool with people in your agency (getting to work on time, being more green), or finding a racquetball partner (staying healthy, living well, bonding) – all of which postitively influence the workplace, in government and in the private sector as well.

As Fred Wellman commented on my original post, “I can’t help but wonder if Chris [Dorobek] is seeking a more politically correct or business sounding name of the same tools with the goal of breaking down barriers to implementation and usage as opposed to a lack of understanding of the power of social networking applications in the business of government.” I think there’s a lot of truth to that. But I also think that, as an academic, this is actually not what we are doing.

This may sound a bit esoteric, but from an academic standpoint I think pointing out that using social networks – online and off – is at the very core of what we are doing is an important thing to point out. When we are “collaborating,” we are leveraging social networks to accomplish important stuff.

Never Listen To Marketers About Social Media | SheenOnline

There is a serious scam going on in the social media world and I’m tired of seeing people get got. Marketing has come a long way, changed a lot, and still remained the same. The problem is that the pillars of the MLM community are fooling you with a false narrative. They want you to think that you will become a marketing powerhouse in social media with thousands of customers running after you, wallets out and purses open,  by simply following the steps in their latest e-book or whatever info product they’re slinging.

Don’t get me wrong, there are marketers out there that know what they’re talking about. You can tell they know what they’re talking about because the tech world recognizes them as equals. Not only are they skilled marketers, but their circles intersect with the people who help build and promote these new media tools.

It goes back to the question of , “Can you be a social media expert without being in social media?” The answer is, “Hell No!” If you aren’t in the trenches building your community and interacting with people, you cannot claim to know how to use this stuff.

The reason these MLM and Network Marketing gurus get such huge followings on all these social networking sites is that they already had huge followings to begin with. Look at how long some of these guys (and gals) have been around. Their tribe was built a long time ago. All they’ve done is leverage that tribe. A simple call to action to their existing mailing list and they’ve suddenly got 30,000 followers on Twitter. It’s that simple…for them.

You will never be able to duplicate this. There is nothing in anyone’s e-book or video series that changes that reality. You don’t have a standing army of customers. You are starting from scratch and you will have to put in the work to build your own community from the ground up. Anyone offering a magic shortcut to this end is blatantly lying you will waste a lot of time failing really slow if you buy into their crap.

Don’t believe me? Try and prove me wrong. I’ll wait…

…on second thought, I won’t. I’ve got better things to do.

via sheenonline.biz

Social Sharing and Volunteering: How Are Volunteers Spreading Opportunities?

With so much talk about Facebook Causes, we’ve already seen fundraising go viral. Can volunteer engagement do the same? At what level will volunteers share their service activities with their social networks?

A few months ago VolunteerMatch added the popular ShareThis application to our service. Now that we have the first reports of how our Web site visitors are using ShareThis, some of the findings may surprise you.

Social Sharing and ShareThis

ShareThis is a free sharing tool that makes it easy for users to share content via social networks and social news sites. ShareThis also offers plain old email as an option for sharing – although across the Web, ShareThis clickers have been choosing this less and less often.

VolunteerMatch added ShareThis as an option on our volunteer opportunity pages so that a user who is about to sign up to volunteer can share their interest with their friends on Facebook, Twitter, Digg, Delicious, MySpace, etc.

The obvious benefit to tools like ShareThis is that they give our visitors the power to help increase the discoverability of organizations and their volunteer opportunities.

How Are Volunteers Sharing?

Click here to continue reading

Shareholders and Radishes

A short, irreverent look at shareholder communications, sustainability and social media.

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