Corporate Social Innovation is the New Corporate Social Responsibility

By Elizabeth Boggs Davidsen
02:13 PM, June 23, 2016

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Innovation

A new trend in international development has paired some unlikely business partners: development finance institutions and impact investors are working with large multinational corporations to fund projects that advance both development and business agendas.

This “corporate social innovation” is the latest advance along the continuum of corporate social responsibility, which began in the 1990s, when many companies began embracing worthy community causes in areas where they operated. Programs focused mainly on the company’s reputation and license to operate, with little direct connection to their bottom lines. For example, Microsoft initiated an annual Employee Giving Campaign, in which employees attend fundraising events for nonprofit organizations.

Good corporate citizenship

This evolution continued in the 2000s, when companies began integrating good corporate citizenship into their business models, often through partnerships with development finance institutions. For instance, when the International Youth Foundation and the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) of the Inter-American Development Bank Group launched the New Employment Opportunities Program (NEO) for youth in 2012, five large companies pledged resources and joined the alliance: Arcos Dorados, Caterpillar, CEMEX, Microsoft, and Walmart. NEO offers job training and placement services to improve the employability of poor youth, and thereby the quality of the workforce throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. The member companies – some of the largest employers in the region – are contributing money and helping to shape the training curriculum and other employment services. The partnership is paying off; NEO is on track to reach 1 million youth through effective job-training programs by 2020.

Shared value

In 2011, professors from Harvard Business School published an article on “Creating Shared Value,” and since then, there has been a growing global movement to make societal impacts integral to a company’s strategy. SABMiller, the world’s second-largest brewer, was an early adopter. SABMiller and the MIF’s 4e Camino al Progreso Program targets more than 380,000 small retailers in SABMiller’s biggest Latin American markets: Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Panama, Honduras, and El Salvador. The 4e program, which began in 2013, aims to improve small retailers’ business performance – and therefore quality of life and leadership abilities – through a combination of classroom training and in-store mentoring on business, life skills, and leadership, and by strengthening the broader “business ecosystems” in which the retailers operate, with a special focus on improving their access to financing and technology. The hope is that this effort will strengthen SABMiller’s retail network and sales.

Corporate social innovation

The latest evolution on this continuum has been the advent of corporate social innovation (CSI). The World Economic Forum launched the Global Agenda Council on Social Innovation in 2014 – bringing together an unlikely cross-section of corporate leaders, impact investors, and development executives – and offered a definition for CSI that builds on shared-value concepts: when companies proactively design and implement business models that increase incomes and better the quality of life of underserved or vulnerable communities at the bottom of the market’s pyramid. The mutual attraction for the unlikely bedfellows is that CSI initiatives are often fueled by corporate venture capital – the investment of cash reserves from a company to fund new endeavors.

A new alignment is emerging among corporate venture capitalists and impact investors. The corporate venture capitalist is seeking returns for the company and new capabilities or access to markets that are aligned with its long-term business strategy. The impact investor is interested in placing capital into companies and generating measurable social and environmental impacts, together with a financial return. The impact investor also wants to expand effective development solutions and – together with development finance institutions – is beginning to understand that working with large companies may be the best route. Companies that set up corporate venture funds also have in-house expertise and distribution channels that allow them to scale-up successful projects.

In its study, Investing in Breakthrough: Corporate Venture Capital, the think tank and advisory firm Volans identifies six sectors in which corporate venturing is active, because these sectors directly affect businesses, individuals, and the environment: cleantech, education, health, urban infrastructure and transportation, financial inclusion, and agriculture and food. Not surprisingly, these are also areas where impact investors place most of their investments.

Some intriguing CSI examples are emerging. To name one: Shell Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the oil giant, formed a strategic partnership with Husk Power Systems, a biomass electricity generator. In five years, Husk has installed 84 minipower plants, providing electricity to more than 200,000 people in 300 rural villages in India. By electrifying villages, Husk is promoting economic development, as businesses are able to stay open after dark and children can study at night. Impact investors Acumen and Oasis Fund have contributed funding to the venture. Business leaders are at the forefront of transforming societies’ ability to confront important challenges. Development finance institutions and impact investors are along for the ride, and it is guaranteed to be exciting.

About the Author
Boggs Davidsen, Elizabeth

Elizabeth Boggs Davidsen is a principal specialist at the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) and responsible for its regional economic development and value-chains portfolios. She also advises on new partnership opportunities for the MIF’s grant and investment activities.

 
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect CSR Manager's editorial policy.
 
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