Fifth Third Asian & Pacific Islander Business Resource Group Welcomes Lunar New Year

Members of the Fifth Third Bank Asian & Pacific Islander Business Resource Group hosted a 2023 Lunar New Year celebration on Friday, Jan. 27. The event featured a performance by World Championship Kung Fu Master Sen Gao and a Gu Zheng (traditional Chinese instrument) musical demonstration.

Speaking at the event were Fifth Third senior leaders Mary Beth McManus, senior vice president and head of operations; Stephanie A. Smith, senior vice president and chief inclusion and diversity officer; and Glenn Meadows, senior vice president and head of mortgage loan servicing.

Steven Acosta, manager of inclusion and diversity at Fifth Third Bank, said, “The API BRG hosted an amazing event that enabled Bank employees to ring in the Year of the Rabbit in style. Whether it was the amazing program or the delicious food, the API BRG gave its members a fun and engaging way to celebrate Lunar New Year.” 

Fifth Third Bank’s business resource groups focus on employee development, community involvement and business innovation. The Bank operates nine active BRGs: African American, Asian & Pacific Islander, Individuals with Disabilities, Latino, LGBTQ+, Military, SustainabilityWomen’s and Young Professionals. 

For more information on Fifth Third’s Business Resource Groups and its commitment to inclusion and diversity, visit 53.com and read its Environmental, Social and Governance Report.   

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A Tech Transformation at Tucson Middle School

Secrist students Damon Foster and Gabriel Guayante use their Verizon-provided tablets to respond to their teacher’s prompts during class.

When Ameel Attallah was teaching at the Delbert L. Secrist Middle School in Tucson three years ago, the school was struggling. But with a new principal, Debbee Garcia, at the helm—a principal who had high hopes for the school, Attallah adds—things turned around quickly. Garcia applied for Secrist to become a Verizon Innovative Learning School, a decision that was pivotal to the school’s transformation. “I have seen amazing changes in our school culture and climate,” Garcia says.

Secrist is one of the most recent schools to become a Verizon Innovative Learning School. What started with just eight schools in four districts in 2014 has grown to 561 schools in 94 districts nationwide, providing a lifetime of change for students and educators. Verizon Innovative Learning Schools are part of Verizon Innovative Learning, the transformative education initiative that began more than a decade ago.

When Attallah returned to the school this year after working elsewhere, he witnessed a technology explosion that has radically changed the school, thanks to Verizon Innovative Learning. Now, students are equipped with individual devices and data plans; Attallah is working as a Coach, supporting his colleagues and students in adopting new learning styles in the classroom. He coaches, models, and co-teaches, as well as helps educators to better serve their students. “Having the 1:1 [tablets] in our school helped teachers locate those students who need more support, and provide that support during the lesson, on the spot,” Attallah says.

Plus, Garcia says, students are finding ways to help one another. “I’m most excited about the growth that our students have been able to make in such a short amount of time,” she says. “They’re now helping one another—so they’re taking on leadership roles.”

With technology that allows students to stay connected at home, as well, Attallah says the students are fully supported whether in class or doing homework on their own. “They can research, they can be creative,” he says. “There’s no limit.”

Through Verizon Innovative Learning HQ, educators can access free learning apps, lesson plans and professional development courses aligned to micro-credentials by visiting www.verizon.com/learning.

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Arbor Day Foundation Unlocks the Power of More Than 500,000 Community Trees in 2022

By Dan Lambe

In 2022, the Arbor Day Foundation announced a focus on planting trees in neighborhoods of greatest need in the United States and around the world. Those efforts led to more than 500,000 trees finding new homes in urban areas across 175 cities, all 50 states and 16 other countries. The new year-end data shows 535 successful community tree plantings in total—more than any year in the Foundation’s history.

For us, every single tree matters.

That’s why we collaborate with an extensive network of planting partners to maximize the impact of our trees. These local organizations play a vital role in helping us understand what kind of tree will address each individual community’s needs. Once those trees are in the ground, we help our planting partners establish consistent maintenance and management to ensure the trees thrive. Community members are also educated on how to care for the trees they choose to take home. We’re excited our network tree champions is growing fast, with nearly 150 partners in 2022.

These trees, while beautiful, are not solely ornamental. They are transformational. Planting trees in cities and neighborhoods helps address urban heat islands, food insecurity and unsuitable air and water quality. Reviving an urban canopy is an investment in the health of the people who call that city home.

Even more exciting, is that this feels like the beginning of something big as more stakeholders stand up and rally around the power of trees. The U.S. federal government, for example, acknowledged the urgent need to plant and protect our nation’s forests through the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act. The bold legislation dedicates more than 1 billion dollars to the U.S. Forest Service’s Urban and Community Forestry program, prioritizing projects that benefit underserved communities. This critical funding will help stakeholders reshape the landscape of neighborhoods that need it most. The Arbor Day Foundation is excited to be part of this work.

We strive to be a leading contributor to facilitating the positive results of planting trees in the right way. The Arbor Day Foundation has proudly planted more than 500 million trees around the world in our first 50 years. Now, we’re committing to the most ambitious goal we’ve ever set by planting another 500 million trees in five years.

We move toward that goal one tree at a time. And you can play a part.

Planting a tree is one of the most meaningful and significant acts a person can do for their community. The need for trees spans across the world, but the solution starts in your neighborhood.

Dan Lambe is CEO of the Arbor Day Foundation, the largest nonprofit membership organization dedicated to planting trees. He can be reached at dlambe@arborday.org

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Worries Run High About Digital Credentials’ Expense, Academic Degrees’ Relevance for STEM Jobs, Survey Finds

Originally published by Higher Ed Dive

About 6 in 10 students, job seekers and employees aiming to change careers think they don’t have the right academic degrees for jobs in the STEM fields of science, technology, engineering and math, according to a new survey commissioned by IBM.

IBM is promoting technology training internationally with a free program for adult learners, college students and faculty, and high school students that it calls SkillsBuild. It’s working with partners around the world to that end, announcing new or expanded partnerships with 45 organizations.

Continue reading here

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Jonathan Rose Honored with Golden Pulaski Award from North Kitsap Trails Association

February 24, 2023 /3BL Media/ – North Kitsap Trails Association (NKTA) has announced Jonathan Rose, vice president of real estate for Raydient Places + Properties—a taxable real estate investment trust subsidiary of Rayonier—as the recipient of its first Golden Pulaski Award. Rose is being recognized for his vision, leadership and follow-through on implementing Kitsap County’s “String of Pearls” Trail Plan connecting local communities, parks and open space with recreational and non-motorized transportations options, including biking, hiking, equestrian and wheelchairs.

“By thinking globally and acting locally, Jon’s trail-blazing ideas, level of energy and personal contributions are an inspiration to the Board. He has offered more than fifteen years of steadfast support that is key to our community’s outdoor enjoyment while enhancing our livability, physical health and environmental sustainability,” said Doug Maraist of NKTA.

The name of this award is derived from the pulaski, a multiuse hand tool that was first introduced in 1876 by the Collins Tool Company. It is credited to Ed Pulaski, an assistant ranger with the United States Forest Service around 1911, and today it is often used in trail building and wildland firefighting.

This award acknowledges Rose’s vision and leadership on all the complex issues of the initiation and implementation of Kitsap County’s “String of Pearls” Trail Plan, that was written by NKTA and adopted by the County in 2011. Rose has been instrumental in the preservation of open space that create these linear parks for public access to connect local communities, parks and open space across the north end of Kitsap County.

The concept name was borrowed from the historic “Emerald Necklace Park”, a trail system in Boston, MA, which connects local communities and serves as a recreational destination. Stretching from the Back Bay to Dorchester, this inviting linear park greenway connects people and nature, just as landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted intended when he designed it more than 150 years ago.

NKTA advocates for future Kitsap generations to have a similar benefit from the Kitsap community “String of Pearls” amenity that connects their local communities with recreation and transportation options. This multi-modal recreational network of urban and rural paths interconnect with a paved multi-use arterial route called the Sound-to-Olympics (STO) trail. The STO will run across north Kitsap County from the Bainbridge Island and Kingston ferry terminals to the Hood Canal Bridge and will be an integral part of completing Washington’s Cross State Trail. The STO will link-up the Palouse-to-Cascades State Park Trail and the Mountains-to-Sound Greenway with the Olympic Discovery Trail (ODT) in Jefferson and Clallam Counties. The Bainbridge-Poulsbo-Port Gamble STO route is also the designated Great American Rail Trail from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean.

About NKTA
It is NKTA’s mission to unite North Kitsap with a regional system of land and water trails connecting communities, parks, and open space with recreational and non-motorized transportation options that promote stewardship of their natural resources and addresses climate change issues while enhancing our communities’ livability. Discover more at www.northkitsaptrails.org.

About Raydient
Raydient masterplans, develops, builds, markets and sells “places and properties” ranging from multi-use communities and industrial parks to rural homesteads and recreational lands. Raydient is a taxable subsidiary of Rayonier (NYSE:RYN), a leading timberland real estate investment trust with assets located in some of the most productive timber growing regions in the U.S. and New Zealand. When the real estate market demands a higher and better use for a property, our team steps in to transition that timberland for its future purpose. Get to know us at www.raydient.com.

About Rayonier 
Rayonier (NYSE:RYN) is a leading timberland real estate investment trust with assets located in some of the most productive softwood timber growing regions in the United States and New Zealand. We own or lease under long-term agreements approximately 2.8 million acres of timberlands. We are More than trees because we recognize that our 90+ years of success in the timberland industry comes from our people, an empowering culture and the courage to constantly challenge “the way it’s always been done.” Get to know us at www.rayonier.com.

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Empower by GoDaddy UK Volunteer Spotlight: Meet Katherine Islim and Dinkar Jaitly

Empower by GoDaddy is GoDaddy’s global social impact program equipping entrepreneurs with training, tools and peer networks to accelerate their journeys. Together with its nonprofit and community partners around the world, Empower by GoDaddy works to understand local communities and the small business landscape to identify gaps and develop customized, neighborhood-based programs that meet every entrepreneur’s unique needs. 

Internally, GoDaddy’s goal is to create thoughtful, high-impact ways for employee volunteers to live out the company’s mission of making opportunity more inclusive for all and experience first-hand how they can give back and improve lives. GoDaddy employees share their expertise in marketing, social media and website development with entrepreneurs. 

GoDaddy asked two of its UK-based Empower by GoDaddy volunteers, Katherine Islim and Dinkar Jaitly to share more about their experiences supporting the program. Here is what they had to say:

What drew you to support Empower by GoDaddy?

Dinkar: “It was a great opportunity for me to speak to an audience and improve my presentation skills. As I am new to the company and working virtually, it was an opportunity to learn more about GoDaddy products as well as network within the company with other volunteers. Although I might not have the appetite to be an entrepreneur, I enjoy encouraging small businesses as every big business starts with a small step.”

Katherine: “I was drawn to Empower by GoDaddy because of the ethos of helping those entrepreneurs without a technical background or resources to get their business online – as this can make such a difference! I enjoyed the chance to connect with our customers, use our products and hear first-hand from them their questions and challenges.”

What would you tell others about volunteering for Empower by GoDaddy?

Dinkar: “Volunteering for Empower by GoDaddy is nice, especially when you can see what end users want to achieve and how GoDaddy products fit in with their needs. Also, as a GoDaddy employee, you get a free site for two years. You can use it and see from the customer’s perspective what onboarding is like with GoDaddy products. Researching GoDaddy’s various product features as a mentor helps you to see training videos and better understand what the features intend to do.”

Katherine: “Do it! It’s helpful to get outside of your day-to-day role and reconnect with why we’re working here at GoDaddy – to help entrepreneurs.”

GoDaddy employees are relentless advocates for entrepreneurs and apply their passion and skills to coach small business owners through Empower by GoDaddy. Employee volunteers teach topics from branding and domains to marketing and ecommerce. 

To learn more about Empower by GoDaddy, visit: https://www.godaddy.com/godaddy-for-good/empower

To learn more about careers at GoDaddy, visit: https://careers.godaddy.com/ 

Empower by GoDaddy Spotlight Series: By partnering with diverse local nonprofits and community organizations around the world, Empower by GoDaddy aims to reach those who haven’t otherwise had access by offering skills training, resources, and mentoring to help accelerate their business journeys. This article is part of the Empower by GoDaddy spotlight series that shines a light on the individuals who make this unique initiative possible.

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ABI Research’s “Sustainability Assessment: Telco Technology Suppliers” Technology Analysis Report

Ericsson was named the overall sustainability leader in the study conducted by ABI Research to assess the capabilities of telco technology vendors in designing and creating equipment, software and services that reduce energy use and waste across the telecom industry.

Sustainability Assessment: Telco Technology Suppliers by ABI Research is a comprehensive report created to help communication service providers decide which technologies to invest in and whom to work with in their journey to build more sustainable networks, as well as more sustainable and resilient businesses.

Among more than 80 assessed telco technology vendors and suppliers, Ericsson has been named the best vendor for sustainable networks and business and number one in the main RAN categories, including Massive MIMO, 5G RAN, Open RAN, AI-driven software, and antenna solutions.

Download the report

Highlights from the report

Key actions for a telco operator to take for reducing its overall environmental impact:

Switch to renewable energy for purchased electricityMigrate to 5GInvest in latest generation massive Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output (mMIMO) technologiesRecycle or reuse network equipment and e-wasteImplement Artificial Intelligence (AI)-enabled software across the network to plan for traffic, while dynamically optimizing the Radio Access Network (RAN) performance based on data traffic and network activityAdopt digital twin technologies for network asset planning, field operations, and customer mapping

The report scope:

Suppliers and vendors were evaluated for sustainable impact and implementation, not to specifically rank companies one against the other, but to highlight their potential for supporting telco sustainability initiatives.

The assessed equipment categories were: mMIMO, 5G RAN, 5G Open RAN, On-site renewable energy, Free cooling, Liquid cooling, AI-driven software, Antenna solutions, and 5G cloud-native platforms.

The overall assessment results:

The impact and implementation scores for the categories were rolled into a final overall assessment to select the providers with the greatest ability to scale sustainable impact across the industry. As a result, the traditional network equipment providers offering products in multiple equipment categories scored higher than companies offering limited telco products.

Traditional telco network equipment vendors – Ericsson

Implementation rank: 1 – Ericsson led the vendor sustainability assessment overall for implementation, and the company also led all competitors in implementation of four categories of telco network equipment (5G RAN, Massive MIMO, AI-driven Software, and Antennas).

Impact rank: 1 – ABI Research met with Ericsson’s head of sustainability and other product experts to confirm the company’s commitment to reducing carbon emissions and waste across its own operations and throughout the entire product portfolio.

The traditional telco market segment is likely to be the best positioned to help telcos improve their overall sustainability positioning. 

Download the report

Learn more about Ericsson.

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Creating Calm Spaces for Air Travelers Through Art

By Brandon Buckner

A new art exhibit called Capturing Calm invites air travelers to de-stress within a busy terminal of Reagan National Airport.

The exhibit, organized by Uniting US and sponsored by Leidos, features paintings by U.S. military veterans curated to help alleviate the anxiety often experienced within busy airports.

Why you should know: Air travelers have faced a number of headaches recently including over the holidays, when extreme weather caused a surge of delays, cancellations, long lines and misplaced luggage.

AnnMarie Halterman, Uniting US Executive Director, said Capturing Calm is about bringing beauty and joy to others in an unexpected place and giving military veterans an outlet to express themselves.

From the source: “Airports are notoriously stressful places,” says Halterman. “Capturing Calm transforms these hectic environments to a balanced ambiance for travelers through images of hope, wellness and unity. We hope to help people relax in a space that can be very triggering and stressful. It’s amazing how peaceful these areas are now, and how different they are from the rest of the airport.”

Daniel Pellegrom, Leidos Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance Director, said the partnership has an added layer of significance because its artists have served in the military or belong to military families.

From the source: “The most exciting thing about this partnership to me is how well the Uniting US culture aligns with the Leidos corporate culture,” says Pellegrom. “Both organizations value mental health, stronger communities and honoring military service, all things we’re celebrating with Capturing Calm.”

Looking ahead: Halterman said a similar exhibit will open at Dulles International Airport later this spring, with plans to expand to Heathrow Airport later this year.

Leidos has many other fingerprints at airports around the world to help improve the travel experience, including software designed to increase runway capacity and equipment designed to modernize security checkpoints.

Please contact the Leidos media relations team for more information.

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7 Best Practices for Creating an Impactful CSR Strategy

Once upon a time, businesses could focus on profitability above all else.

Not any more: modern companies are expected to care about making the world better. They’re expected to serve their communities, listen to their customers, take public stances (and action) on important issues, value and support employees, work for sustainability, and respond to current events.

CSR (corporate social responsibility) programs are one way businesses are meeting this mandate. And standout programs addressing social and environmental issues are most often the result of thoughtful CSR strategies.

Whether you’re new to CSR or looking to refine existing initiatives, understanding the ins and outs of CSR strategy is a prerequisite for creating successful programs with lasting impacts. The new “business as usual” demands smart social responsibility—are you ready to meet the challenge?

What is CSR strategy? 
Why have a CSR strategy? 
Best practices for creating a CSR strategy

What is CSR strategy? 

CSR strategy is the comprehensive plan companies and funders use to design, execute, and analyze their corporate social responsibility initiatives. It includes specific focus areas, program design, promotion and communication approaches, and evaluation procedures.

Most companies with thriving CSR initiatives use strategy to build and monitor their programs; a few of these companies also share their strategy publicly. Nestle is a great example, offering detailed insight into their brand’s approach (called “Creating Shared Value”) that includes long-term goals for serving individuals, families, communities, and the planet, as well as measurement procedures and transparent performance and reporting.

Some companies also release an annual corporate responsibility report which is another useful way for you to see what a CSR strategy can look like. Google’s 2020 Environment Report includes priorities, company mission, performance targets, and detailed analysis in five key focus areas.

Why have a CSR strategy?

In the world of CSR, it’s especially prudent to look before you leap.

This is because successful CSR initiatives are intricate, complex, and require demonstrable impact. They’re also public-facing (and potentially brand-damaging when done poorly). And they offer a host of business benefits you might miss out on by failing to plan.

A well-crafted CSR strategy can help you:

Keep everything organized

Great CSR initiatives involve lots of people, multiple goals, tons of data, and countless responsibilities. Your CSR strategy is an opportunity to get everything in order and prepare to stay on top of all the details.

Improve impacts

According to Deloitte’s third annual global survey of more than 2,000 C-suite executives at companies with societal impact goals, the presence of comprehensive strategy directly correlated with greater success (measured by innovation, growth, and employee acquisition).

Protect your brand reputation 

Launching a corporate responsibility initiative without proper foresight is a big risk—that’s because your CSR program will be a public-facing endeavor with multiple stakeholders and partners who expect follow-through. Strategic planning can reduce the possibility that your company will gain a reputation for big talk and no action, which can ultimately harm your bottom line.

Take full advantage of CSR program benefits

CSR has a host of potential benefits for your company. A successful corporate responsibility initiative will benefit your community and serve your employees. It will also improve your brand image, attracting new talent and increasing customer loyalty. Ultimately, these outcomes can contribute to revenue and drive your company’s growth. 

In order to reap the full business benefits of CSR, you’ll want a strategy that’s brand-aligned, well-researched, responsive, partnership-driven (at all levels), and constantly evolving in pursuit of positive impacts everyone can feel good about.

Best practices for creating a CSR Strategy

Understanding the role and value of a CSR strategy is an important first step.

Now, how do you create and develop a CSR strategy that gets results? There are seven key tactics for strategic planning that will help improve the outcomes of your business’s CSR activities.

1. Link to company values

Whereas CSR was once seen as a peripheral approach to boosting business performance and legitimacy, today’s best CSR initiatives are squarely brand-aligned and central to operational strategy.

Connecting CSR to business strategy is increasingly a corporate best practice, as evidenced by the 181 CEO’s from brands like Amazon, Citigroup, and Ford who signed Business Roundtable’s latest Statement of Purpose, indicating a commitment to “to lead their companies for the benefit of all stakeholders—customers, employees, suppliers, communities, and shareholders.”

What it looks like to align your CSR strategy with your brand, core competencies, and operational strategy, will be different for every company.

WarnerMedia’s Access Writers Program is a great example of a CSR initiative that clearly links back to company values: WarnerMedia is a media corporation focused on diverse entertainment whose latest program seeks to improve the access marginalized community members have to professional opportunities in television.

2. Get insights from your various stakeholders

You’ll want to develop a strategic plan for CSR inspired by what your customers, employees, and community members care about. You might also seek inspiration from what’s worked for other brands already. Here’s how:

Poll your customers

The creation of a CSR strategy is a great excuse to connect with your customer base. Build a short, easy to access poll to collect the following information:

Which environmental and social issues matter most to your customers?

Design your poll in alignment with your brand. For example, if you sell custom T-shirts, are customers most interested in your sustainability, supply chain, dedication to labor and human rights, or donations to kids in need? Focused questions will lead to more actionable results.

What do customers know about your current giving and initiatives?

If you have run programs in the past or currently engage in CSR, how well did you communicate about them? Are your initiatives known for success?

What associations do customers have with your brand? 

This is a great opportunity to collect data about your business’s image, which you can try to influence in your new CSR strategy.

To help boost participation, consider offering an incentive to customers who complete your poll, such as a discount or entry into a drawing.

Collect employee feedback 

Your CSR strategy doesn’t move without your employees. Start by determining your employees’ preferences and using that information to help build your overall strategy.

A survey is a great tool to collect this important information, combining multiple-choice and open-ended questions.

It’s easy to build a responsive, employee-friendly survey in Submittable’s social impact software.

As an example, for your T-shirt company, you might have employees select between three brand-aligned volunteer opportunities followed by an opportunity for open feedback. This approach will you help you get the targeted data you need and also help employees feel heard and valued.

Assess community needs

What “community” looks like is unique for every business. Taking time to research and consider what your community needs is a great first step towards building the partnerships your CSR program will need to succeed.

Community Tool Box offers great suggestions for understanding community needs and resources, with methods that can be combined, depending on the extent of data you’re looking to connect.

3. Borrow great strategy

Your CSR strategy doesn’t have to reinvent the wheel. Spend time exploring where other businesses have succeeded in their sustainability, charitable giving, and employee engagement, for example. Don’t worry about being derivative: your strategy will necessarily be unique because your brand is unique and so are the people you care about and listen to.

One way to find brands doing the best CSR is via reports like “America’s Most Responsible Companies” from Newsweek and Statista—and congratulations to HP, Cisco, and Dell for top success in three focus areas: environment, social, and corporate governance.

Harvard Business School’s Baker Library offers a comprehensive list of social responsibility ratings and reports for companies. Of particular interest is Fortune’sChange the World” list—you’ll find PayPal and Zoom in the top 10 for 2020.

Many companies have aligned their CSR activities in some way with the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that include issues like poverty, hunger, education, gender equality, and action around climate change. Chevron’s corporate sustainability program, for example, clearly lays out how the company is addressing every SDG, and Target includes an SDG index in their 2020 corporate social responsibility report.

4. Establish internal buy-in

You’ll need your team’s support, enthusiasm, and dedication to make your social responsibility program thrive. Engage employees early in the strategy process by being responsive and inclusive.

Respond to team values

Once you’ve assessed what your employees care about most and where they want the company to focus, put this data to work.

It probably won’t be possible to incorporate everyone’s feedback in your strategy, but at the very least, share your findings with the group. Your team will enjoy learning about what their colleagues value.

Use the information you’ve collected to identify top areas of interest and common suggestions for your CSR strategy. Try to actively pursue at least one employee-sourced initiative every quarter or fiscal year, with formal plans for addressing additional issues in the future.

Involve employees in strategy-building

Research shows that shared leadership and employee-empowerment have a number of benefits, including increased team effectiveness, a stronger sense of community, improved employee perceptions of management, higher levels of employee satisfaction, and less burnout.

That data combined with evidence that corporate social responsibility boosts employee motivation and increases employee engagement makes sharing the planning of your program with staff a natural win-win.

Whether you establish an employee-led committee or include employee representatives in planning sessions, be sure employees are actively engaged and aligned with your CSR visions and values, missions and goals, and on-the-ground initiatives.

5. Build external partnerships

There’s already good work going on in the communities you’re looking to empower. Seek out the organizations and individuals doing this work early in your CSR strategy development process.

Many businesses are already reaping the value of partnership-driven CSR. This list from Donorbox offers examples of 14 major brands, including Adidas, IKEA, Apple, and BMW, that have partnered with community nonprofit organizations to better meet their CSR goals.

Community organizations will have the knowledge and experience to put your brand’s funding, sponsorship, or employee volunteerism, for example, to the best use. As philanthropic leader Edgar Viallanueva recently advised, “You shouldn’t feel that you need to recreate what’s already in place. Find organizations that have established relationships with grassroots communities and trust them to get the money to the right people. These bridge organizations often have the relationships and trust, but lack sufficient capital.”

Approach community partnerships with humility and take a learning stance—what do partner organizations need most and how can your business help? In addition to deep listening, be sure you’re establishing authentic relationships with partners. Sustainable and equitable partnerships (as opposed to shallow partnerships for the sake of PR) require that community members hold actual decision-making power, especially regarding campaigns that will directly affect them.

6. Be clear and transparent

Once you’ve tackled brand-alignment, stakeholders’ concerns (including customers, employees, and community members), and partner-driven strategy, it’s time to distill this wealth of information into a clear communication plan.

Get specific about goals and outcomes

Your CSR strategy should be as clear and specific as possible for a few reasons:

A clear strategy helps keep everyone on the same pageThe more focused your goals are, the easier it will be to assess if you’ve met themClarity reflects positively on your brand’s commitment to corporate social responsibility, demonstrating rigor and care

Aim for precise language, numbered goals (each communicated in a single sentence if possible), key strategies and initiatives for meeting each goal, and measurement tactics for assessing progress towards each goal. Be sure to include your mission, vision, and partners.

Campbell’s Soup provides a great example of clarity and synthesis in its corporate responsibility strategy—especially this goals chart which lists target objectives alongside current progress displayed numerically and graphically.

Make a communications plan

Your CSR strategy shouldn’t be a secret. Think through how you’ll share this information internally and externally to foster enthusiasm, boost stakeholder engagement, and enhance accountability.

Your CSR strategy should include your plan for regularly and publicly discussing your CSR initiatives—via your website, social media, newsletters, email updates, reports, and even press releases.

Sharing high-level corporate strategy publicly can help generate interest in your CSR programs. It also indicates transparency and accountability—you’re sharing your plan because you intend to follow through and be accountable.

Use the same principles for sharing your strategy that you will to talk about your active and completed CSR campaigns, including these considerations adapted from the EMG group:

Objectives: What do you want to accomplish with your CSR communication plan?Audience: Who will you communicate with?Subjects and key messages: What will you tell your audience about?Timescales: When will you communicate about CSR?Channels: Where will you communicate with your audience?Feedback: How will your audience be able to engage with you?

7. Learn, respond, and improve

In the world of CSR, there is always room for improvement, because CSR is about people and people are dynamic. Our needs change and so does the world we live in.

Accordingly, your CSR strategy won’t be complete without a plan for learning, adjustment, and growth—or as Global Giving puts it, the opportunity to “Listen, Act, Learn. Repeat.”

Plan for reporting and feedback 

Data and feedback collection should be an essential part of your CSR strategy. Don’t wait for an initiative to finish to consider how you’ll assess outcomes—planning ahead will help ensure your whole strategy is aligned with what you hope to achieve and how you’ll demonstrate progress.

You also shouldn’t wait until the end of a campaign to begin your learning process. Establish a timeline for collecting information at regular intervals throughout your initiative.

There are plenty of ways to collect data and feedback, including interviews, surveys and questionnaires, observational data, focus groups, public forums, oral histories, or some combination of these. Plan to use the tools that make the most sense for your CSR initiative.

Whichever method you choose, be sure your strategy involves connecting with all relevant groups and stakeholders. What results did you achieve among community members and where could you improve? How did employees feel about your CSR program and what suggestions do they have going forward? Were customers interested in your campaign?

Your plan for measuring CSR performance should include how you’ll collect information and from whom, how you’ll assess the data, how you’ll share your findings, and how you’ll incorporate suggestions for improvement.

Be responsive to learning and to the moment

Your CSR strategy shouldn’t be iron-clad. It should evolve in response to new insight and data. Think of your strategy as a working, living document that can and should continue to improve, even mid-campaign, as necessary.

As an example, the events of 2020 forced businesses to reconsider their existing CSR programs. Many companies chose to pivot in response to COVID-19 and movements for racial justice. The publicity around these shifts, including critiques of hollow brand statements, underscored the importance for socially responsible companies of clearly linking action (via CSR) to rhetoric.

According to Mark Horowitz, CEO of Moving Worlds, global events have resulted in a tipping point for CSR, wherein business leaders are making bigger promises without changing operations to support their proposals. More than ever, he argues, companies must respond to the moment and take real action: “The next 10 months will define the CSR space for the next 10 years … CSR leaders within companies have the opportunity to right the position of corporations in society.”

While it’s vital to stay responsive, be wary of altering key goals and measurement tactics before you’ve had time to accurately assess them. Not only do you open your company up to critique for empty promises, but change doesn’t happen overnight and long-term objectives require longer-term measurement.

As Neil Buddy Shah, Managing Director at GiveWell, shared in a recent panel on impact data, you risk good ideas failing when organizations run an impact evaluation that is too rigorous too early.

Time for action: Bring your CSR strategy to life

A thoughtful CSR strategy requires time, thought, and teamwork to build. Make the best use of your efforts with tools that help transform your vision into action and results, faster.

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St. Louis Banker and Entrepreneur Build Friendship and Businesses

Originally published on U.S. Bank company blog

Tony Dansberry and Johnny Little’s friendship grew from what started out as purely a business relationship. In 2016, Dansberry, now a U.S. Bank District Manager in St. Louis, was a branch manager and met with Little when he came to the branch to talk about his business goals.

Little is CEO of eLittle Communications Group, which provides public relations, marketing, advertising and other services for clients that include federal entities, nonprofits, school districts and a public transit agency. After their first conversation, Dansberry knew then that Little had big dreams.

“As a private citizen and now as an entrepreneur with multiple businesses, Johnny has always been a philanthropist for North St. Louis County who wanted to make a difference,” Dansberry said. “When he first started thinking about expanding his communications business, I began putting him in touch with the right team at U.S. Bank to help him pave the way for success.”  

The team helped Little develop plans that have paid off.

“I can truly say that in the last seven years or so we have grown tremendously in the PR field,” Little said. “Headquartered in St. Louis, we now have several employees across the country. U.S. Bank has helped us be able to access capital and sustain our growth.” 

Little moved from Holly Springs, Mississippi, to Ferguson in the late 1990’s after he graduated from Rust College, a historically Black college and university. Part of the Greater St. Louis metropolitan area and known as North County, the Ferguson community has remained important to Little, who has made it his mission to bring businesses and opportunities to the area. 

“I wanted to invest more in Ferguson, so I purchased a building that had closed during the pandemic in November 2020,” Little said. “My No. 1 goal is for people who want to visit our city to feel safe and want to be a part of this resurgence in the community.”

“Little obtained a loan from U.S. Bank to get funding that enabled him to do a total renovation. He opened Elicious, a Southern-style breakfast and brunch restaurant, in November 2021. 

“Within the last 60 days or so, we’ve become one of the most popular restaurants in St. Louis County,” said Little, who started banking with U.S. Bank in 2007. 

At the restaurant’s grand opening, Little donated to the Ferguson Youth Initiative by starting scholarships for two students who are interested in the hospitality industry. The students work alongside Little and his staff on the weekends to learn the business. Both high schoolers are officers/leaders with Ferguson Youth Initiative.

Throughout February, in honor of Black History Month, Little and his staff are saluting African American chefs in the St. Louis community and special dishes will be served in their honor. 

“It’s been great to see this endeavor succeed, which is wonderful for Johnny but also the community,” Dansberry said. “It was a privilege to help him grow his businesses and help facilitate his dream of changing the perception of the Ferguson area.”

Little said he appreciates the partnership with U.S. Bank.

“Tony has been the perfect banking partner and we have developed a friendship on top of that,” he said. “He has listened to my vision and has asked me the important questions so he and U.S. Bank can come alongside me. I am grateful.”

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