Managing Corporate Social Responsibility: A Communication Approach
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has become central to many businesses as they negotiate in an increasingly global marketplace. This book offers a strategic, communication-centred approach to integrating CSR into organizations, founded in stakeholder engagement and dialogue. It is structured around the CSR Process Model, which guides readers through the research, development, implementation, and evaluation of CSR initiatives. Corporate reputations are increasingly dependent upon CSR, which in turn signals the importance of this topic for organizational success and the need to integrate stakeholders into this process. Lively, international examples are used throughout and are drawn from a variety of industries to illustrate the challenges of doing CSR well.

Topics covered include maximizing the use of social media and traditional media; creating strategic initiatives that reflect the organization’s missions and its capabilities; communicating to promote CSR efforts; collaborating with third party organizations; assessing internal and external stakeholder expectations and involving stakeholders in CSR efforts; and managing challenges to an organization’s CSR record. This highly accessible book draws from a variety of disciplines to illustrate how corporate social responsibility should be viewed as an ongoing process grounded in effective communication practices.

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Managing Corporate Social Responsibility: A Communication Approach
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has become central to many businesses as they negotiate in an increasingly global marketplace. This book offers a strategic, communication-centred approach to integrating CSR into organizations, founded in stakeholder engagement and dialogue. It is structured around the CSR Process Model, which guides readers through the research, development, implementation, and evaluation of CSR initiatives. Corporate reputations are increasingly dependent upon CSR, which in turn signals the importance of this topic for organizational success and the need to integrate stakeholders into this process. Lively, international examples are used throughout and are drawn from a variety of industries to illustrate the challenges of doing CSR well.

Topics covered include maximizing the use of social media and traditional media; creating strategic initiatives that reflect the organization’s missions and its capabilities; communicating to promote CSR efforts; collaborating with third party organizations; assessing internal and external stakeholder expectations and involving stakeholders in CSR efforts; and managing challenges to an organization’s CSR record. This highly accessible book draws from a variety of disciplines to illustrate how corporate social responsibility should be viewed as an ongoing process grounded in effective communication practices.

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Managing Corporate Social Responsibility: A Communication Approach

Managing Corporate Social Responsibility: A Communication Approach

Managing Corporate Social Responsibility: A Communication Approach

Managing Corporate Social Responsibility: A Communication Approach

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Overview

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has become central to many businesses as they negotiate in an increasingly global marketplace. This book offers a strategic, communication-centred approach to integrating CSR into organizations, founded in stakeholder engagement and dialogue. It is structured around the CSR Process Model, which guides readers through the research, development, implementation, and evaluation of CSR initiatives. Corporate reputations are increasingly dependent upon CSR, which in turn signals the importance of this topic for organizational success and the need to integrate stakeholders into this process. Lively, international examples are used throughout and are drawn from a variety of industries to illustrate the challenges of doing CSR well.

Topics covered include maximizing the use of social media and traditional media; creating strategic initiatives that reflect the organization’s missions and its capabilities; communicating to promote CSR efforts; collaborating with third party organizations; assessing internal and external stakeholder expectations and involving stakeholders in CSR efforts; and managing challenges to an organization’s CSR record. This highly accessible book draws from a variety of disciplines to illustrate how corporate social responsibility should be viewed as an ongoing process grounded in effective communication practices.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781118106662
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 09/07/2011
Sold by: JOHN WILEY & SONS
Format: eBook
Pages: 194
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

W. TIMOTHY COOMBS is a Professor in the Nicholson School of Communication at the University of Central Florida in Orlando. He is author of the award-winning Ongoing Crisis Communication (1999), Today’s Public Relations (with Robert Heath, 2006), and Code Red in the Boardroom: Crisis Management as Organizational DNA (2006).

SHERRY J. HOLLADAY is a Professor in the Nicholson School of Communication at the University of Central Florida in Orlando. Her work has been widely published in several journals.

Together, W. Timothy Coombs and Sherry J. Holladay are authors of the award-winning books It’;s Not Just PR: Public Relations in Society (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007) and PR Strategy and Application: Managing Influence (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010), and co-editors of The Handbook of Crisis Communication (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010).

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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xiii

1 Conceptualizing Corporate Social Responsibility 1

Box 1.1: The Sullivan Principles 2

Corporate Social Responsibility: Seeking Parameters 5

Defining CSR 6

Box 1.2: Definition of CSR 8

Benefits and Costs of CSR 9

Two Sides of CSR Cost-Benefit Analysis 9

CSR Costs for Corporations 10

CSR Costs for Society 12

CSR Benefits for Corporations 13

CSR Benefits for Society 14

Winning and Sustaining Support for CSR 14

Other Conceptual Questions about CSR 16

CSR: Modern or Historic? 16

Box 1.3: Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Standards 19

Forms of CSR 20

Where Is CSR’s Home? 22

Should CSR Standards Be Localized or Globalized? 24

Conclusion 27

2 Strategic CSR 29

Characteristics of the Corporation 31

Stakeholder Expectations and the Importance of Organizational Identification 32

Reputational Benefits of CSR 35

Perceived Motives for CSR Initiatives 38

General Strategic Guidance: Approaching the CSR Process as Change Management 44

Everyone Loves a Good Story 45

The CSR Process Model: A Brief Preview 47

3 CSR Scanning and Monitoring 51

Issues Management 53

Scanning and CSR 54

Prioritizing CSR Concerns 54

Monitoring and CSR 57

Scanning and Monitoring in Concert 58

Stakeholder Engagement’s Role in Scanning and Monitoring 58

Conclusion and Critical Questions 60

4 Formative Research 63

Researching Stakeholder Expectations for CSR 67

Box 4.1: MyStarbucksidea CSR Suggestions 68

The Expectation Gap Approach 69

Box 4.2: IKEA Child Labour Code of Conduct 71

Origins of Expectation Gaps 73

Box 4.3: Pinkwashing Detection 75

Relevance of Operant Conditioning Theory to Stakeholder Challenges 77

The Alignment Approach 80

The Counterbalance: Corporate Concerns 85

Conclusion and Critical Questions 85

5 Create the CSR Initiative 89

Selecting the CSR Initiatives: Appreciating the Contestable Nature of CSR 90

Differing CSR Expectations among Stakeholders 90

Stakeholder Salience 91

Box 5.1: Stakeholder Salience 92

What Constitutes CSR? 92

Stakeholder Participation in Decision Making 94

Organizational Justice in the Engagement Process 96

The “Right Amount” of CSR 98

When Employees Challenge CSR: Considering Internal Stakeholders 99

Preparing for Negative Stakeholder Reactions: Message Mapping 101

Developing CSR Objectives 101

Box 5.2: Message-Mapping Template 102

Process versus Outcome Objectives 103

Conclusion and Critical Questions 105

6 Communicate the CSR Initiative 109

CSR Promotional Communication Dilemma 110

Box 6.1: Overview of Corporate-Activist Partnerships 116

Communication Channels for CSR Messaging 116

Overview of Communication Channels for CSR 117

Box 6.2: Social Media Overview 118

Employees as a Communication Channel 122

External Stakeholders as a Communication Channel 123

Strategic Application of Social Media to CSR Communication 124

The Overall CSR Promotional Communication Strategy 128

Annual Reports and CSR Communication 128

Conclusion and Critical Questions 133

7 Evaluation and Feedback 137

Evaluation 138

Assurance and CSR Evaluation 141

Stakeholder Engagement in the Evaluation Process 142

Box 7.1: Musgrave Group Assurance Statement 2006 143

Box 7.2: Basic ROI Formula 145

Considering Return on Investment 145

Feedback 146

Feedback from Stakeholders on the CSR Process 147

The Communication Audit 148

Conclusion and Critical Questions 148

8 CSR Issues 153

Overarching Concerns for CSR Initiatives 154

Responsibility for CSR Initiatives 155

Limitations from Industry, Culture, and Law 157

Industry Standards 157

The Culture and Socioeconomic Context 158

Box 8.1: Culture and Activism 160

The Legal Context 161

Beyond Limitations 161

Parting Thoughts 162

References 165

Index 177 

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“This will become a seminal text that can be used at both undergraduate and graduate levels. It is well-written, incorporates U.S. and European theoretical perspectives on CSR practice, and places it squarely in the domain of strategic communication.”
- Derina R. Holtzhausen, Oklahoma State University

“CSR has become the new mantra of the corporate world. With a strategic and process oriented approach to CSR, this important book provides new research-based insights into the concept, philosophy, and practice of CSR.”
- Winni Johansen, Aarhus University

“Without a sound CSR commitment by management, efforts to communicate CSR are at best facile and at worst manipulative and deceptive. CSR theory reasons that the organization must first be “good” if it is to communicate in ways that can advantage its brand equity and protect it against unwarranted attacks. Coombs and Holladay wisely understand this battlefield and build on it to advance the understanding of what can and must be said to feature businesses’ CSR achievements.”
- Bob Heath, University of Houston

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