By Andrea Montes, member of the Baud team.
According to the Corporate Social Responsibility Observatory, Corporate Social Responsibility is defined as "a way of managing companies based on managing the impact of their activities on their customers, employees, shareholders, local communities, the environment and society in general".
Corporate Social Responsibility conceives and proposes a new and integral way of understanding business.
Sin embargo, su incursión en el ámbito empresarial ha quedado relegada a un segundo plano mucho menos ambicioso y relevante. Históricamente, la Responsabilidad Social Corporativa ha sido considerada un departamento, un silo interno cuya área de actuación e impacto era más bien pequeña. Llegando a ser, en muchos casos, un collage de acciones puntuales orientadas a maquillar la imagen corporativa y no un compromiso honesto y transversal.
In recent years, we have seen the consolidation of a more conscious consumer, concerned about his or her social and environmental surroundings and also more demanding, who demands more responsible business, products and services from the brands with which he or she interacts. This imbalance between social demand and corporate response has taken a 180º turn in recent months.
During this global health crisis, consumers have witnessed how companies have become truly involved in improving their lives.
Las marcas, como nunca antes, se han comprometido con el bienestar de las personas, por encima de su propio beneficio y, gracias a esto, han construido vínculos emocionales muy sólidos con sus audiencias. Hoy, la RSC ha liderado, de verdad, las políticas de la gran mayoría de las empresas aportando, en cada momento de la crisis sanitaria, el valor que la sociedad tanto necesitaba.
It is therefore inevitable to ask the following question:
What will be the role of Corporate Social Responsibility in companies after this global pandemic? Will they return to the cosmetic practices of the past or will a new social conscience emerge that will permeate the entire business?
The answer, for now, is an unknown, but, if companies are able to answer adequately, not only will their relationship with their audiences improve, but their legacy and social impact will be vastly more positive.
Corporate Social Responsibility today is not a static or predefined concept, but is constructed as a prism with an infinite number of faces that must be integrated into companies and evolve in step with society. After all, CSR has the potential and ambition to go as far as each company wishes:
- The essential pillar that defines the corporate roadmap, its products and services.
- A transversal commitment that permeates the entire professional hierarchy and all business processes.
- The ethical sieve that guides decision making, from the smallest to the largest.
- A tangible benefit that is directly perceived by all of a company's audiences.
- A more social, plural and responsible perspective on how to do business.
The great social power of companies has been exposed and it will be difficult for people to forget it.
We have understood that Corporate Social Responsibility is not a distant issue, but a business, social and individual commitment. Because CSR is activated by cultivating a certain sense of conscience in each company, in each employee, in each consumer, in each person.
In short, this reflection on the role of CSR in companies could be summed up in the great phrase that Uncle Ben said to Spiderman or, as in fact happened, that Franklin D. Roosevelt pronounced in his last speech to the public: "with great power comes great responsibility".
