Leadership and The Corporate Sustainability Challenge
Leadership and The Corporate Sustainability Challenge
Leadership and The Corporate Sustainability Challenge
MINDinsets
action
Contents >>
Executive Summary
Introduction
1 | Gearing Up
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Closing
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The Authors
BACK COVER
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Executive Summary >> With the goal of examining the subject of sustainability through a new lens, uncovering how business
organizations are reconciling their role in the world today and into the future
and what it will take to realize that futureAvastone Consulting conducted the
Avastone Corporate Sustainability Study (ACSS).
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
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Mindsets offer
untapped potential
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Fresh groundrecognizing
the relationship between gears
of sustainability and leader
mindset development
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
We are unlikely to meet the future effectively with existing perspectives and mindsets. To usher in this new
reality, new frameworks and capacities are required
ones that catalyze breakthrough thinking and solutions,
assist in communicating this new reality to people in
ways that they understand, and expand the very meaning of sustainability. As Albert Einstein said, No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness
that created it. In essence, a shift in consciousness is
needed to effect substantial change. Embracing the
complexity of sustainability calls for understanding it
at a new level of consciousness.
And that is what we are here to explore. This report
offers several frameworks for examining corporate
sustainability and discerning what is being done sustainability-wise by some of the best-known companies
worldwide, and what can be learned from them. It also
contextualizes their progress by connecting it to the bigger picture of planetary limits and ecological overshoot.
Specifically, this report highlights results of an initial
qualitative study, the Avastone Corporate Sustainability
Study (ACSS), which researches corporate sustainability
among ten global companies, some of whom are
recognized as sustainability icons. The ACSS categorizes
the overall nature of progress, identifies what drives
success, reviews challenges being faced, and points to
new capacities needed to accelerate headway. Through
data and analysis, we present a set of core findings
and reflections about what rests at the heart of sustainability progress and what will be required to realize
substantial shifts forward.
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The data collection phase of ACSS was conducted confidentially in 2006, with companies in manufacturing and
transportation sectors who represent a diverse set of
industry groups: metals and mining, high technology,
foods, pharmaceuticals, industrial and consumer products, textiles, and chemicals. The companies had a mix
of organizational histories, with legacies ranging from
25 to more than 200 years. All had a clear orientation
toward sustainability. Six of the ten companies were
listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index World and
Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations. The size of
the participating companies varied from $1 billion to
well over $100 billion, based on 2005 annual revenues.
Research was conducted via direct one-on-one interviews with company officers, vice presidents, or directors of sustainability/corporate responsibility from each
company. An independent research firm established the
overall study methodology and developed the database.
Principals from Avastone Consulting conducted and
transcribed interviews, performed data analysis and
synthesis, developed findings, and prepared this report.
With respect to language, we use the term sustainability to refer to business or corporate sustainability and
corporate responsibility. We define it more broadly than
some, offering the term as a simple catchall for other
terms such as corporate citizenship, sustainable development, corporate social responsibility and its acronym
CSR, and ESG (environmental, social, governance).
INTRODUCTION
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1 | Gearing Up
A goal of ACSS was to establish a baseline for what is really going on with
corporate sustainability today. In interviewing executives from the participating
companies, we sought to understand the current state of progress being made,
what further work is targeted, and how progress compares with what experts
and stakeholders in the field view as essential.
Section 1 presents an overview of progress within each of the companies studied,
establishes a baseline set of findings, and introduces the first of several frameworks used to make sense of complexity in the corporate sustainability arena.
We begin with a look at a comparative framework used for overall analysis,
then follow with side-by-side profiles of company progress and interpretation
of broad findings and trends at play.
Comparative Framework
Because definitions and descriptions of sustainability
point in many directions and toward a myriad of diverse
activities, we sought to bring consistency and rationality
to our analysis through the use of a structured, orienting framework. After gathering data in our investigative
process, we delineated participant information using a
developmental model of corporate sustainabilityone
that reflects progression through a series of stages.
These stages evolve in scale and scope in proportion to
increasing degrees of complexity, involvement, and
comprehensiveness.
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1 | GEARING UP
Comply
1.0
Comply
No
No business
business case
case
perceived
perceived beyond
beyond
compliance and
and
compliance
philanthropy
philanthropy
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2.0 Volunteer
Impact reduction
and eco-efficiency
3.0 Partner
Proactive risk management, co-evolution of
solutions, reputationbuilding
1 | GEARING UP
4.0 Integrate
Increasingly strategic,
embedded in business
processes, integrated
responses across
value chain
5.0 Redesign
Systems change in
financial systems,
markets, and
business models
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1 | GEARING UP
PROFILE OF COMPANIES
5.0
Redesign
Redesign
Increasing Scale/Complexity
Systemic
Systems changes
change inin
financial systems,
markets,
markets and
and
business models
4.0 Integrate
Increasingly strategic,
embedded in business
processes, integrated
responses across
value chain
Partner
3.0
Partner
Proactive risk
risk
Proactive
management,
management,
co-evolution
co-evolution
of
of solutions,
solutions,
reputation building
reputation-building
2.0 Volunteer
Impact reduction
and eco-efficiency
Comply
1.0
Comply
No business
business case
case
No
perceived
perceived beyond
beyond
compliance and
and
compliance
philanthropy
philanthropy
Increasing Size
Current Position
Aspiration
Recent/Partial
Activity
Interpretive Profile of
Study Companies
Figure 1.1 presents graphically a side-by-side comparison
of study companies based on the Gearing Up framework.
Letters A through J represent the ten companies involved
in the study. Note that the size of the companies
increases from left to right based on annual revenues.
Companies A and B are in the less-than $10 billion
range; C through G are in the $1040 billion range; and
H, I, and J have annual revenues of over $40 billion.
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1 | GEARING UP
Illustrations of
Companies on the Gears
The following quotations provide examples of three
companies gear activity. While representative in nature,
they show differences in view taken and scope of
activity involved.
COMPANY B
Most of the way from 1.0 COMPLY to
2.0 VOLUNTEER
The Director of Corporate Responsibility from a foods
manufacturer said: I am trying to activate a group of
volunteers. The senior team is intrigued by sustainability and has given me time and space to try this stuff. I
have won their support, but I dont have a budget. Im
spending a lot of my time justifying what I wish I could
dictatelets do it. Im going to operations and marketing and saying, What do you think? I have to rob Peter
to pay Paul. They are very generous with dollars in the
community and have done some great things.
COMPANY H
Half the way from 2.0 VOLUNTEER to 3.0 PARTNER
A Director of Environmental Affairs at a transportation
company stated: Our processes were already highly
efficient, well tracked, and very well managed.
Sustainability did not create these things because they
were already in place. All we did was find a way to
measure them on a grand scale and use it in the sustainability report. Risk management plays a big role,
and brand management is key. We win a lot of awards.
COMPANY G
On the way from 3.0 PARTNER to 4.0 INTEGRATE
The Vice President, Corporate Responsibility for a
pharmaceutical manufacturer noted: Our leaders
understand the contribution it makes to the company
in terms of enhancing reputation and managing risks to
reputation. You cant just do corporate responsibility.
What you have to do is build responsibility into every
aspect of the way you do business, so its built in, not
bolted on. It can range from how we license our vaccines if we have pandemic flu, to the use of nanotechnology, to driver safety in the field forces.
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1 | GEARING UP
The Global Compact Challenge reflects, While corporate responsibility initiatives have potential to bring
about positive change, this will only be realized if
such initiatives focus on achieving critical mass across
all industry sectors, and are connected to wider
public policy efforts that address the root cause of
the problems.16
Does business have a role beyond that of the 4.0 INTEGRATE Gearbeyond creating business value in concert
with societal value? Views from prominent CEOs,
sustainability experts, and stakeholders suggest that
business does indeed have such a responsibility, as
highlighted by these representative comments:
From McKinsey & Company report, Shaping the New
Rules of Competition, July 2007: The issues that companies increasingly have no choice but to confront
are becoming so complex that they can seem
intractable. Top issues to address, such as climate
change, education and talent constraints, and poor
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1 | GEARING UP
Although the up-shifts can be difficult and uncomfortable, they are considered necessary. They are also seen
to be rewarding in tangible ways. Movement up the
gears can be viewed as progression from saving money
to making money to transforming money. That is, movement progresses from sustainable activities that reduce
costs and save money (Gears 1.0 and 2.0), to endeavors
that generate opportunities and make money (Gears 3.0
and 4.0), to those that transform the systems through
which money flows (Gear 5.0). This analogy establishes
the up-shift journey as a change process.
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
Patterns of Success
While important and useful, the Top Contributors to
Success yield only so much perspective. It is through
application of an additional analytical framework,
approached through aggregate mapping of all success
factors across all companies, that two distinct and
important patterns for gearing-up movement are
revealed. This framework, the AQAL Integral Model
developed by Ken Wilber, points to a newly contoured
foundation for success, one that has not been discussed
to date in the corporate sustainability arena.17
Presented below is an introduction to this framework,
highlights of findings and overall patterns seen, and a
key directional pointer to an overall route for up-shift
efforts.
Using a Broad Integrated Frame
As with the Gearing Up model, the frame utilized for
analysis helps shape what is revealed when investigating the nature of what is really going on. In this case,
Wilbers AQAL Integral Model offers an elegant framing
perspective, one that provides a practical and comprehensive map for analysis when applied to complex
issues. For those not familiar with the framework,
Wilber put together the Integral Model to offer a more
complete representation of the multiple aspects of reality found in all situations and events. The AQAL Integral
framework (comprised of 5 aspects: quadrants, levels,
lines, states, and types), which evolved over the course
of 30+ years of trans-disciplinary and cross-cultural
scholarship, is documented in two dozen books and
more than 100 articles, and is translated into more
than 24 languages.
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Individual
Experience
Behavior
Mindset
Motivation
Commitment
Performance
Competencies
Skills
Interior
Culture
Systems
Collective
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Exterior
Structure
Processes
Goals/Metrics
Worldviews
Shared Values
Resonance
Individual
Individual
Behavior
s
ant
dr
60%
Sys
Culture
Systems
Collective
FIGURE 2.3: Interior-Exterior Success Profile.
s4
0%
ACSS
Success
Factors
Qu
a
Other
Interior
rior 53%
Exte
erior 47%
ACSS
Success
Factors
Experience
Exterior
Int
Behavior
Exterior
Interior
Experience
te
Culture
Systems
Collective
FIGURE 2.4: Systems-Other Quadrants Success Profile.
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
However, this all-quadrant emphasis requires that quadrants first be differentiated, which is often not done. Our
consulting work beyond the study indicates that interior
quadrants are frequently collapsed into the exterior
behavior or systems domains, or not recognized at all.
This collapse or lack of acknowledgment of every quadrant presents a potential impediment to up-shift movement. Important factors for attention are often missed
or not understood in relation to the change effort as
a whole.
Once each quadrant is effectively differentiated and
realities ascertained within and among them, progress
is activated through efforts that serve to integrate them,
bringing them together through a process of alignment
and mutual reinforcement. Key levers (appropriate to
the companys unique situation) are selected across the
quadrants and initiatives crafted to optimize the upshift change process. Thus, an integrated, all-quadrant
change process replaces a more typical partial or fragmented change approach.
Challenges to Progress
Along with the success orientation described above, the
study also identifies prominent challenges being faced
in the gearing-up process. These challenges add
further nuance to the patterns of success.
Outlined next are two challenge areas: top areas of
difficulty and the common challenge experienced.
Book Title
Exterior
Interior
Systems %
Behavior %
Culture %
Experience %
Cradle to Cradle
73
10
Natural Capitalism
90
75
16
79
14
63
22
11
Plan B 2.0
91
94
Ecovillage Living
64
19
11
40
13
32
15
40
60
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Quadrant Emphasis
Mindsets
Deepening the level of embrace
Taking sustainability thinking deeper
Difficult Metrics
Defining and measuring what makes
a sustainable company
Measuring diversity and the social
side of sustainability
Engagement
Involving others early on and
over time
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
Making
Accumulating/rolling-up
meaningful
data
Quantifying tough-to-measure issues
global
Aligning
workable
make sustainability built in, not bolted on. This comment intersects with our earlier point: embeddedness is
best considered at the intersection of all quadrants,
where integration among quadrants can establish and
grow deep roots.
Overall, participants reflected on the current level of
organizational embeddedness and its future importance,
as shown in Figure 2.7.
Future Importance
4.94
Current Level
3.5
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
Vertical Growth
Horizontal Growth
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M I N D S E T / S TA G E
P E RC E N TA G E
Diplomat
12%
Expert
38%
Achiever
30%
Individualist
10%
Strategist
4%
Alchemist
1%
SELF-IDENTITY
O R I E N TAT I O N
COGNITION
S U S TA I NA B I L I T Y
CONTRIBUTION
Concrete operations.
Thinking about objects,
without totality of
structured whole.
Upholds allegiance to
company/values. Attends to
well-being of others. Brings
stability, supportive glue to
group.
Demonstrates specialist
knowledge and expertise.
Regards craft logic as only valid
way. Detailed and perfection
oriented. Dismisses others
thinking. Knows the answers.
Abstract operations.
Begins capacity for
abstract thought,
reasoning by
hypothesis.
Formal operations.
Abstract rationality at
its peak, coordinating
logical operations into
single system.
Meta-systemic order.
Comparing, contrasting,
synthesizing systems in
terms of properties.
Questions underlying
assumptions of the business.
Adapts or ignores rules when
needed, invents new ones.
Brings greater awareness of
other worldviews to bear
may promote all voices,
involvement, equality.
Paradigmatic order.
Creating new
paradigms out of
multiple meta-systems.
Catalyzes breakthrough
shifts, linking overarching
principles with strategy,
dynamic systems interactions.
Builds new foundational
frameworks. Seeks mutuality,
recognizing interdependence
in relationships.
Cross-paradigmatic
order. Integrating
paradigms into a new
field or profoundly
transforming old ones.
Generates transformations,
often behind the scenes,
integrating material, societal,
spiritual domains. Honors
and integrates divergent
perspectives, worldviews;
coordinates between and
among them.
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Relationship between
Leader Mindsets and
Gears of Sustainability
From here, a new sustainability concept emergesthe
correlation between stages of leader development and
the gears of sustainability. This relationship links
achievement of complex sustainability outcomes with
attainment of advanced leadership capacities. In other
words, without later-stage leader mindsets, organizations will find it difficult to attain Gear 4.0 and unlikely
to reach Gear 5.0 at all.
This correlation does not suggest that sustainability
success is based on all leaders attaining later-stage
capacities. This is neither realistic nor required. Yet it
does suggest that a critical mass of capacity generated
from later-stage leader development is needed to attain
complex sustainability outcomes.
Alchemist
Strategist
Individualist
Achiever
Expert
Diplomat
5.0 Redesign
4.0 Integrate
Partner
Proactive risk
management,
co-evolution
of solutions,
reputation building
3.0 Partner
2.0 Volunteer
Comply
No business case
perceived beyond
compliance and
philanthropy
1.0 Comply
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FIGURE 3.4: Leader Mindset-Cognitive Capacity for Gears 4.0 and 5.0.
Alchemist
5.0
Redesign
Redesign
(Cross-Paradigmatic)
Systemic
Systems changes
change inin
financial systems,
markets,
markets and
and
business models
Strategist
(Paradigmatic)
Individualist
(Meta-System)
Achiever
4.0 Integrate
Increasingly strategic,
embedded in business
processes, integrated
responses across
value chain
(Single-System)
MINDSETS IN ACTION:
Joan Bavaria, Strategist Leader
Joan Bavaria was assessed by the Leadership Development Profile (LDP) to be a Strategist leader in the
1980s. In 1982, Bavaria founded Trillium Asset
Management, an organization that integrates competition and collaboration, economics and politics;
promotes companywide learning; and attracts
directors with similar ideals and later-stage mindsets
to lead into the future.
Trillium created the unique market niche of socially
responsible investment. Its approach was ridiculed
for many years by mainstream investment firms
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Implications of the
Mindset-Gears Correlation
If the leader-mindset and gears-of-sustainability correlation is as strong as we contend that it is, it suggests
that mindsets hold opportunity not previously recognized and serve as a linchpin to gear up-shifts going forward. Interior mindsets and leader stage development
need to be taken seriouslyrecognized, cultivated, and
leveraged for direct impact on sustainability success.
In specific terms, the mindset-gears correlation has two
important implications:
First, to actualize the highest gears, leaders with laterstage capacities will need to be engaged. These leaders
can help envision, formulate, mobilize, and harmonize
the integrated sets of actions needed for large-scale systems redesign and radical shifts forward. These leaders
can also translate sustainability into communications
and methods of change and engagement that match
the mindsets and worldviews of others. Without highcapacity leaders, the up-shift process to Gear 5.0
which requires positive, full, and widespread momentummay not progress at the speed required or happen at all.
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This section provides a look at steps forward to accelerate the corporate up-shift
process based on the results of the ACSS and affiliated research. These steps are
offered as a means to complement, support, and push the boundaries of practical
work already underway in organizations today. We also hope to stimulate further
research that includes or builds upon some of these steps and study findings.
The steps forward are outlined in two parts as follows:
Accelerating efforts at any gear
Bridging the gap to achieve Gears 4.0 and 5.0
Perform an all-quadrant analysis of progress, differentiating and identifying significant enablers and
gaps in each quadrant. Directly investigate the combination of interior and exterior dimensions, and individual and collective dimensions. Identify areas that
are minimally attended to or absent yet needed.
Identify the factors that have facilitated progress to
date and those that are constraining or preventing
progress. Isolate and conduct deeper assessments on
particular areas as needed.
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MINDSETS IN ACTION
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vid
Mu
en
nc
Coh
er
Culture
inforce
S h if
ms
l Re
Leadership
ts
in
Systems
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ste
ti o
Inte
ra
uals
ua
Shifts
Behavior
Sy
i
nd
in
Experience
leader holding a high-leverage position can make a difference in terms of an organizations development.51
Initiate a vertical development component into ongoing
leadership development processes, where benefits are
realized longer term. Draw from a range of practices,
activities, and approaches that facilitate this development. Emphasize this development while leveraging two
affiliated areas of focus: (1) understanding and use of
comprehensive, inclusive frameworks (AQAL Integral as a
good example) that serve as a common basis for language and communication, and (2) deepening the understanding of the multiple and linked meta-systems at play.
Several institutions have successfully initiated pilot programs and served as a beacon for vertical development
in the arenas of executive education and university
graduate education. The University of Notre Dame and
its public Executive Integral Leadership program,
launched under guidance of Associate Dean Leo Burke,
is one example.52 (Burke is the former director of
Motorola University, the global education and development arm of Motorola, Inc.) Another that stands out is
Sean Esbjrn-Hargens at John F. Kennedy University, who
in 2002 launched a Master of Arts program in Integral
Psychology, explicitly based on an integral theory education model.53
Also emerging is the new work of Australias SHIFT
Foundation, focusing on both horizontal and vertical
development of young global leaders.54 In addition,
Avastone is supporting the design of vertical development processes and launching a new Leading Integral
Sustainability series.
Representative sources of introductory readings on vertical development include Esbjrn-Hargens article on
Integral Education from AQAL Journal (Summer 2007),
Rooke and Torberts Harvard Business Review article
Seven Transformations of Leadership (April 2005), and
the Integral Life Practice book, supported by a forthcoming Internet portal, www.integrallife.com.55
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CLOSING
Closing >> The sustainability journey is a challenging one, with upshifts and a great gap to Gear 5.0 offering both risks and opportunities. In many
ways, a huge leap is required to cross the complex terrain and adapt with resilience
to coming realitiesa leap forward in perspective, coupled with resilience to
respond gracefully even amid shock waves of possible perfect storms. Yet the
importance and inherent potential of leadership bring with it reason for optimism.
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Cynthia A. McEwen
John D. Schmidt