Browne, John 1948-

Connect : how companies succeed by engaging radically with society / John Browne ; with Robin Nuttall and Tommy Stadlen. - xvi, 302 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm

Includes bibliographical references (pages 256-285) and index.

The business of business. The nothing new -- Chocolate villages -- Meatpackers and muckrakers -- The last nabob -- Silent Spring -- Queen and servant -- The reservoir -- The four tenets of connected leadership. History rhymes -- On purpose -- Professional era -- The front foot -- People rising.

"Why being radically connected with society is not just the right thing to do, it is an imperative for a company's bottom line. Connect is a practical manifesto that redefines the role of business in society. Through insightful analysis and vivid storytelling - ranging from ancient China, Andrew Carnegie and the Homestead Strike of the late nineteenth century, to oil spills and privacy issues emanating from the technology of the twenty-first - Connect explores the recurring rift between business and society and proposes a way in which companies can prosper by connecting with the world around them. There is an enormous prize for leaders who engage creatively and constructively with society, and who make its needs part of their company's business model. The evidence presented in Connect shows that the value of radical connection amounts to 30 percent of corporate earnings. The shares of companies that connect outperform those of competitors by 2 percent every year, amounting to a performance boost of 20 percent over a decade. Connect rejects stale ideas about corporate social responsibility disconnected from commercial activity and from the needs of real people. It identifies four tenets of "connected leadership," a radical new paradigm that shows how companies and executives can thrive by close engagement with society." -- Publisher's description

9781610396974 (hardcover) 1610396979 (hardcover)


Social responsibility of business.
Responsabilidad social de la empresa

HD 60 / B882c 2016

658.408