Friday, June 20, 2025

For companies, LUV is a three-letter word.

 

This editorial will appear on the Communicate issue 184, Q2 as I am the editor in chief of the magazine in question.

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For companies, love is a three-letter word.

Is there an alphabet soup to make companies feel better? Let us try these:

     CSR: Corporate Social Responsibility

     DEI: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

     ESG: Environmental, Social, and Governance

 

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives have increasingly become a focal point for organizations striving to align their operations with ethical standards and societal expectations. However, despite the growing emphasis on CSR, many companies encounter significant challenges that hinder effective implementation. The failure of CSR initiatives often stems from a lack of genuine commitment from leadership, insufficient stakeholder engagement, and inadequate resource allocation. These shortcomings not only undermine the intended impact of CSR efforts but also contribute to skepticism among consumers and communities regarding corporate intentions.

 

Furthermore, the divergence between assimilation and integration programs within an organization can exacerbate these failures. While assimilation involves the adoption of external social norms into corporate culture, integration requires a more profound transformation that aligns business objectives with social values. When organizations struggle to reconcile these two approaches, they risk creating disjointed initiatives that fail to resonate with both internal stakeholders and external audiences.

 

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs have become a staple in organizations aiming to foster inclusive environments and promote social justice. However, despite their widespread adoption, many DEI initiatives face significant challenges that hinder their effectiveness. Research indicates that these programs often fail to achieve sustainable change due to various factors, including employee resistance and the complex nature of measuring success.

 

One primary reason for the lack of effectiveness in DEI initiatives is the subtle resistance exhibited by employees. Researchers emphasize that resistance can manifest in ambivalent ways, complicating efforts to gauge support for these initiatives. Employees may outwardly endorse diversity while undermining it through passive-aggressive behaviors or disengagement. This duality suggests a deeper issue within organizational culture, where superficial compliance does not translate into genuine commitment to diversity goals.

 

I am trying to be very simplistic here, while untangling something legally very complex, but the gist of it is this: Corporations are considered persons” under U.S. law. As a person, one is expected to be ethical toward their families, neighbors, and communities at large.

It has actually been proven, however, that inside every act of generosity lies an element of selfishness. Meaning: If I do good, will I be rewarded in the afterlife? Will God return my act tenfold? Will I gain good karma? Naturally, in the same vein, companies expect their contributions to society to ricochet back to their sales. (According to the World Economic Forum in 2021, across 25 countries surveyed, 70% of respondents stated they prefer to buy products from companies with values.)

 

According to the MIT Climate Portal, carbon offset credits fund specific projects that either lower CO₂ emissions or sequesterCO₂—meaning they take some CO₂ out of the atmosphere and store it. Some common examples include reforestation, building renewable energy, carbon-storing agricultural practices, and waste and landfill management.”

 

Here are some examples of greenwashing:

     In 2019, McDonalds introduced paper straws that turned out to be non-recyclable.

     The European court ordered Shell to reduce its carbon emissions by 45% by 2030 compared to 2019 levels. It was the first time a private company had been ordered to reduce emissions by a fixed amount within a defined time frame. (This ruling was overturned by the Court of Appeal in The Hague in November 2024.) Meanwhile, the company still claims in its ads that it supplies 100% of household energy—despite that energy simply coming from the grid.

     Back in 2020, Delta pledged $1 billion for a plan that included carbon offset credits and supposed reduced jet fuel use to cut emissions. The company is now being sued over its claim to be the worlds first carbon-neutral airline.”

     As part of its pledge to recycle all packaging by 2030, Coca-Cola—through WPP Open X, led by Ogilvy New York—transformed its iconic script logo to encourage recycling. The logo, now appearing crumpled like a ready-to-recycle can, debuted in major Latin American cities. However, considering the company is the worlds largest plastic polluter, many question the motivation behind the campaign.

 

Some brands, on the other hand, end up playing both sides of the field, making any judgment incredibly complex.

 

Take Zara as a generic example. On the one hand, several factors bolster its reputation:

     Sustainable Collections: Its Join Life” line uses organic cotton, recycled wool, and other sustainable materials.

     Textile Recycling Program: In-store recycling bins are available for customers to deposit used garments.

     Energy-Efficient Stores: Many retail locations now run on renewable energy.

However, on the other side of the spectrum:

     Fast Fashions Environmental Impact: Zaras model of quickly producing trendy, cheap clothing in large quantities is inherently unsustainable.

     Worker Exploitation: The brand has long faced criticism for poor working conditions and low wages in its supply chain.

     Greenwashing: Its recycling schemes, while promoted, are relatively small compared to the businesss overall scale.

 

Another brand, Patagonia, is often seen as a beacon of environmental protection. However, paradoxically, it must still sell products to fulfill its objectives. Some of Patagonias positive factors include:

     Recycled Materials: Many products are made from recycled content.

     Fair Trade and Ethical Sourcing: The company partners with Fair Trade-certified factories.

     Repair and Reuse Program: Customers are encouraged to repair and reuse products, promoting a circular economy.

 

That said, Patagonia is still a business, and like others, it has trade-offs:

     Shipping Impact: The carbon footprint of global distribution remains high.

     Synthetic Fibers and Microplastics: Even recycled synthetics release microplastics into water systems.

     Pricing and Accessibility: High prices limit access to eco-friendly options for some consumers.

 

When it comes to DEI, the picture is, at best, a mixed bag. News cycles now proclaim that DEI is dead. Several major U.S. brands—including Bud Light, Target, John Deere, and Lowes—have faced pushback. The phrase Go woke, go broke” is often repeated like a mantra.

Still, according to U.S. company data:

     75% reported an increase in women in leadership; only 14% saw a decline.

     56% saw an increase in senior ethnic minority executives; only 23% experienced a decline.

     Companies sharing disability workforce data doubled in the past three years.

     14% now have an LGBTQ+ board member.

 

Yet despite this progress, McDonalds—like many companies—has pulled its targets for "aspirational representation goals" in senior leadership and supplier diversity. Still, 30% of its leaders come from underrepresented groups, and 25% of its suppliers are diverse-owned, fulfilling previously stated quotas.

 

Meta, meanwhile, dismantled its DEI program at the start of 2025, just before the investiture of the 47th U.S. president—who then issued a presidential order banning DEI programs in federal agencies. This move has sent shockwaves through the private sector. Some companies are pulling back entirely; others are reorganizing. But this is no laughing matter—its a directive from the top of the chain.

 

In our region, even gender balance remains a struggle. Just 31% of GCC marcomms (marketing communications) professionals report equal or near-equal male–female leadership representation (defined as 40–60% in favor of any gender). A majority (54%) report low representation, and almost a third cite very low representation, where women make up fewer than 25% of leadership. Only 30% say a woman holds the most senior role—CEO, CMO, MD, or founder—in their organization.

 

To call all of this confusing” is an understatement. What one region struggles with isnt even on the radar of another. There is no one-size-fits-all solution for CSR or DEI. Each society, community, and country faces its own unique set of challenges.

 

But for companies, sometimes, simplifying to three letters is more than enough.