Sustainable Business

SB March 2014

Sustainable Business magazine - essential reading for sustainability professionals

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Sustainable Business Business models 2/8 The wrong story? When you boil it down, our convention- al narrative for business is fairly straight- forward. It relies, almost exclusively, on the narrow pursuit of short-term growth and profit; selling as many goods and services as we possibly can, maximising the price commanded by virtue of lever- aging our customers (usually branding seems to work well, here), and minimis- ing resource costs (through consolidated sourcing, negotiating hard with our sup- pliers, and by extending payment terms for as long as we can). Oh, and fending off our competitors – by fair means, or foul. And all this activity, regardless of whether it leads to a sustainable outcome or not, is justified on the basis of our sin- gular responsibility to our shareholders. For years, the popular narrative has been driven by reference to Milton Friedman's rather restricted view of business and responsibility – that business is solely about making profits for the benefit of shareholders, and that the ends justified the means. Furthermore, this view of business is often backed up with reference to evolution, natural selection, and the laws of competition – as if these offer us fundamental and indisputable truths. What we need is the biggest overhaul in business thinking, ever.

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