Marketing Strategy and Competitive Positioning pdf ebook
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hooley graham et al marketing strategy and competitive posit
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- Figure 17.1
CHAPTER 17 CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND ETHICS
While the impact of social marketing on the social role attached to the marketing discipline has considerable social importance, our focus here is somewhat broader, and is concerned with the impact of the corporate social responsibility stance of the firm on its marketing and business strategy and performance. Social initiatives and ethical stand- ards have become part of how companies compete and create value. The structure we are adopting to evaluate these issues and the key questions to address are summarised in Figure 17.1 . 17.1 Marketing strategy and corporate social responsibility At one time, the issue at stake was primarily a matter of ‘corporate philanthropy’ ( Porter and Kramer, 2002 ), such as making donations of financial or other support to good causes, or entirely a question of moral obligation or pure altruism – for example when MAC cos- metics decided to donate all earnings from its Viva Glam lipstick range to HIV-related causes ( Jack, 2008 ). However, corporate social responsibility (CSR) is now increasingly recognised as a source of competitive advantage (or disadvantage if we are weaker than others in this area), and thus a corporate resource, as well as an important part of how competitive relationships operate. Certainly, good corporate citizenship is a marketing asset that can yield benefits in customer loyalty and employee commitment and business performance, but corporate social responsibility is now seen as a strategic resource. Strength in this resource, as in any other, may bring competitive advantages; weakness in this resource, as in any other, may bring vulnerability ( Branco and Rodrigues, 2006 ). Consider, for example, the following situations. Figure 17.1 Key issues in assessing corporate social responsibility and marketing strategy Marketing strategy and CSR The scope of CSR Drivers of CSR initiatives The other side of CSR initiatives Defensive CSR initiatives CSR and innovative competitive advantage How companies are responding to the CSR mandate CSR and customer value Do we understand where CSR and ethics fit in our strategic thinking? Can we map out the factors driving CSR in our type of business? Are we aware of the risks to our company if we get it wrong? Are we just defending our position or developing a new business model? Are we ahead or behind competitors? Does CSR create customer value in our market? 491 MARKETING STRATEGY AND CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY In 2007, Microsoft dropped one of its UK suppliers because that supplier failed to meet Microsoft’s standards on employee diversity. Microsoft in the UK is one of a growing num- ber of British companies that monitor suppliers to ensure that they employ a representative mix of women and ethnic minorities. The decision resulted from Microsoft’s diversity audit at its 250 largest British suppliers (Taylor, 2007). In the USA, many large companies, includ- ing Microsoft, already insist on good diversity practices from suppliers, and are reducing or terminating the business they do with suppliers who fail to heed requests to diversify their workforces. Suppliers unable or unwilling to meet the social responsibilities defined by major customers stand the considerable risk of losing those customers. In 2014, Apple extended its supply chain clean-up beyond Chinese factories that produce its devices, to pressure all its suppliers to make their own sourcing more ethical. The goal was to cut the amount of conflict resources ending up in iPhones and iPads sourced from mines in Africa (conflict resources are materials extracted in a conflict zone and sold to per- petuate and support the fighting). The company wants to stop using materials from mines that are unacceptable from a human rights perspective (Bradshaw, 2014). Further concern extends to questions of ethics in executive behaviour, to which we will return, where inappropriate behaviours in managing buyer/seller relationships can cause expensive losses. The accusations of corruption and bribery levelled against Volkswagen and Siemens executives in Germany – for example, the alleged Siemens ‘slush fund’ to pay bribes to win international contracts – have been extremely damaging to both companies (Woodhead, 2007). Appositely, it should be noted that many practices regarded in the past as wholly acceptable – for example, ‘corporate hospitality’ – may now be enough to undermine or destroy buyer/seller relationships, not to mention the careers of individual executives. The impact is magnified by growing transparency and information availability, so dubious practices are more difficult to hide. A review of the ‘integrity land-mines’ faced by companies concludes: The changes in laws, regulations, stakeholder expectations, and media scrutiny that have taken place in the past decade can now make a major lapse in integrity catastrophic. Fines, penalties and settlements are counted in the hundreds of millions (or billions) of dollars. . . And worse, in some cases (as Enron and Arthur Andersen demonstrated) – a company can actually implode. (Heineman, 2007) The management of business-to-business buyer–seller relationships has to be placed into this more demanding ethical context. Moreover, at the level of the brand, questions of social responsibility and the ethics and morality of corporate behaviour are increasingly significant, posing both risks and opportunities. In 2007, the ethically minded coffee company Starbucks found itself in the midst of a damaging and intractable struggle over the legitimacy of coffee trademarking by the Ethiopian government. While the Ethiopian government – one of the world’s poor- est countries – wanted to trademark some of its most famous coffees, Starbucks objected to the trademarks as damaging to its own brand. The dispute was played out live on the video website YouTube. One commentator suggested that Starbucks was ‘playing Rus- sian roulette’ with its brand (Rushe, 2007). Indeed, more recently, Starbucks’ reputation has been further threatened by its tax avoidance policies – with its first-ever fall in UK sales after calls for a boycott from outraged consumers (Skapinker, 2014). Importantly, there may be an increasing number of trade-offs faced by companies between CSR and commercial goals. There are important signs that consumers do indeed appear to be discriminating between brands and companies on issues of societal impact and ethical standards, although they may be less impressed by corporate posturing than some companies may believe. For example, consumers were less than amused to discover that Philips and Osram ‘Eco’ light bulbs |
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