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Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility: A New Driver for Public Relations Conceptualizing CSR Value of CSR Expectation Gaps Legitimacy Procurement Model

Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility: A New Driver for Public Relations 

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Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility: A New Driver for Public Relations . Conceptualizing CSR Value of CSR Expectation Gaps Legitimacy Procurement Model. Companies that promote their CSR. Starbucks Home Depot HP Unilever Toyota BP Chiquita. Concern for “triple bottom line”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Chapter 13Corporate Social Responsibility:

A New Driver for Public Relations

Conceptualizing CSRValue of CSR

Expectation GapsLegitimacy Procurement Model

Page 2: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Companies that promote their CSR

• Starbucks• Home Depot• HP• Unilever• Toyota• BP• Chiquita

Page 3: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Concern for “triple bottom line”

• Financial performance.• Social performance.• Environmental performance.

Page 4: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Conceptualizing Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

• Howard Bowen, father of CSR.• Need to operate in way consistent with

societal values and objectives.• Beyond financial and legal to ethical and

philanthropic.• Consider stakeholders beyond investors.

Page 5: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Parameters of CSR

• How operations impact society.• Should be net contributors.• Expectation of what counts as CSR can vary

from culture to culture.

Page 6: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Sample Social Impacts

• Poverty• Environmental damage • Sustainability• Human rights • Treatment of workers• Disease control/eradication• Treatment of indigenous peoples

Page 7: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Working Definition

• The management of actions designed to affect an organization’s impacts on society.

Page 8: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

CSR as Voluntary

• CSR goes beyond legal requirements.• Compliance is not being irresponsible,

minimal CSR at best.

Page 9: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Example: CSR types for Climate Change

• Defensive organizations fight against the change and do not comply.

• Opportunistic/hesitant organizations accept the change but do not discuss it publicly.

• Offensive organizations lead the field by being first to take action and may urge governments to set tougher standards.

Page 10: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Value of CSR to Corporations

• Financial returns• Reputation returns• Avoid churn

Page 11: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Financial Return

• Result of timing.• No benefits if “forced” into CSR.• Greatest benefits when CSR is part of

organizational strategy.• Way to differential organization from

competitors.

Page 12: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Beware of the Polls

• Over 80% of people say they buy based on social responsibility.

• In reality, usually under 20%.• Still can be a valuable customer base.

Page 13: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Cause Marketing

• NGO or PVO receives money from purchase of a product.

• Idea of shopping to change the world.

Page 14: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Reputation Returns

• CSR can contribute to a positive reputation.• Positive reputations attract customers,

investors, and quality employees.• CSR is a means of creating identification with

constituents.• CSR reveals shared values.

Page 15: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Avoiding Constituent Churn

• Constituents best for organizations when neutral or supportive.

• Constituent churn is when they mobilize against an organization.

• Churn increases the cost of operating.• Churn can force behavior change — no

financial gain from that.

Page 16: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Role of Constituent Expectations

• Constituents hold expectations for organizational performance.

• Organizations can try to shape expectations.• Constituent expectations are constraints for

organizations.

Page 17: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Expectation Gaps

• Expectation gap occurs when performance does not match expectations.

• Sethi (1979) calls these legitimacy gaps.

Page 18: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Types of Expectation Gaps

• Perception Gaps: constituents unaware of policies and behaviors that meet expectations.

• Reality Gaps: organizational policies and behaviors do not match constituent expectations.

Page 19: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Negative Consequence

• Constituent churn.– example: PepsiCo in Burma/Myanmar

• Organization can face protests and boycotts.

Page 20: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Positive Potential

• Anticipate and prevent gaps.– example: Chiquita and Rainforest Alliance with

Better Banana Project.

• Organization becomes leader on the social concern.

• Social concern becomes differentiating factors from competitors.

Page 21: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

How to Anticipate Expectation Gaps

• Scan by listening to constituents about their social concerns.

• Evaluate likelihood and impact of social concerns.

• Anticipate, from research, which social concern might emerge as important.

• Apply issues management to social concerns.

Page 22: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Strategic Use of Social Concerns

• Social concerns are value based.• Organization’s values must reflect the values

of the social concern.• Constituents with those values are then drawn

to the organization.

Page 23: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Mechanism for Preventing Gaps

Step One: values advocacy.• Publicly promotes a social concern/value.• Reinforces importance of the social

concern/value.

Page 24: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Mechanism for Preventing Gaps

Step Two: embody the social concern/value.• Organizational actions and policies reflect the

social concern/value.• Constituents “see” the social concerns/values

in the organization allowing identification.• If effective, operating environment is more

supportive.

Page 25: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Step One: Emerging value is identified and selected

Society Value Cluster

Corporate Value Cluster

Page 26: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Step 2: Same value is developed in the corporation

Society Value Cluster

Corporate Value Cluster

Page 27: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Step 3: Selected value is promoted, including

corporation’s use of the value

Society Value Cluster

Corporate Value Cluster

Public promotion of selected value

Page 28: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Step 4: Stakeholders perceive their connection to the

corporation through overlapping values

Stakeholder Corporation

Page 29: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Cons of Linking CSR to PR

• CSR is tainted when linked to PR and reputation building.

• PR’s “ethical problems” make for a bad fit with CSR.

Page 30: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Pros of Linking CSR to PR

• PR helps management listen to constituents.• PR helps to create awareness of CSR.• PR can build legitimacy for CSR.

Page 31: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Legitimacy Procurement Model

• Value in third-party endorsements such as certification like Fair Trade.

• Third-party endorsements build legitimacy for CSR efforts.

• PR can help to promote those endorsements.

Page 32: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Types of Publics

• Apathetic, inattentive on most issues.• Hot-issue, active on issues that involve almost

everyone/are widely discussed in the mainstream media.

• Single-issue, are active on one or a small set of issues.

• All-issue, are active on all issues (Grunig, 1989; 2005).

Page 33: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Relevance to CSR Promotion

• Targets for CSR include:

⁻ trendy: the hot-issue publics when social concern is widely known

⁻ committed: the single-issue and all-issue publics when the social concern is the single issue

Page 34: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Trendy Publics

• Limited interest in and knowledge of the social concern.

• Want their actions to reflect social concern.• Allows them to feel better about their actions.• Fairly easy to win their support.

Page 35: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Committed Publics

• Social concerns are important values for them.• Want organizations that have same level of

commitment.• Difficult to win their support.• More realistic goal is to prevent their

opposition to the organization (churn).• Refer to the Legitimacy Procurement Model

for a more detailed discussion.

Page 36: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Reflection Points

• Why does the organization’s commitment to CSR matter?

• How can constituents tell if an organization is committed to CSR?

• How can PR influence constituent perceptions of CSR?

Page 37: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Reflection Points

• Why are greenwashing and bluewashing relevant to discussions of CSR?

• What is the role of Committed Publics in keeping CSR “honest?”

• Can a company respected for CSR retain that respect when it is purchased by corporation not known for CSR?

Page 38: Chapter 13 Corporate Social Responsibility:  A New Driver for Public Relations 

Reflection Points

• How have companies such as Patagonia and the Body Shop built such strong reputations for CSR?

• Do the motives for CSR really matter?• Who is benefiting from corporate CSR efforts?