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CSR Research: Corporate Citizenship

ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Do-no-harm vs. do-good social responsibility

In communicating and framing corporate citizenship efforts in countries beyond their headquarters, firms should highlight do-good rather than do-no-harm corporate citizenship initiatives to gain the most positive evaluation from stakeholders.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

From token support to meaningful action

Signing petitions, “liking” a post or joining a Facebook page, and wearing pins/ribbons are popular, token ways to indicate support for a cause or program. In order to build on that initial act of support and encourage deeper and more meaningful commitment to the cause, marketers and citizenship managers should focus on those supporters who are willing to privately participate in token acts for more meaningful engagement.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

The financial benefits of diverse leadership

When top management teams are comprised of leaders from many different nations and diverse backgrounds, firms experience stronger financial performance.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

The keys to future board diversity are in the hands of current board members

First time directors who are racial minorities or women receive lower levels of mentoring, which in turn results in fewer additional board appointments.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

What to expect when you are expecting activists…

When advocating for change, traditional activist groups (nongovernmental organizations, issue advocacy groups) tend to rely on protests and boycotts, which drag companies “through the mud” with media attention. In contrast, religious groups and activist investors rely on lawsuits and proxy votes to seek corporate reform. While the latter method may receive little media attention, it is more likely to foster investor risk perceptions.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Managing your message in unfavorable times

Firms that respond to recalls by communicating specific actions taken to address issues can decrease negative media coverage.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Do decimals add credibility?

Green advertising claims are often substantiated with numerical information. When more precise numbers are used in environmental advertising claims, consumers who are less skeptical.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Good corporate citizenship performance can help educate stakeholders equally

When information gaps exist between a firm and its stakeholders, the firm may experience negative financial consequences.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Communication is key to managing the market

Corporate citizenship efforts—both internal and external—have a positive effect on market performance.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

To increase purchase intentions, communicate how your actions benefit the environment where your consumers live

For the majority of consumers, if the communication frames the listener to identify as part of a local community, environmental messages targeted at addressing an issue locally are more effective at increasing purchase intentions than those that frame the issues as global.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Increased market competition can foster corporate citizenship

When faced with mounting competition from foreign rivals, U.S. companies tend to increase corporate citizenship investment as a way to differentiate themselves.

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ResearchBrief_1483653945_144

Investing in both customers and employees provides firms the greatest financial value

Firms that engage in positive employee-related activities—in addition to customer-related activities—achieve greater firm value.

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