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Corporate Social Responsibility
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12.06.2007 - 10:42am ET
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Media Response to WWF-UK Report on Luxury Brands Could Be Tipping Point for the Industry.
"Deeper Luxury: quality and style when the world matters", researched by Lifeworth for the world's leading environmental group focuses on the world's leading luxury brands, and finds them missing out on the opportunities for ethical excellence.
Report authors Jem Bendell (Lifeworth) and Anthony Kleanthous (WWF-UK)
(CSRwire) GENEVA, SWITZERLAND – December 6, 2007 - Last week over fifty newspapers
and magazines from Britain, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand, Italy and
Switzerland reported on the corporate responsibility of the world's
largest holding companies of luxury brands. For the first time they had
been ranked on their ethical performance in the report Deeper Luxury:
Quality and Style When the World Matters, which was published by
environmental group WWF-UK. The news went 'viral' through trade journals
and blogs on fashion, jewelry, and celebrities.
The report "could herald a huge change in the way global luxury brands
operate," states Fashion UK.(1) 'The luxury goods industry looks like it's
having its own Nike moment," suggests UN corporate reporting expert Dr
Anthony Miller, referring to the mid-90's criticism of labour practices in
Nike's supply chain that made the company invest heavily in its corporate
responsibility programme. Within days, Just-Style.com reported that "PPR
Group commits to improving sustainability" as a result of the
publication.(2)
Leading industry executives speaking at the International Herald Tribune
(IHT) conference on luxury, in Moscow, on the day of the report's launch,
portrayed a growing awareness of the importance of ethical performance.
Laurence Graff, chairman of Graff Diamonds, and Yves Carcelle, chairman
and chief executive of Louis Vuitton, spoke positively of their company's
responsibilities. However, in Conde Nast Porfolio.com, Lauren
Goldstein Crowe contrasted "the words v. the reality," citing the WWF-UK
report as an opportunity for needed leadership on this agenda (3). Not
surprising then that IHT had earlier refused an offer to launch the report
at their conference. The newspaper did not feature the report, with the
international business coverage being scooped by Vanessa Friedman at the
Financial Times.(4)
'Press coverage has focused on the ranking, and on what these companies
are failing to do right for the environment," noted WWF-UK's Anthony
Kleanthous in The Guardian. "However, the main thrust of the report
looks to a future in which the very definition of luxury deepens to include
not only technical and aesthetic quality, but also environmental and social
responsibility," says the co-author of the report.(5) The longest chapter
in the report focuses on the business reasons why that new approach to
luxury is commercially viable. "We examined key commercial challenges
facing the industry and found that greater depth and authenticity is a
strategic response to many of them," explains Dr. Jem Bendell of Lifeworth
Consulting, the responsible enterprise consultancy contracted by WWF-UK to
manage the research project and co-write the report.
"Modern technology means that what's on the catwalk today can be copied
and in the shops tomorrow, so brands need to offer something deeper than
purely appearance. The same goes for counterfeiting." says Bendell. "Sales
growth in societies with high social inequality means that luxury brands
face a crisis of legitimacy and a regulatory backlash, so their products
will need to benefit the local economy with good jobs. The increasingly
youthful profile of luxury consumers means luxury brands need to find ways
to build in value to casual fashion items, without making them non-casual,
with sustainability and ethics an obvious approach," he explains. "The
increasing availability of luxury items means that brands must find new
ways of maintaining their cachet, rather than relying on the memory they
were once scarce and exclusive. Deeper luxury is the strategic answer to
all these challenges."
Also an Associate Professor of at Griffith Business School in Australia,
Dr. Bendell stresses the need for a paradigm shift in corporate strategy:
"Consumer awareness should no longer be assumed as the only commercial
driver for ethical excellence. Though counter-intuitive to traditional
corporate strategists, this shift in thinking is fundamental to the
contemporary business environment of global communications, where
successful brands are behaving more like social movements."
Tom Ford, the former Gucci top designer said on the eve of the report's
publication that "we need to replace hollow with deep."(3) Ford’s
business instinct rather than telepathy is key, according to Bendell.
"There's no one better than Tom Ford for spotting trends in consumer mood.
The report details a variety of strategic commercial imperatives for deeper
luxury. If executives don't get it, that could be because they've had it so
good for so long and have become complacent."
At the IHT conference Tom Ford explained his emphasis on depth means that
his own clothing label does not carry - a label. "In the report we explain
that 'no logo luxury' is a growing trend that responds to consumers' desire
for authenticity as well as responding to the availability of
counterfeits," says Dr Bendell. If luxury is having its 'Nike moment',
then "executives could do well to hire expert advice on the stages of
corporate response to social challenges over the past 10 years, to learn
from the experience of others," says Sao-Paulo based sustainable
enterprise advisor Roland Widmer. "Lifeworth is working with research and
consulting partners to offer solutions to those executives in the luxury
industry who really believe in achieving social and environmental
excellence as part of the identity of luxury brands" says Dr Bendell.
And what of the reaction? "Some executives might be stung by the coverage,
and some environmentalists confused," notes Lala Rimando of the Authentic
Luxury Network. "But WWF-UK should be applauded for sticking its neck out
by publishing this report" says the Manila-based business journalist and
consultant. "The scale of the environmental challenge is so great and
pressing, and the reach of NGOs into Asian societies currently so limited,
that if the brands that affluent Asians love can excel in sustainability,
then awareness of sustainable living may grow in emerging economies fast
enough to offer a chance of curbing global consumption and pollution
within environmental limits."
Lifeworth has launched the Authentic Luxury Network to bring together
executives, designers, analysts and entrepreneurs who want to lead the
creation of more sustainable and ethical luxury (www.authenticluxury.net). The
company has also launched a site for people to keep up to date with
celebrity reaction to the report and its proposal of a Star Charter for
responsible brand endorsement (www.starcharter.net).
Dr Jem Bendell will be presenting his analysis on the future of luxury at
seminars in Singapore (in January 08), Manila (February 08), Brisbane Gold
Coast (April 08), Dubai and Geneva (May 08). To be invited email
luxury(at)lifeworth.com. In addition, a few places are available at a CSR
Geneva dinner on sustainable luxury on December 10th 2007 (email tiago.pintopereira@gmail.com).
To download the report: http://www.wwf.org.uk/deeperluxury
To contact Lifeworth Consulting: http://www.lifeworth.com
1) http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/dbe49fbc-9dda-11dc-9f68-0000779fd2ac.html
2) http://www.just-style.com/article.aspx?id=99314
3) http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/fashion-inc/2007/11/29/luxury-and-ethics-the-words-v-the-reality
4) http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/dbe49fbc-9dda-11dc-9f68-0000779fd2ac.html
5)http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/anthony_kleanthous/2007/12/brand_awareness.html
Press coverage of the report includes:
FT Online
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/dbe49fbc-9dda-11dc-9f68-0000779fd2ac.html
Tribune de Geneve
http://www.tdg.ch/pages/home/tribune_de_geneve/english_corner/news/news_detail/(contenu)/165120
Reuters
http://uk.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUKL2864063820071129
The Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2007/11/29/eabrands129.xml
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