Table of Contents
Praise
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Disclosure and Disclaimer
HIP Portfolio Calculations
Introduction
The HIP Approach
Focusing on Impact Adds Business Value
How HIP Is It? Three Questions to Ask of Any Investment
How Does HIP Make Bigger Profits?
How Does HIP Build a Better World?
How HIP Are You?
Are You Ready to Be a HIP Investor?
PART I - GETTING READY FOR YOUR HIP PORTFOLIO
CHAPTER 1 - The Importance of Human Impact to Investors
What Is Human Impact?
A Leading Indicator: Quantifiable Human Impact
The HIP Mindset Is Already Here
Seeing the Light
CHAPTER 2 - Assessing the Global Trends: Why HIP and Why Now?
Nine Billion Customers with Many Unmet Human Needs
Finite Natural Resources Running Out
Everyone Knows Everything All the Time
Demand for Good Is Growing
Is Investing Keeping Pace?
“The Trend Is Your Friend”
PART II - RESEARCHING YOUR HIP PORTFOLIO
CHAPTER 3 - Bringing Products to Market that Solve a Human Need
Health
Wealth
Earth
Equality
Trust
Next Step: Counting the Impacts
CHAPTER 4 - Count the Quantifiable Human, Social, and Environmental Impacts
Health
Wealth
Earth
Equality
Trust
Putting It All Together
CHAPTER 5 - Directly Embed HIP Criteria into Decision Making
Paint a Compelling Business Vision Integrating Human Impact
Manage All Performance with a Comprehensive Balanced Scorecard
Align Human Impact Metrics with Financials
Establish Accountability for HIP Across the Entire Enterprise
Embed HIP Criteria into Every Decision-Making Process
HIP Management Practices: A Predictor of Impact?
Linking Impact and Practices to Profit
CHAPTER 6 - Equate Impacts to Profit and Valuation
The Higher Valuation of Positive Human Impact
Mapping Impact to the Financial Statements
Translating Human Impact to the Income Statement
Capturing Human Impact on the Balance Sheet
How Human Impact Can Alter Demand for—and Pricing of—Share Value
How to Achieve Truly Sustainable Profits
PART III - DESIGNING YOUR HIP PORTFOLIO
CHAPTER 7 - Framing Your Portfolio for Human Impact + Profit
Being Inclusive Can Be More Attractive
How to Complete a HIP Scorecard
The HIP Scorecard Face-Offs
What Happens to a HIP Portfolio that Screens Out “Bad” Companies?
Build Your Own HIP Scorecard
CHAPTER 8 - Growing a HIP Approach Into Your Entire Portfolio
Evaluating Risk for Your Whole Portfolio
Determining Allocations for Your Portfolio
Constructing a HIP Equity Portfolio
Investors Can Customize to Impact Goals
How Sector Weights Can Affect Performance
Designing the Rest of Your HIP Portfolio
Investment Choices beyond Public Equities
Planning for a More HIP World
CHAPTER 9 - How to Make a Future HIP World
A Competitive Race-to-the-Top by Corporations
Expanded Tools for HIP Investors
More Investors Allocating with a HIP Approach
An Integrated Multi-Disciplinary Society, Solving Problems Collaboratively
$175 Trillion of Profitable Investments that Build a Better World
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Index
Additional Praise forThe HIP Investor
“As an investor, executive, and entrepreneur, I have seen first-hand how successful commercial models can be an effective method for solving human needs. Successful leaders usually manage organizations that focus on positively impacting society. This HIP book shows you how the Human Impact + Profit approach is a powerful combination that can create great value for your portfolio, your business, and your world.”
—Alvaro Rodriguez Arregui, Co-founder and Managing Partner of IGNIA Partners LLC; Chair of the Board, Compartamos Banco
“Herman’s book provides forward-looking investors with unique tools to help build a compelling portfolio.”
—Robert Safian, Editor, Fast Company magazine
“For those who want to do good and make money, this HIP book shows you how to do so through your work, investments, and shopping.”
—Liz Cutler Maw, Executive Director, Net Impact
“This book is a how-to manual for creating business ventures and investment portfolios that are both profitable and good for the world.”
—David Bornstein, Author, How to Change the World
“This transformational book shows how investors and companies can find opportunities to profit and have a positive human impact. With vivid examples across different sectors, Herman demonstrates how a focus on human impact is beneficial financially and socially.”
—Perla Ni, Founder, Stanford Social Innovation Review; CEO, GreatNonprofits.org
“The socially responsible investment field has been in a long period of stagnation, relying on outmoded metrics and methodologies that do not keep pace with the realities of business today. The HIP Investor provides a breath of fresh air. Herman builds on the established success of beneficial social- and positive eco-impact business strategies to create an innovative, flexible, and practical road guide that enables investors to get started.”
—Brian Dunn, CEO, Growth Capital Services Inc.
“Better products, more engaged people, lower costs, and better market share—all benefits that can come from satisfying what Maslow called our need for self-actualization. R. Paul Herman says that leaders, companies, and investors who align their views to this approach can thrive and excel beyond their peers, and I know he’s right. The HIP Investor is a great guide for a company looking to create positive ‘human impact and profit.’”
—Ray Anderson, Chairman and Founder, Interface Inc.; Author, Confessions of a Radical Industrialist
“Leading companies everywhere are increasingly measuring not just their narrowly defined accounting profits, but also their social and environmental impacts. This book describes why these drivers of intangible asset value are fundamental in assessing a company’s long-term profitability and market valuation. While this book is intended as a guide for investors, it is simultaneously an excellent overview for senior executives and board members of the challenges and potential rewards from linking sustainability metrics and strategies (the HI of HIP) to profits (the P of HIP).”
—Dr. Paul R. Kleindorfer, Paul Dubrule Professor of Sustainable Development, INSEAD
“As the world experiences population growth, water shortages, and poor health and sanitation services, Herman proves that major corporations and investors can benefit from an investment mentality. Herman shows that corporations have made strides in seeking to solve the world’s leading problems—and profited handsomely—by expanding their mindset to deliver billion-customer markets and products that address pressing human problems.”
—Rahilla Zafar, Contributing Writer and Editor, Knowledge@Wharton and INSEAD Knowledge
“The principles in The HIP Investor—focusing on both Human Impact and Profit—make sense for both investors and business leaders. The leading portfolios in the next century will improve lives and make attractive profits—resulting in a long-term, lower risk win-win.”
—Dave Stangis, Vice President of Sustainability, Campbell’s Soup Company
“The HIP Investor is recommended for individuals and institutions who want to combine tough-minded financial analysis with criteria of ethics and sustainability for the long-term growth of their portfolios. Herman makes the case, drawing on examples of leading companies, that doing good and doing well can often go together in the world of investing.”
—Dr. Eric W. Orts, Guardsmark Professor and Director of the Initiative for Global Environmental Leadership, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
“Herman challenges social investors, individuals and institutions, to broaden the scope of their investment criteria to incorporate the wider human impact that such companies have on society, and outlines how to measure that impact—and its relationship to profit.”
—Bob Annibale, Global Director, Citi Microfinance
“Herman has done us all a big favor by constructing an innovative means for improving your whole life—including your portfolio, your workplace, and your impact on the community. I urge you to read The HIP Investor to find practical advice that you can use now to lead a richer life personally, professionally and financially.”
—Dr. Stewart D. Friedman, Author, Total Leadership: Be a Better Leader, Have a Richer Life ; Professor, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
“The biggest financial returns in the 21st century will come from solving the world’s most pressing problems. The HIP Investor guides you, your firm and your portfolio to prioritize those investments—and generate attractive profits while building a better world.”
—Josh Becker, Co-founder and General Partner, New Cycle Capital
“The HIP Investor shows you how corporations are reinventing their companies and creating better brands while delivering healthy returns for investors—and how you can too!”
—KoAnn Vikoren Skrzyniarz, CEO, President and Founder, Sustainable Life Media
“R. Paul Herman and his colleagues at HIP Investor have produced an incredible book: deeply researched, practical, and extremely timely. If you want to innovate and lead rapidly emerging opportunities around investing sustainably, these are the thought leaders! Twenty years from now, it will be looked back on as a cutting-edge tome.”
—Peter Sims, Co-author, True North: Discover Your Authentic Leadership
“We need new investment advice for a new economy where the impact on people and planet are an important part of a portfolio’s profit. Herman has done a wonderful job of providing. This a new perspective for building a better world with strong, sustainable profits.”
—Dr. Mark S. Albion, Office of the President, Babson College; Author, More than Money and Making a Life, Making a Living
Copyright © 2010 by R. Paul Herman. All rights reserved.
“HIP,” “HIP Investor,” “Human Impact + Profit,” “How HIP Is It?” “HIP 100,” and “HIP 500” are all service marks of HIP Investor Inc.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey. Published simultaneously in Canada.
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Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Herman, R. Paul.
The HIP InvestorSM : Make bigger profits by building a better world / R. Paul Herman ; with Jessica Skylar and Gayle Keck.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
eISBN : 978-0-470-62250-6
1. Investments—Social aspects. 2. Investments—Environmental aspects. 3. Social responsibility of business. I. Skylar, Jessica. II. Keck, Gayle. III. Title.
HG4515.13.H47 2010
332.6—dc22
2009049437
For all the strong women of the world, includingMy wife and soulmate, GayleMy mother, AliceMy sister, MaryMy mother-in-law, Sue AnnMy business partners, Jessica and JoanMy grandmothers, Mary and MarthaAnd all the high-esteem men who respect them.
Disclosure and Disclaimer
The purpose of this book is to educate you about a new investment approach. As with any decisions about investing, you should consider the risks involved, including potentially losing your principal.
This book is not intended to provide personalized investment advice. Each investor has different goals, timelines, tolerance for risk, as well as unique tax situations. Therefore, you should consult an investment adviser, accountant, or tax expert.
This book does not recommend the specific stocks, bonds, or other investment vehicles described within. Instead, the descriptions are intended to be illustrative of the potential benefits and risks of this investment approach. The author may own public or private investments described in this book.
As always, evaluate your personal situation, goals and risks before making any investment decisions and consult the appropriate investment professional.
HIP Portfolio Calculations
The HIP results do not represent the results of actual trading using client assets but were achieved by means of the retroactive application of a model, assuming a $100,000 beginning portfolio. There are inherent limitations of showing composite portfolio performance based on model results. Unlike an actual performance record, model results cannot accurately reflect the effect of material economic or market factors on the price of the securities, and therefore, results may be over- or under-stated due to the impact of these factors. Since model results do not represent actual trading and may not accurately reflect the impact of material economic and market factors, it is unknown what effect these factors might have had on HIP’s decision making if HIP Investor were actually managing client portfolios. During the period for which model results are shown, securities of U.S. companies have generally been rising, and the model returns are a function of this market environment. If this environment were to change materially, the model results portrayed in HIP’s material would, in likelihood, reflect results different from those portrayed.
The HIP, S&P, and Treasuries results include reinvested dividends or interest, and results are net-of-fees as a client would have paid to HIP on a quarterly basis in advance for advisory fees and brokerage costs. During the period for which model results are shown, HIP has maintained the same investment strategies and advisory services as those that HIP offers to clients. There is potential for loss as well as for profits. It should not be assumed that the recommendations made in the future will be profitable or will equal the performance of the securities in the portfolio. The S&P index is shown as a general market indicator and is not available for direct investment. Tax consequences have not been considered. Investments are managed via separately managed accounts with HIP Investor Inc. as the investment adviser. This is not an offer of securities. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Introduction: The New Fundamentals—Build a Better World, Make Bigger Profits
Capitalism used to be easy. Discover, acquire, and defend a unique resource. Pay people the least you can get away with. Off-load as many liabilities and risks to government as possible. And, of course, collect the profits in as short a time as possible. These captains of industry used to be called “robber barons”; today they are simply called “capitalists.”
For most of the history of investing, capitalists have delivered the highest financial returns to shareholders, with a focus on maximizing short-term profits at almost any cost. Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman reinforced this view by asserting that “the business of business is business,” and that any distraction from making money as quickly as possible must be avoided. But the pure capitalist path melted down again in the fall of 2008, eliminating its excess returns.
At the same time, “do-gooders” have pursued societal change through charities and nonprofits focused on individual problem areas that address environmental, social, and human challenges on an individual basis. Many of these problem solvers provide social services that treat the symptoms, missing an opportunity to go “upstream” to fix the root cause.
The majority of investors have focused on a capitalist approach and short-term financial gain. However, this traditional approach has accelerated the number and intensity of societal problems, creating a larger gap between a better world and the world of today. To counter this approach, some investors have selected a “socially responsible” investment approach, which typically excludes “bad” companies from their portfolios. This approach has relieved some consciences, but in most cases has failed to yield attractive long-term financial results.
Until now, an investor would need to choose between these two options: short-term gains that risk society’s stability, or positive intentions that fail to deliver consistently attractive returns. Now, there is a new investment approach—one that realizes bigger profits that capitalists seek while building a better world that do-gooders desire. This approach generates human impact and profit, or what I call “HIP,” simultaneously. It embraces a comprehensive view of society. It produces long-term results while also yielding short-term profits. It enables for-profit companies to solve human problems for customers, employees, and society. It combines “doing good” and “making money”—drawing from the best of both worlds. “HIP investing” can produce bigger profits for your portfolio and build a better world for you, your family, and society overall.
By revitalizing your portfolio with a HIP approach, you can practice a fundamentally new way of investing. How can you build a more HIP portfolio? This book will explain how to be more HIP in how you invest, where you work, and what you buy. (You may even start evaluating every daily decision with the question, “how HIP is it?”) I wrote this book to show you the tools and process to build an investment portfolio designed to realize Human Impact + Profit.
The HIP Approach
A diversified portfolio is built up of stocks, bonds, real estate, and other financial assets. The HIP approach enables you to evaluate each of these investment types methodically. Every asset in your portfolio can be rated on its HIP-ness. Since 2006, HIP Investor Inc. has analyzed, rated, and ranked the HIP factor of large, publicy traded companies. By 2009, HIP evaluated the largest 500 U.S.-based companies in the standard benchmark, the Standard & Poor’s® 500 index. HIP has observed that the best-managed companies, which deliver both short- and long-term value for shareholders, do the following:
• Assess the trends to identify risks and opportunities of the entire global society, including environmental and social challenges.
• Bring products and services to market that serve the needs of customers, shareholders, and stakeholders.
• Count the quantifiable data beyond traditional accounting and finance numbers, to include human, social, and environmental results.
• Directly integrate a new management approach into the way decisions are evaluated and implemented across the whole enterprise.
• Equate the quantifiable human impacts to financial success—across income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow.
Investors, too, can use this methodology to position their portfolios for success. Those who adopt this HIP approach and criteria can discover leading indicators that drive the financials before they happen, providing an advantage over those who solely use the old greedy capitalist or optimistic do-gooder approach.
HIP portfolios can produce significantly higher returns, even adjusting for risk. Over the five-year period from July 2004 to June 2009, the HIP 100 portfolio outperformed the S&P 100 by at least four percentage points per year, or what financial experts refer to as 400 basis points. (The HIP 100 represents the same companies in the S&P 100 but reweights each of them for quantifiable sustainability.) This HIP portfolio, which covered both up- and down-markets also out-gained the lowest-risk approach of three-month Treasury bills. In Figure I.1, you can see the cumulative returns of all three portfolios. Because of HIP’s fundamentally sound approach of measuring the leading indicators of quantifiable human impact, a HIP investor expects to make bigger profits by building a better world.
The HIP fundamentals enable an investor like you to outperform by combining the best of both disciplines. This innovative approach mixes the hard-nosed, data-driven analytics of finance with the comprehensive end-to-end lifecycle view of society’s nurturers. When combined, you can benefit from a breakthrough approach that can make more money by doing more good. HIP investors and their advisers are already recalibrating their portfolios and you can choose to do so, too.
Focusing on Impact Adds Business Value
In 2007, Dave Stangis was the director of sustainability at Intel Corp. When Stangis first learned of the HIP methodology and its focus on quantifiable results, it was an enlightening moment.
Figure I.1The HIP 100 Index Outperforms the S&P 100 Index and Treasuries Historically
Source: HIP Investor; Standard & Poor’s; Bloomberg Finance LP.
“Measuring results that focused on the outcomes of Health, Wealth, Earth, Equality, and Trust made sense business-wise,” said Stangis. “You have to show real results to demonstrate how serious a player you are in delivering impact” (Stangis, interviews 2007-09).
Quantifiable results are one overarching element of the HIP methodology. Whereas capitalists focus on heaps of financial and operating ratios, many times they become disconnected from the true source of a company’s growth: solutions for customers who have a human need. The benefits of that solution can be quantified—longer life from a medical device, more income from a savings account, or lower fuel usage (and emissions) from a hybrid car. Companies that quantify these values and understand how they drive financial value are well positioned for bigger profits and help to create a better world.
Intel Corp. historically has been rated as one of the 10 most HIP companies. It follows the five steps outlined above: (1) Assessing the global trends of billion-person markets and trillion-dollar opportunities instills a new mentality. (2) Bringing products to market to serve those customers positions Intel for new revenues, such as health care wireless products and home monitoring systems. (3) Counting the quantifiable impacts is possible by focusing on improved access to care and higher quality of life. (4) Directly embedding these criteria into management practices is easy for the company’s engineering culture. (5) Equating those impacts to financial value has highlighted results of $50 million from overall resource conservation and efficiency initiatives—more than a 2-for-1 return on its investments in those areas (Intel CSR report 2008, 35).
Stangis has brought that thinking and approach to Campbell’s Soup, where he is Vice President of Sustainability. He is energized by CEO Douglas Conant’s drive to roll out the discipline of sustainability—a field that interconnects all the elements of company, customers, and society—into every business unit and employee. “Sustainable performance is one of the seven ‘pillars’ here,” Stangis says of the company’s goals and strategies. “And it is expected to drive business value across the whole enterprise.”
Corporate leaders like Stangis, and others advocating similar initiatives (whom you will meet in this book) are helping to create new sources of shareholder value previously untapped, by improving the society around them. This HIP approach can be adopted by investors to select the best-managed companies for your portfolio—and by the companies seeking to be those leaders.
How HIP Is It? Three Questions to Ask of Any Investment
When evaluating a possible investment for your portfolio, you should ask “How HIP Is It?SM” to understand the company’s true commitment, measurements, and management of sustainability and how it drives profit. A company that is HIP will have compelling—and quantifiable—answers to the following three questions, also shown in Figure I.2.
1. How HIP are the company’s products? What quantifiable impact do they have on the customer? How do they solve a human problem? What share of revenue do those HIP products provide?
2. How is the company measuring its human, social, and environmental impacts? Which are leading indicators for the business? How do those impacts drive profit and shareholder value?
3. How do existing management practices reflect a HIP approach? Do the vision and metrics support a long-term, comprehensive view of the company, customers, and society? Do all systems for accountability and all processes for making decisions include criteria for bigger profits and a better world?
Figure I.2Three Questions: How HIP Is It?
Leading companies with a high HIP score systematically apply a strategic three-pronged approach. For the first category of HIP products , HIP leaders create revenue-generating products and services that have positive impact for their customers and society. SunChips, a product of PepsiCo, is made from organic corn that is converted to chips using solar power and sold in a compostable bag. PepsiCo classifies products that produce these benefits nutritionally and operationally as “good for you” or “better for you” and according to the company, these products total approximately 30 percent of its revenue (Morris 2008).
For the second category of HIP measurements, HIP leaders quantify their human, social, and environmental impacts. As we saw above with its $50 million savings, Intel Corp. aggressively pursues improvements in energy usage, water usage, and employee diversity, all of which can be enumerated and shown to directly link a more profitable bottom line. Data-driven approaches are critical, connecting easily to the manage-by-numbers of traditional business success, while also integrating a systematic view toward increasing stability and reducing future risk.
For the third category of HIP management practices, leading HIP firms embed a new type of thinking into every aspect of decision-making inside the organization. At General Electric, its “ecomagination” and now “healthy-magination” strategies are cross-company initiatives. Aspirational goals for reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions are integrated into executive and manager performance reviews, overall decision making, and pay and promotion decisions. This has led to new ways of governing the company. The proactive approach ensures that both profit and impact become recurring results. In 2008, GE generated $17 billion from “ecomagination” products, including wind turbines and fluorescent light bulbs, summing to nearly 10 percent of the company’s nine-digit revenues (GE 2008 Ecomagination Fact Sheet).
This strategic three-pronged approach provides HIP investors the tools to evaluate the leaders and the laggards of an investable group of companies. With the HIP analysis, you can allocate more money to leaders and less money to laggards in your portfolio—or, you can consider excluding the laggards, but that may make for a riskier, less diversified portfolio. This book will explain what to look for when evaluating a company, and point to the leading indicators of more HIP companies that are poised to reap bigger profits while building a better world.
How Does HIP Make Bigger Profits?
The HIP approach has outperformed traditional and socially responsible investing because it focuses on sustainable business value. That value is counted in one of four ways. Three you can see on the financial statements: higher revenue, lower costs, and optimal taxes, all of which increase profit. The fourth is seen in valuation. The increased investor demand for a stock, by buyers willing to pay more for higher profits, drives the stock’s value higher and enhances your financial return if you are a shareholder who buys in earlier. The combination of both can provide higher total return from both stock appreciation and dividends paid by the company, which can be reinvested for further gain.
Higher Revenue. The highest-growth companies create value in three ways: identify new customers to buy existing products, invent new products, or acquire new products from other companies to sell to customers. Successful products solve a pressing human need. Population growth is fastest in lower-income economies. New customers from these economies are seeking out products reinvented for a lower-priced economy (e.g., the Tata automobile) or higher value (e.g., solar energy stove). Many times, a new version of an old product, like Procter and Gamble’s single-use shampoo, is developed for sale in India. P&G customized the package size to be smaller so that prices would be affordable to everyday families in places like India. In this market, 70 percent of all shampoo used in India is from single-use sachets. For P&G and its industry-leading competitor Hindustan Lever, it is a multimillion dollar market (ENS Economic Bureau 2004). This product also increases the overall hygiene of these customers, which has a wellness benefit—a HIP solution. Chapter 3 will describe many more product examples that drive higher revenue.
Lower Costs. Companies spend money on employees, benefits, outside services, energy, and materials. Finding savings typically requires either human ingenuity or technical innovation. Managing overall energy usage—which tends to be mostly fossil fuels—to be more efficient via motion sensors or staff action eliminates waste, lowers costs, and reduces carbon emissions. Interface Inc. has saved a cumulative $400 million in costs since embarking on its quest to be more sustainable through energy efficiency, materials reduction, and waste reuse and recycling (Interface Global EcoMetrics). Companies like Herman Miller and Salesforce.com also lower their costs from broad engagement of employees. In both cases, more than a fifth of the company is engaged in product development or operational initiatives that save money, encourage innovation, and have a human benefit. In the case of the Aeron Chair by Herman Miller, it is 95 percent recyclable, generates higher profit despite higher costs because of higher pricing and attractive market share, and is motivating for employees due to its eco-design.
Optimal Taxes. Governments levy taxes at the federal, state, and local levels in order to deliver common benefit and services for their citizens. When seeking to create public good, governments can use tax incentives and rebates to stimulate private-sector action. Health care retailer Walgreens has adapted more than 100 of its California and New Jersey stores and at least two distribution centers to take advantage of renewable-energy state tax incentives, creating an accelerated return on investment for those projects. In those locations, this solar power will generate 20 to 50 percent of electrical needs and be a cleaner, less polluting, and more independent power source (FYPower 2001).
Investor Demand. The price of a stock is not just based on fundamentals like earnings and growth rate, but also on how many investors are seeking to purchase that stock. This may be tied to a particular company’s prospects or competitive advantage, or to the industry as a whole (as when investors “rotate” in or out of a sector). The term “price-to-earnings ratio” is frequently used to assess the stock price relative to its profit potential. When companies are more transparent about their current and future plans, investors can more readily set a proper price. United Technologies is an industrial company that sells Otis elevators and Pratt and Whitney jet engines. When United Technologies started publicizing HIP products, like more eco-efficient buses and zero-energy building designs, its stock price moved up beyond the industry average (BusinessWeek, “What Price Reputation” 2007). Being transparent to stakeholders, including investors, is very HIP.
HIP Investor’s research of more than 500 companies since 2006 shows that companies pursuing a HIP approach tend to drive more business value—through higher revenue, lower costs, optimal taxes, and higher investor demand. The HIP approach focuses on leading indicators—products solving a human need, quantifiable human impact, and comprehensive management practices—which tend to lead to higher profit and shareholder value, benefiting investor portfolios by up to 4 percent annually above the standard market benchmark.
Each chapter of this book will highlight HIP corporate innovations, case studies, and initiatives from this insightful research. You will also meet the leaders who are driving this business transformation to achieve higher human impact and profit. You will be able to evaluate “How HIP Is It?” for your purchases, your workplace, and your investments. You will learn how to incorporate these new fundamentals into your own portfolio and position yourself for a better world and bigger profits.
How Does HIP Build a Better World?
HIP investors realize bigger profits through a portfolio of companies that are actively building a better world. Those firms can create positive impact in a variety of ways:
• Innovating new products that improve quality of life
• Operating with higher environmental efficiency
• Offering new supply contracts to diverse suppliers
The HIP approach identifies more than 20 indicators whose values indicate positive results for society. These measures quantify the good that is created, allowing investors of all types to use this information to better design their portfolios. It also permits investors to gather a summary of human-impact results beyond pure financial returns. Typically, the better the human-impact performance, the bigger the profits.
HIP has defined five categories of human impact, which will be detailed in Chapter 1.
These areas are: Health, Wealth, Earth, Equality, and Trust.
1. Health refers to both physical and mental well-being, including quality of life.
2. Wealth encompasses ways for people to earn more, save more, or better secure their financial future.
3. Earth covers the water we drink, the air we breathe, and the overall ecosystem balance.
4. Equality seeks fair representation, whether classified by gender, ethnicity, or income class.
5. Trust includes open, transparent information and ethical and respectful behavior.
As a HIP investor, you can design your portfolio to equally weight each of the five, focus on only one of them, or blend them in any combination you desire. While some investors may focus on energy efficiency and choose to double up on Earth, others may hone in on ethical behavior and triple-up on Trust. The beauty of a HIP portfolio is you can choose among these five factors to match your specific desires for human impact. More specifically, as you will see in Chapter 7, you can set up face-offs among companies in the same industry, like Coke vs. Pepsi and Starbucks vs. McDonald’s. Then, you can weight your portfolio to reflect those HIP results.
HIP offers a fundamentally new way of investing that gives each investor the power to choose what the most important leading indicators are, and to apply those preferences across multiple companies and industries. It is a more comprehensive approach than the financially-focused capitalists and a more inclusionary approach than the do-gooder investors. The HIP approach provides the foundation for a better world for you and bigger profits for your portfolio.
How HIP Are You?
There is a “generational shift” occurring in buying and investing right now. This force, which will also inherit $22 trillion of inter-generational wealth, is poised to have the highest economic impact since the baby boomers. The twenty-first century will see more active investors—and the financial advisers who serve them—seeking a broad range of “performance” indicators. This entire group will seek to apply their financial power to close today’s large gaps and move toward more ecological balance and social stability, which would mitigate risk and increase potential profit.
This new generation of forward-thinking investors and fiduciaries, including a broad swath under the age of 45 (branded as Millenials and Generations Y and X), sees no division between the business, social, and government sectors. They realize that problems are multi-sector and the solutions are multi-disciplinary. They see the power of blending the best of the old capitalist and do-gooder investment approaches. Hence, these new investors will also reward those companies who see the world in the same way, and feel a shared accountability for improving the world.
These HIP investors and investment advisers—from all age groups and backgrounds—are seeking and investing in leading companies that pursue human impact and profit. Leaders like Procter and Gamble, Intel, and United Technologies are delivering great products that have a positive human impact, measuring them and embedding a HIP approach into their entire enterprises. These firms are driving the field with higher financial performance and greater social and eco-benefits.
You may be part of this movement already, or think in a similar direction. Have you determined how HIP you are? Will you apply this breakthrough approach to your investing and money management? Are you ready to be a HIP investor?
Are You Ready to Be a HIP Investor?
This book is written for investors of all types—you don’t need to be rich or a financial whiz to build a HIP portfolio. This book also serves the investment advisers who seek fundamentally strong analytical approaches that deliver attractive financial returns and mitigate risks. Everyone can invest—and every aspect of your portfolio can pursue this new, transformational approach. Surveys show that the aspiration to “do good and make money” is mainstream, and if that is you, read on. Your guide is right here.
This book is designed to fully equip you as an investor to pursue a HIP approach for your entire portfolio. When you’re done, not only will you know the HIP approach front to back, you will be in a position to work independently or with your financial adviser to capitalize on all the HIP opportunities you can find.
Chapter 2 is written to show you why here and why now. Growing populations, finite natural resources, a plethora of information, and a desire to “do good” are all changing the world and giving companies some of their greatest opportunities.
Chapter 3 evaluates how companies are responding to these opportunities. We’ll review some of the leading products developing across Health, Wealth, Earth, Equality, and Trust. Their solutions will inspire you—and demonstrate how their new solutions are breaking down sector boundaries, serving human needs, and building top-line revenue.
Then we’ll approach the meat of HIP’s methodology. Chapter 4 will walk you through more than 20 factors, illustrating how it improves Human Impact and how it drives profit. The result: a full quantitative assessment of a company’s Human Impact and Profit potential that goes beyond traditional surveys or blanket assessments, and instead gives a complete picture of the enterprise.
Chapter 5 approaches a company’s management practices. Is the company structuring itself to become more sustainable? HIP’s research shows that the highest performing innovators have a clear, measurable vision, a strong culture of accountability, integrated decision-making processes, and financial measures for each approach. This chapter will assess how to evaluate which companies are best structured to innovate and take advantage of Human Impact opportunities.
Next, Chapter 6 will show you how quantifiable impacts translate into a traditional income statement and balance sheet. It will also demonstrate how you assess and derive HIP value from standard accounting reports. You will also see how leading HIP companies are communicating their leadership to investors in the realm of human impact and profit.
After understanding how to fully evaluate a company’s HIP score (incorporating its HIP products, Human Impact scores, and management practices), Chapter 7 will walk you through evaluating a company. You will also learn to build face-offs of competitive companies to evaluate their HIP factors, and how to weight the equities in your portfolio according to your preferences.
After rating all your findings, Chapter 8 provides the tools to construct a full HIP portfolio across stocks, bonds, real estate, and other types of investments. You can build a HIP portfolio that seeks to generate a better world and bigger profits in each asset class.
Finally, Chapter 9 shares a vision of what a more HIP world will be. Corporations will compete on human impact, and reinvent their businesses to deliver maximum results for society. Those results will better the bottom line and investors can use new tools to personalize their portfolios. The world will benefit from a fuller multidisciplinary approach, including what is taught in schools and academia. All $175 trillion in global financial assets will be seeking human impact and profit—a very HIP world indeed.
This book is written for all investors and their fiduciaries—for everyone that is dissatisfied with the “robber baron” capitalist path and frustrated with the do-gooder philosophy. Each chapter provides you a basic overview of how and why HIP works, and for those who want to dive deeper, this book includes detailed metrics behind the results. The bottom line: if you’re looking for a new way to invest that better reflects your goals and the world we live in, we’ll give you the tools and process you need to take your investing to the next HIP level.
Are you ready to be a HIP investor? Let’s get started and learn about the foundation of the HIP framework.
PART I
GETTING READY FOR YOUR HIP PORTFOLIO
The first step to developing your portfolio begins with a fresh perspective.
Let’s start at the beginning. Being productive requires you to be healthy. Then you need to pay for your living expenses and accumulate some wealth. We would prefer to breathe crisp air and drink clean water from the earth. If you believe that every person can make a difference, then we need equality. Finally, for a community to grow, we need to trust each other.
Each of these five elements—Health, Wealth, Earth, Equality, and Trust—forms the foundation of the Human Impact + Profit (HIP) framework. It is inspired by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, and focuses on the human needs that each of us has.
Business is one provider of solutions to these everyday core needs. As a customer, you buy products that make your life easier or better. As an investor, you want to have companies that excel in the five elements in your portfolio.
While some may view solving social or environmental problems as the scope of government or nonprofits it is actually the leading companies today who view the world as a series of human problems to solve, and who do so profitably.
The global trends of our world line up with this new world view: that all of us want to live long, prosperous lives on an unpolluted earth that respects our individual potential and supports us working together ethically.
Companies that solve these problems will help the most people and make quantifiable human impacts on the world’s seven billion citizens. These firms will also make the most money by assessing the global trends and designing their business strategies in response to these massive forces.
Chapter 1 shows you the foundation of the HIP framework that will be explored throughout the book. Chapter 2 outlines the trends that fit with this fresh perspective. By the conclusion of Part I, you will see the opportunity to be a more HIP investor—and discover how to realize more Human Impact + Profit for your portfolio and your world.
CHAPTER 1
The Importance of Human Impact to Investors
An innovative experiment on a holiday weekend by an entrepreneurial engineer led to a new form of business: one that created bigger profits and a better world.
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!