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"Implement the green strategies outlined in Dan Esty's and Andrew Winston's bestseller Green to Gold" Hard-nosed business advice for gaining competitive advantage through sustainability action in buildings and operations, information technology, product design, sourcing, manufacturing, logistics and transportation, marketing, accounting, and other key business functions Whether you are a climate change skeptic or an environmentalist, sustainability issues cannot be ignored in today's corporate world. With rising energy and natural resource costs, intensified regulations, investor pressures, and a growing demand for environmentally friendly products, sustainability is no longer an option--it's a business imperative. Unlike many green business books, the Playbook skips the environmental ideology and deals exclusively with tools and strategies that have been shown to cut costs, reduce risks, drive revenues, and build brand identity. * Builds on Dan Esty and Andrew Winston's prizewinning Green to Gold, which has become a business classic and a staple of management training across the world. * Shows in detail how each business function or department can achieve an eco-advantage over the competition * Offers frameworks, checklists, and action plans applicable to any business-big or small, in manufacturing or services The Green to Gold Business Playbook gives you the tools to make green work-and work profitably-for your business.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2011
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Epigraph
Dedication
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One: Introduction
Chapter 1: Why Every Business Needs an Eco-Strategy
Chapter 2: How to Use This Book
Part Two: Gear Up: What Leaders Need to Know
Chapter 3: Building a Winning Eco-Advantage Strategy: Top 10 Action Items
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 4: Making the Internal Business Case for Going Greener
BASIC PLAYS: OUTLINE YOUR CASE
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: SUPPORT THE CASE WITH NONFINANCIAL DATA
ADVANCED PLAYS: SHARPEN THE PENCIL
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Part Three: Analyze: Identify Your Eco-Risks and Opportunities
Chapter 5: Spot the Eco-Issues that Could Impact Your Bottom Line
BASIC PLAYS: KNOW WHAT ISSUES MATTER TO YOU
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: PRIORITIZE ISSUES
ADVANCED PLAYS: REFINE AND REVISIT
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 6: Assess and Measure Your Environmental Impacts
BASIC PLAYS: UNDERSTAND YOUR METRICS AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
INTERMEDIATE PLAY: CONDUCTING LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENTS
ADVANCED PLAY: EXTEND THE ANALYSIS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 7: Benchmark Your Performance against Competitors and Best Practices
BASIC PLAY: CONDUCT A RAPID ASSESSMENT
INTERMEDIATE PLAY: BENCHMARK AGAINST PEERS
ADVANCED PLAYS: DEEPEN THE ANALYSIS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Part Four: Strategize: How Each Business Function Can Benefit and Contribute
Chapter 8: Office Activities
BASIC PLAYS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS
ADVANCED PLAYS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 9: Buildings and Facilities
BASIC PLAYS: HARVEST LOW-HANGING FRUIT
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: GET STRATEGIC
ADVANCED PLAYS: INTEGRATE SYSTEMS AND BUILD GREEN
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 10: Information Technology
BASIC PLAYS: FIND LOW-HANGING FRUIT
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: TACKLE BIG COSTS AND FIND BIG SAVINGS
ADVANCED PLAYS: USE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY TO DRIVE ECO-ADVANTAGE
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 11: Product Design
BASIC PLAYS: BUILD CAPACITY INTO DESIGN FOR THE ENVIRONMENT
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: GET CREATIVE
ADVANCED PLAYS: CREATE NEW PRODUCTS AND SERVICES EMPLOYING ADVANCED GREEN DESIGN
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 12: Sourcing and Procurement
BASIC PLAYS: IDENTIFY ISSUES AND SUPPLIERS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: ENGAGE SUPPLIERS
ADVANCED PLAYS: EXPAND SCOPE AND REACH
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 13: Manufacturing and Processing
BASIC PLAYS: USE A GREEN LENS TO IMPROVE ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN OPERATIONS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: GET LEANER BY GOING GREEN
ADVANCED PLAYS: TAKE EFFICIENCY TO NEW HEIGHTS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 14: Logistics and Transport
BASIC PLAYS: SEIZE LOW-COST, HIGH-RETURN OPPORTUNITIES
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: DRIVE BIGGER RETURNS THROUGH MORE EFFICIENT SYSTEMS
ADVANCED PLAYS: OPTIMIZE AND INNOVATE
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 15: Marketing and Sales
BASIC PLAYS: LEARN BEFORE YOU LEAP
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: SEIZE THE OPPORTUNITIES
ADVANCED PLAYS: TRANSFORM THE MARKETPLACE
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 16: Legal and Regulatory Affairs
BASIC PLAYS: COMPLY WITH ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: BE PROACTIVE
ADVANCED PLAYS: GET AHEAD OF THE CURVE
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 17: Accounting and Finance
BASIC PLAYS: LOOK AT FINANCIAL ANALYSES THROUGH A SUSTAINABILITY LENS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: EXPLORE NEW SUSTAINABILITY TOOLS
ADVANCED PLAYS: APPLY THE SUSTAINABILITY LENS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Part Five: Mobilize: Execute and Engage
Chapter 18: Create an Action Plan—and Execute
BASIC: BUILD THE EXECUTION PLAN
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: EXPAND EXECUTION CAPABILITIES
ADVANCED PLAYS: SUSTAINABILITY TRANSFORMATION
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 19: Build Your Climate Change Plan
BASIC AND INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS FROM COMPANY OPERATIONS
ADVANCED PLAYS: LOOK BEYOND YOUR OWN OPERATIONS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 20: Mobilize Employees and Build an Eco-Advantage Culture
BASIC PLAYS: LAY THE GROUNDWORK
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: BUILD A TRACK RECORD OF SUCCESS
ADVANCED PLAYS: EXPAND THE NETWORK
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 21: Engaging Stakeholders
BASIC PLAYS: INITIAL STEPS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: ENGAGE IN STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS
ADVANCED PLAYS: FORMALIZE ENGAGEMENT EFFORTS AND EXPAND PARTNERSHIPS
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Part Six: Optimize: Evaluate, Report, and Reassess
Chapter 22: Communicate and Report Results
BASIC PLAYS: PRIORITIZE INFORMATION NEEDS
INTERMEDIATE PLAYS: REPORT ON RESULTS
ADVANCED PLAYS: FORGE NEW GROUND
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Chapter 23: Celebrate Success and Promote Continuous Improvement
Notes
PART ONE. INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1. WHY EVERY BUSINESS NEEDS AN ECO-STRATEGY
PART TWO. GEAR UP: WHAT LEADERS NEED TO KNOW
CHAPTER 3. BUILDING A WINNING ECO-ADVANTAGE STRATEGY: TOP 10 ACTION ITEMS
CHAPTER 4. MAKING THE INTERNAL BUSINESS CASE FOR GOING GREENER
PART THREE. ANALYZE: IDENTIFY YOUR ECO-RISKS AND OPPORTUNITIES
CHAPTER 5. SPOT THE ECO-ISSUES THAT COULD IMPACT YOUR BOTTOM LINE
CHAPTER 6. ASSESS AND MEASURE YOUR ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
PART FOUR. STRATEGIZE: HOW EACH BUSINESS FUNCTION CAN BENEFIT AND CONTRIBUTE
CHAPTER 8. OFFICE ACTIVITIES
CHAPTER 9. BUILDINGS AND FACILITIES
CHAPTER 10. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
CHAPTER 11. PRODUCT DESIGN
CHAPTER 12. SOURCING AND PROCUREMENT
CHAPTER 13. MANUFACTURING AND PROCESSING
CHAPTER 14. LOGISTICS AND TRANSPORT
CHAPTER 15. MARKETING AND SALES
CHAPTER 16. LEGAL AND REGULATORY AFFAIRS
CHAPTER 17. ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE
PART FIVE. MOBILIZE: EXECUTE AND ENGAGE
CHAPTER 18. CREATE AN ACTION PLAN—AND EXECUTE
CHAPTER 19. BUILD YOUR CLIMATE CHANGE PLAN
CHAPTER 20. MOBILIZE EMPLOYEES AND BUILD AND ECO-ADVANTAGE CULTURE
CHAPTER 21. ENGAGING STAKEHOLDERS
PART SIX. OPTIMIZE: EVALUATE, REPORT, AND REASSESS
CHAPTER 22. COMMUNICATE AND REPORT RESULTS
CHAPTER 23. CELEBRATE SUCCESS AND PROMOTE CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
Index
This book is printed on acid-free paper made from 100 percent post-consumer recycled pulp with soy ink.
Copyright © 2011 by Daniel C. Esty and P. J. Simmons. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey. Published simultaneously in Canada.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Esty, Daniel, 1959– The green to gold business playbook : how to implement sustainability practices for bottom-line results in every business function / Daniel Esty, P.J. Simmons. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 978-0-470-59075-1(cloth); ISBN 978-1-118-01072-3 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-01088-4 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-01089-1 (ebk) 1. Industrial management—Environmental aspects. 2. Corporations—Environmental aspects. 3. Business enterprises—Environmental aspects. I. Simmons, P. J., 1967– II. Title. HD30.255.E883 2011 658.4′083—dc 222010042187
The authors have offset the greenhouse gas emissions associated with the printing and distribution of this book through the purchase of carbon reduction credits from San Francisco–based 3Degrees Group, Inc. 3Degrees, a leading carbon offset provider, is supplying offsets from a landfill gas capture and electric energy generation project in Denton, Texas. All carbon offsets generated will be registered and verified by the Climate Action Reserve’s Landfill Project Protocol.
To our parents
John and Katharine Esty
Patrica Bonin and E. Joseph Simmons, Jr.
Preface
When we set out to write Green to Gold: How Smart Companies Use Environmental Strategy to Innovate, Create Value, and Build Competitive Advantage, very few people in the business world were focused on environmental issues or broader sustainability concerns as a core element of strategy. But in the intervening years, in part spurred on by Green to Gold, many business leaders have come to recognize the importance of climate change, water, air pollution, waste management, land use, chemical exposures, food safety, and other environmental issues to marketplace success. Companies face evolving regulatory requirements, natural resource scarcities, shifting consumer expectations, rising demands from business customers who are “greening” their supply chains, and other sustainability pressures that shape the nature of competition.
Interest in green business has expanded considerably. Top executives in almost every large corporation now recognize that the environment and sustainability issues must be part of their business strategies. Leaders of mid-sized and even small companies increasingly find value in applying an environmental lens to their business activities. The number of entrepreneurs launching companies designed to sell environmental goods and services or traditional products with an environmental twist has expanded exponentially. Almost every city now offers green dry cleaners, green lawn care services, green printers, and green versions of many other day-to-day products and services.
Of course, interest in the environment generally and a focus on bringing green thinking into the business domain does not proceed in a linear fashion. Over the last several years, the significant worldwide economic downturn has caused some companies to pull back on their sustainability focus—and inspired Andrew to write Green Recovery (Harvard Business Press, 2009), which reformulated the green business case for tight times.
We were not surprised by this flow following the ebb of the green tide. But we were impressed by how many companies maintained, or even accelerated, their commitment to going green through the downturn, and how many others quickly reestablished sustainability as a priority as the recovery kicked in. The sustained interest in corporate environmental strategy should not, however, have come as a surprise. Eco-efficiency—the use of an environmental lens to look for opportunities to eliminate waste and inefficiency—has special value in a downturn. Lower energy consumption, reduced scrap, and more efficient use of every input in a production process cuts costs, and those savings drop straight to the bottom line.
Environmental activities are also a popular way to maintain employee morale during difficult times. Companies in many sectors and countries are ramping up their sustainability activities as a way to demonstrate to their workforce a commitment to corporate social responsibility and to being an attractive employer over the long term—even as layoffs and other cuts occur.
The quick reemergence of the environment and sustainability as central corporate strategy agenda items does not mean that interest in the environment and the societal commitment to respond to these challenges has been strengthened across all issues and in all places. Quite to the contrary, the United States seems to have broken down in its ability to address climate change in a thoughtful and serious manner. Moreover, significant uncertainties remain about the best path forward with regard to chemical exposures, waste, packaging, and many other concerns. And companies find themselves facing new challenges, evolving science, and changing public perceptions about what needs to be addressed and~how.
The Green to Gold Business Playbook, which Dan wrote with P.J. Simmons, seeks to respond to these questions, building on the foundation laid in the original Green to Gold. This new book offers clear and pragmatic guidance on how to bring sustainability into each and every business function in a manner that delivers tangible results. Green to Gold reached many more people than we could ever have dreamed of, but many of the executives that have used it as a strategic template have asked us how to drive that kind of thinking into all aspects of the company. We are pleased to see the work that we started going in so many directions. We hope this new book will serve as a worthy companion to and extension of the strategies and tools we’ve already offered.
Dan Esty New Haven, CT
Andrew Winston Greenwich, CT
February 2011
Acknowledgments
Two names appear on the cover of this book as authors, but in fact, hundreds of people have contributed to its content. We are grateful for the ideas put forward by sustainability experts across the world, including the dozens of people whose stories are told in these pages. Indeed, The Green to Gold Business Playbook offers a distillation of best practices from many companies and individuals in corporations large and small who have been doing the hard work of bringing an environmental focus or a broader sustainability lens to their day-to-day operations—and in doing so, have helped clarify what works and what doesn’t in the push to deliver “green to gold” results.
The Playbook} builds on Dan Esty and Andrew Winston’s pathbreaking book, Green to Gold: How Smart Companies Use Environmental Strategy to Innovate, Create Value, and Build Competitive Advantage. Thus, a great debt of gratitude goes to Andrew Winston whose many contributions to the original book provided the platform on which this volume is constructed. As a professor, it is a great joy to see a former student’s career take off from the academic launch pad, and Dan therefore takes great pride in Andrew’s emergence as a leading voice in the push to make sustainability a core element of business strategy.
We are also grateful for the important role played by Peter Price-Thomas, who led the research team during the project’s first year. Peter’s thinking about how best to present the green to gold story to a broad-based audience—building on his cutting-edge work with The Natural Step across Europe—helped shape the book in significant ways. We thank him (and his wife Annalise) for numerous contributions to the Playbook.
Clara Fang’s role in the Playbook, beginning during her days as student at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies but continuing beyond, was both broad and deep. Her thoughts and ideas helped to shape every chapter. From chasing down important materials to drafting sections of the book, she played a critical role in pulling the final manuscript together. Clara is on her way to being a leading light in the field of sustainability, and we are deeply appreciative of all she did as a key part of our research team.
The intellectual content found in the Playbook draws from a great many sources above and beyond Green to Gold. A significant number of the frameworks and other analytic tools came out of the work of Esty Environmental Partners (EEP) (www.EstyEP.com), the sustainability strategy consulting firm that Dan launched in the wake of the considerable marketplace interest in Green to Gold and its introduction of the concept of Eco-Advantage. Dan’s partners at EEP—George Favaloro, Amy Longsworth, and David Lubin—have made contributions both individually and collectively to substantial aspects of the content in this book. The rest of the EEP team, including Alicia Chin, Hannah Doran, Zeke Hart, Britt Harter, Sandra Lauterbach, John Masland, Lauren Sinatra, and Yamama Raza have all helped to refine the intellectual content and battle-test the frameworks and strategies that make this book an indispensible guide for anyone working on pollution control and natural resource management issues in a corporate setting.
The essence of the Playbook is its grounding in real-world business practice. Indeed, the seasoned executives at the companies with which EEP has worked and that comprise the Corporate Eco-Forum, which P.J. Simmons chairs, were an important source of inspiration for the ideas in this book and provided many of the case examples. We owe an enormous debt to this group for their commitment to sharing lessons learned and accelerating the spread of corporate sustainability best practices. In particular, we wish to thank the executive teams at: 3M, Abbott Laboratories, Alcoa, American Eagle, ArcelorMittal, AT&T, Aviva, Avon, Bayer, Bissell, BP, BT Group, Catterton Partners, Chevron, Clorox, Coca-Cola Enterprises, The Coca-Cola Company, Darden Restaurants, Dell, Delhaize Group, Deloitte, Deutsche Bank, Dimensional Fund Advisors, Disney, Dow, Duke Energy, Eastman Kodak, Ecolab, E.&J. Gallo, Ernst & Young, FedEx, Fidelity Investments, Ford Motor, Gamesa, General Electric, Hanesbrands, Hannaford, Harrah’s Entertainment, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intuit, IKEA, Jones Apparel Group, Jones Lang LaSalle, Kaiser Permanente, Kimberly Clark, KPMG, LANXESS, Levi Strauss, Live Earth, Lockheed Martin, McKesson, Microsoft, Motorola, Naya Waters, Nestle Waters North America, NetJets, News Corp., NextEra Energy, Nokia, Northrop Grumman, Oracle, Peabody Energy, PG&E, Philips Electronics, Procter & Gamble, Sabre, Sanmina-SCI, SAP, S.C. Johnson, Scotts Miracle-Gro, Shaklee, Sony, Spectra Energy, Sprint Nextel, State Farm Insurance, SunGard, Swiss Re, Sybase, Symantec, Tata Consultancy Services, TechTurn, Tiffany & Co., Timex, TPG Capital, Transocean, U.S. Postal Service, United Launch Alliance, United Technologies, Veolia Water, Verizon, Walmart, Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., Waste Management, Wells Fargo, Weyerhaeuser, Xerox, and Yahoo!.
We wish to extend special thanks to the individual leaders who have been particularly generous with their time and insights—either through the Corporate Eco Forum, EEP’s Sustainability Innovators Working Group, or both: Kevin Kramer and Jackie O’Brien at Alcoa, Jason Schmitt at ArcelorMittal, Toby Redshaw at Aviva, Mary Armstrong at Boeing, J.P. Rangaswami at BT Group, Nancy Tuor and Joe Danko at CH2M HILL, Jeff Seabright, Ben Jordan, and Lisa Manley at The Coca-Cola Company, Megan Hellstedt at Delhaize, Jeff Baer and Andrew Stokes at Deutsche Bank, Beth Stevens and Aaron Frank at Disney, John Matthews and Moe Bechard at Diversey, Neil Hawkins and Anne Wallin at Dow, Roberta Bowman, Michelle Abbott, and Jenny Ward at Duke Energy, Rob Carter and Mitch Jackson at FedEx, Sue Cischke and John Viera at Ford Motor Company, Ann Klee and Kate Brass at GE, Jim Miller at Google, Wayne Balta and Jackie Jasiota at IBM, Paulette Frank at Johnson & Johnson, Lauralee Martin and Michael Jordan at Jones Lang LaSalle, Len Sauers at Procter & Gamble, Rob Bernard and Tony Scott at Microsoft, Jil Zilligen at Shaklee, Gavin Neath and Karen Hamilton at Unilever, Matt Kistler, Beth Keck, and Shannon Frederick at Walmart, and Patty Calkins at Xerox.
Much of the supporting research for this volume was done at Yale University, and Dan is grateful for the help provided by the University and a number of its leaders including President Richard Levin, and Deans Peter Crane, Harold Koh, Robert Post, and Gus Speth. For more than a decade, Dan’s team at the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy (YCELP) (www.yale.edu/envirocenter) has played a key role in advancing thinking on the corporate sustainability agenda. Special thanks in this regard go to Ysella Edyvean, who managed the Playbook research project with great skill and energy over multiple years and many ups and downs. Thanks as well as to Bill Dornbos, Christine Kim, Rachel Easton, Susanne Stahl, and a long list of YCELP research assistants who have played roles in gathering the facts, building the case studies, and supporting the effort to produce this book including Luke Bassett, Bryant Cannon, Anuj Desai, Patricia Devlin, Mary Fischer, Erin Burns Gill, George Haddad, David Henry, Maisah Khan, Ainsley Lloyd, Dustin Meyer, Anthony Moffa, Ian Sprague, Kristin Tracz, Dylan Walsh, and especially James Zhang, who was instrumental in helping us produce the buildings and facilities chapter.
Additional research and support for this book came from the Center for Business and the Environment at Yale (www.yale.edu/CBEY). The CBEY research team, led by Bryan Garcia and supported by Amy Badner, contributed significantly to the ideas and case studies that unfold in the pages that follow and thanks go to Jesse Burkhardt, Raman Jha, Shazan Jiwa, Priyanka Juneja, and Igor Lukashov. Two research assistants in particular, Brent Peich and Kari Twaite, made heroic contributions. Brent worked with us tirelessly and cheerfully for over a year, adeptly handling every project tossed his way, and was pivotal in shaping the information technology chapter. Kari, too, made many outstanding contributions, especially in the areas of impact assessment and supply chain management.
In recognizing that nothing concentrates the mind like having to teach a subject, Dan would additionally like to thank all of the students who have taken his course, Environmental Management and Strategic Advantage, over the past decade at INSEAD as well as Yale. And special thanks go to Steve Ramsey who has co-taught this course with Dan for a number of years. Steve’s perspective on the corporate sustainability challenges and opportunities—building on his career in the corporate sustainability realm, including 17 years as vice president for environment, health, and safety at General Electric—helped shape the flow of this book in numerous ways. The teaching assistants for the Esty-Ramsey course also provided insights, suggestions, and case studies that helped to clarify the critical concepts, frameworks, and strategies discussed in this book. Thanks in this regard go to Audrey Davenport, Stuart DeCew, Cat Manzo, and Anna Palazij.
The intellectual platform on which the Playbook stands owes its existence to a further set of academic colleagues. Professor Michael Porter at Harvard Business School, in particular, has been a source of inspiration and support for more than two decades. His competitiveness-based strategy model is foundational to the Eco-Advantage framework around which this book is built. The late C.K. Prahalad, one of the world’s greatest management thinkers and a founding advisor to the Corporate Eco Forum, also leaves an extraordinary legacy of intellectual achievement on which we have tried to build—including his observation in 2009 that sustainability is becoming the “key driver of innovation.”
Other scholars working on the corporate sustainability challenge whose ideas have contributed to the Playbook include: Tima Bansal, Lori Bennear, Marc Epstein, Tom Gladwin, Neil Gunningham, Stuart Hart, Andy Hoffman, Andy King, Mike Lennox, Tom Lyon, John Maxwell, David Orr, Eric Orts, Aseem Prakash, Forest Reinhardt, Rob Repetto, Ulrich Steger, Mike Toffel, and David Vogel.
The need to bring an environmental focus to the business world has been slow to develop but has now taken on great momentum due to the contributions of many other writers working in the environmental realm. In particular, we would like to thank: Ray Anderson, Alan AtKisson, Wendell Berry, Bill Blackburn, Craig Canine, Gregg Easterbrook, John Elkington, Chris Flavin, Hilary French, Gil Friend, Paul Hawken, Matthew Kiernan, Cary Krosinksy, Fred Krupp, Jonathan Lash, Amory Lovins, Hunter Lovins, Joel Makower, Bill McDonough, Bill McKibben, Ron Pernick, Carl Safina, Andy Savitz, Auden Schendler, Stephan Schmidheiny, Adam Werbach, Clint Wilder, and Pieter Winsemius. In addition, a number of journalists have shaped our thinking and helped to broaden understanding about how the environment and sustainability fold into corporate strategy, including: Natalie Angier, Jeff Ball, Felicity Barringer, Keith Bradsher, Frances Cairncross, Roger Cohn, Marla Cone, Tim Egan, Juliet Eilperin, Mark Gunther, Fiona Harvey, James Kantor, Verlyn Klinkenborg, Tom Knudson, Betsy Kolbert, Fred Pearce, Michael Pollan, David Quammen, Andy Revkin, Libby Rosenthal, Kit Seelye, Keith Schneider, Phil Shabecoff, Vijay Vaitheeswaran, Bryan Walsh, Mike Weiscoff, Ted Williams, and Carl Zimmer.
We also wish to thank several colleagues who have helped us over the years to refine our thinking and sharpen our understanding of the theory and practice of sustainability. Dan wishes to thank Paul Anastas, Mark Ashton, Gordon Binder, Ben Cashore, Marianne Chertow, Lisa Curran, Don Elliott, Bill Ellis, Landis Gabel, Brad Gentry, Tom Graedel, Hank Habicht, Ethan Kapstein, Matt Kotchen, Doug Kysar, Reid Lifset, Rob Mendelsohn, Dick Morgenstern, Bill Nordhaus, Bill Reilly, Carol Rose, and Anastasia O’Rourke. P.J. thanks Jessica Bailey, Boris Chen, Aimée Christensen, Kate Cook, Geoffrey Dabelko, Renaud des Rosiers, Tim Griffin, Ben Grant, Catherine Greener, Jeff Hittner, Heather Hurlburt, Priscilla Lewis, Michael Northrop, M.R. Rangaswami, Sonal Shah, Rachel Silverstein, Michael Terrell, David Sandalow, and Madhavan Vasudevan.
We have also received assistance in many forms from our publisher, John Wiley & Sons. We are especially grateful for the unswerving support and sage guidance of our editor Richard Narramore, editorial assistant Lydia Dimitriadis, and Production Manager Maureen Drexel.
No book of this kind could be produced without funding to support the research and writing. We are deeply grateful to Buddy Fletcher and the Fletcher Foundation, the GE Foundation, André Heinz and the Heinz Family Foundation, Jesse Johnson and the Johnson Family Foundation. Special appreciation also goes to Jesse and Betsy Fink whose support for the outreach effort for Green to Gold—produced a good bit of the material for The Green to Gold Business Playbook.
Special thanks to Marge Camera at the Yale Law School without whose help this book would never have come into being. And a particular note of appreciation to Joe Colonnese who helped Dan move from one project to the next over many years—and has just retired.
Deep gratitude also goes to our families and friends who put up with the long nights and weekends consumed by this project. Dan thanks his wife Elizabeth and children Sarah, Thomas, and Jonathan. P.J. owes the biggest thanks to Noah Aberlin, who has been his rock. Noah provided much-needed daily doses of encouragement, patience, perspective, kindness, and humor, and was a constant inspiration. P.J. is also grateful for the unswerving support of Robert and Mary Beth Aberlin, Kathryn Aberlin, Bruce Barney, Doug Bell and Danielle Briggs, Anisa Costa, Janelle Kellman, Laurie Kohn and Chris Murphy, Aidan and Caleb Kohn-Murphy, David Laudati, Priscilla Lewis, Christian Marsh and Amanda Monchamp, Dane Nichols, Jove Oliver, Biliana Pehlivanova, Jennifer Prediger, Juliet Sampson and Simon Mays-Smith, Marylene Smeets, Barbara and Ben Simmons, Miaoruo Simmons, and Stephen Thirolle. And P.J. is indebted to the following mentors, whose influence has been greater than they will ever know: Steve Dennis, John Harper, Stephen Heintz, Vida Johnson, Thomas E. Lovejoy, Walter Lubelczyk, Jessica T. Mathews, David Maxwell, M.R. Rangaswami, William K. Reilly, David Sandalow, E. Joseph Simmons Jr., and Sarah M. Terry.
Finally, we would like to thank our readers in advance. The Green to Gold Business Playbook is intended to be not simply a guide to corporate sustainability but also a constantly updated and refined resource for the thousands of companies and individuals working to build a sustainability focus into all corners of the corporate domain. We are committed to supporting their efforts with a website that provides a platform for keeping the material introduced here refreshed. So we invite you to make suggestions, provide feedback, and introduce your best practices at www.greentogoldplaybook.com.
Part One
Introduction
Chapter 1
Why Every Business Needs an Eco-Strategy
CEO Jack Welch of General Electric (GE) seemingly could do no wrong in the 1990s. Named Fortune magazine's “Manager of the Century” in 1999, he presided over a company whose market value grew from $14 billion to over $400 billion in 20 years. While Welch pushed the company to manage environmental issues more rigorously, he didn't make everyone's Christmas card list. Critics saw GE as an environmental bad actor based on Welch's endless battles with the Environmental Protection Agency over whether and how to clean up the dioxin and other pollutants GE factories had dumped in the Hudson and Housatonic rivers decades earlier.
Welch's take-no-prisoners approach to the EPA left the company in a difficult strategic position. Regulators watched the company like hawks. Political leaders shied away from being seen as too friendly with the company. The GE human resources group began to notice that top recruits turned them down, citing doubts about the company's core values. Pitched legal battles cost the company tens of millions of dollars.
When Jeff Immelt took over as CEO of GE in 2001, he reversed course, working to make GE a world leader on corporate environmental matters. Today, many corporate sustainability experts cite GE's environmental management system as a model. The company's “digital cockpit” of performance metrics—scalable from a particular production line in a single factory to the entire company—wins praise for being top of the line. GE executives no longer see the environment as a burden with regulations to follow, costs to manage, and risks to mitigate. Indeed, they see environmental issues as opportunities for competitive advantage and marketplace success. As Immelt likes to say: “Green is green.”
Jeff Immelt knows what he is talking about. Under his leadership, GE's “ecomagination” line of products and services has blossomed. With high-efficiency jet engines and locomotives, wind turbines, water purification technologies, solar power systems, and other clean energy equipment, GE has become a world-leading “environmental solutions” provider. Immelt's push to meet the government, business-to-business, and consumer demand for “green” does not mean that he is secretly a member of the Sierra Club or otherwise an “environmentalist.”
No, his logic is pure business. Immelt sees the high-growth, high-margin ecomagination line as fundamental to GE's future ability to deliver value to its shareholders.1 And while parts of the company have struggled in recent years, GE now earns over $20 billion per year from its ecomagination products and services with better than 20 percent annual growth in these lines of business.
REIMAGINING A BUSINESS THROUGH A GREEN LENS
GE's ecomagination success comes from the fact that it looks at environmental challenges through the eyes of the customer. All across the world, pollution control, energy efficiency, and careful stewardship of natural resources have become critical agenda items. Thus, GE's pitch of cutting-edge, efficiency-minded, less-polluting products grabs the customer's attention. The GEnx aircraft engine, for example, burns 15 percent less fuel, emits 30 percent less nitrous oxide, runs 30 percent quieter, and costs less to maintain than the prior generation of engines.2 For an airline, replacing older jet engines with the GEnx model can mean fuel cost savings that run to the tens of millions of dollars.
GE's environmental commitment continues to grow with more than 80 product lines now bearing the ecomagination brand, up from 17 in 2005. And the company spends $1.5 billion each year on research and development aimed at generating additional eco-friendly technologies and services.3
You don't have to be a corporate giant to uncover the competitive differentiation that derives from bringing sustainability into strategy—what Dan Esty and Andrew Winston dubbed “Eco-Advantage” in . Smaller companies can also benefit from going green. Take Curtis Packaging Corporation, a 165-year-old Connecticut-based company with 188 employees that produces folding cardboard cartons for products such as cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, gourmet foods, and golf balls. In 2003, CEO Don Droppo decided to put sustainability at the heart of the company's business strategy. Rebranding itself as “luxuriously responsible,” the company switched to renewable energy, reduced waste and emissions, and incorporated eco-friendly materials into its products. By 2007, annual sales had doubled to $47 million. The Curtis management team attributes the gains to improved product quality and environmental goodwill, which secured customer loyalty and brought in new business partners.
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!