Net Positive: How Courageous Companies Thrive by Giving More Than They Take - Paul Polman, Andrew Winston
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
Business
 Climate Change
 Environment
 Science
 sustainability
 Technology
Shared by:XavierOnline
These massive dual challenges—and other profound shifts like pandemics, resource constraints, and shrinking biodiversity—threaten our very existence on the planet. Yet division and discord risk undermining our response, just when we need to come together. Global partnership and leadership are lacking, free trade and globalization are under attack, and populism continues to breed intolerance and disruption.
At this critical time in history, the imperative to reimagine our economies and companies could not be more urgent. Fortunately, many in the business community—from large corporations to microenterprises—are helping to solve our most profound challenges by deploying long-term, purpose-led business models that put people and planet first. And they are profiting on this new path with new tools, AI and data-driven transparency, and radical improvements in the economics of clean technologies.
The key question has flipped from Why would you do sustainability? to Why wouldn’t you?
In this paradigm-shifting book, former Unilever CEO Paul Polman and sustainable-business guru Andrew Winston provide a model to help leaders build companies that contribute more to the world than they use or take—that is, net positive companies. They bypass the last gasps of denial to show how purpose and profits are inextricably linked and how collective action can deliver the scale of change and transformation the world needs.
Net Positive outlines the principles and practices for surviving and thriving, based on the experience of one world-leading company, Unilever, and other groundbreaking global organizations. This essential book is for leaders, executives, managers, and professionals who want to succeed, but know that winning requires caring deeply about serving the world. Building a net positive company is the key, and this book shows the way.
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| Creation Date: | Thu, 28 Oct 2021 15:17:52 +0200 |
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This post has 3 comments with rating of 1/5
October 28th, 2021
Unilever doesn’t give more than it takes. Unless environmental externalitites, child labor, forced plantation labor, and the use of Pinkerton like union suppression methods in south Africa are ignored. Among other corporate crimes and misbehavior.
To me this casts some doubt of a former Unilever CEO’s credibility on the topic this book purports to address.
October 28th, 2021
Like that guy with the coffee company who was super green and paid his employees a “living wage”. Remind me… What happened with that?
November 19th, 2021
Reminds me of Amazon warehouses in the middle of shanty towns in South America and paying their employees enough to buy peanuts whilst The Bezos makes $95B in 2020.
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