
Subscribe
For companies committed to corporate social responsibility (CSR), there is a belief that all those good deeds will be rewarded with new business, but there is scant hard evidence.
Image Microsystems (IM), of Austin, Texas, stands as one of the few companies that can ascribe new business gains to its core values of sustainability and community, which are achievements that have been squarely leveraged by public relations to amplify their effect.
Walker says that IM’s revenues in the first six months of 2011 already match revenues for all of 2010, putting the company on target for 100% growth in the current year.
“I can directly attribute much of the growth [to] our diversity initiatives and our closed-loop, cradle-to-cradle process of converting e-waste into signage,” she explains. “Dell increased and extended its printer cartridge recycling contract with Image Microsystems because of our CSR commitments.”
Other clients include Office Max and NEW, the major extended warranty company for computer tech.
The Critical Role of PR
The Image Microsystems case study highlights the key elements of leveraging CSR elements for new business development:
Walker, who splits her time between marketing and stewarding the new MicroStrate business, says public relations has been her main outreach strategy, with a regular schedule of media-friendly press releases documenting achievements.
Tactically, Walker focuses PR on:
In November, IM will ramp up production to meet the new MicroStrate demand in a new 91,000-square-foot plant in suburban Austin.
From there to here
While Image Microsystem’s business trajectory was firmly set toward the reverse logistics and recycling sector, the diversity push was an unexpected goldmine.
IM was founded in 1992 as a manufacturer and seller of computers, but shifted focus over the years toward IT parts and components and now to “reverse logistics” – meaning, in this case, that IM diverts IT parts, equipment and waste from garbage heaps and incinerators by repairing, remarketing and recycling.
In 2005, Toni Abadi, an expert in American Sign Language, convinced her Image Microsystems CEO husband, Alex Abadi, to hire two deaf workers.
As a pilot project, the first hires were so successful that IM entered into partnership with Texas School for the Deaf, offering internships and employment opportunities. It was an experiment with substantial cultural and business development dividends.
Special needs employees, says Walker, are generally reliable, hardworking, appreciative and have lower turnover. In one case, a team overseeing printer returns at IM is 80% deaf, including the supervisor.
Corporate Trust as a CSR Dividend
When companies like Image Microsystems adopt sustainable business strategies, the mantra is “People, Planet and Profits” – the vaunted Triple Bottom Line that guides organizations through their commitments to Corporate Social Responsibility.
One way to evaluate the “pay off” for companies that invest in CSR is the gain in improved levels of corporate trust.
“Sustainability and trust create a virtuous cycle,” says Barbara Kimmel, the Executive Director of Trust Across America, an independent research company. “Because trust is an inherent element of optimism that buoys any economy, companies that understand the correlation between trust and sustainable business create greater value for all stakeholders, in addition to ’doing the right thing.’”
She adds: “A trustworthy organization is innovative and collaborative, leading to an even more sustainable business, driven by new products and their resulting revenue.”
In November 2010, Trust Across America identified 59 companies – the “Gold 59” including brands like Aflac, Fed Ex, Lexmark and Cigna — that met its benchmark standard for trustworthy business behavior and compared their performance since 1999 against the S&P 500.
“These companies have already outperformed the S&P by approximately 35% since we began tracking them in November 2010, and it’s no fluke,” says Kimmel. “If someone had been smart enough to have picked those same companies in 1999, they’d have outperformed the S&P by over 500%.”
The Halo Effect
At Image Microsystems, PR has proven to be the bridge between good deed and new business – catalyzing customer development, improved brand awareness, industry kudos, and enhanced employee morale, among other benefits.
As a take away, the strategy at IM boils down to this:
Ian Edwards is Executive Vice President of Arcadia Sustainability Communications in New York City. www.arcadiasustainability.com.
TriplePundit has published articles from over 1000 contributors. If you'd like to be a guest author, please get in touch!