Hubbry Logo
Creating shared valueCreating shared valueMain
Open search
Creating shared value
Community hub
Creating shared value
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Creating shared value
Creating shared value
from Wikipedia

Creating shared value (CSV) is a business concept first introduced in a 2006 Harvard Business Review article, Strategy & Society: The Link between Competitive Advantage and Corporate Social Responsibility.[1] The concept was further expanded in the January 2011 follow-up piece entitled Creating Shared Value: Redefining Capitalism and the Role of the Corporation in Society.[2] Written by Michael E. Porter, a leading authority on competitive strategy and head of the Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness at Harvard Business School, and Mark R. Kramer, of the Kennedy School at Harvard University and co-founder of FSG,[3] the article provides insights and relevant examples of companies that have developed deep links between their business strategies and corporate social responsibility (CSR). Porter and Kramer define shared value as "the policies and practices that enhance the competitiveness of a company while simultaneously advancing social and economic conditions in the communities in which it operates",[2]: 6  while a review published in 2021 defines the concept as "a strategic process through which corporations can turn social problems into business opportunities".[4]

Menghwar and Daood (2021) conducted a comprehensive review published in the International Journal of Management Reviews ranked second best journal in the field of management in year 2022.[4] In this article, they further refine three characteristics of creating shared value and define CSV as "a strategic process through which corporations can solve a social problem which is relevant to its value chain while making economic profits".[4]: 467 

The central premise behind creating shared value is that the competitiveness of a company and the health of the communities around it are mutually dependent. Supporters argue that recognizing and capitalizing on these connections between societal and economic progress has the power to unleash the next wave of global growth and to redefine, or even rescue,[5]: 1  capitalism.

Critics, on the other hand, argue that "Porter and Kramer basically tell the old story of economic rationality as the one and only tool of smart management, with faith in innovation and growth, and they celebrate a capitalism that now needs to adjust a little bit".[citation needed] One critic regards the CSV concept as a "one-trick pony approach", with little chance that an increasingly critical civil society will buy into such a story.[6]

In 2012, Kramer and Porter, with the help of the global not-for-profit advisory firm FSG,[3] founded the Shared Value Initiative to enhance knowledge sharing and practice surrounding creating shared value globally.

Mechanism

[edit]

Companies can create shared value opportunities in three ways:

  • Reconceiving products and markets – Companies can meet social needs while better serving existing markets, accessing new ones, or lowering costs through innovation
  • Redefining productivity in the value chain – Companies can improve the quality, quantity, cost, and reliability of inputs and distribution while they simultaneously act as a steward for essential natural resources and drive economic and social development
  • Enabling local cluster development – Companies do not operate in isolation from their surroundings. To compete and thrive, for example, they need reliable local suppliers, a functioning infrastructure of roads and telecommunications, access to talent, and an effective and predictable legal system

Many approaches to CSR put businesses against society, emphasizing the costs and limitations of compliance with externally imposed social and environmental standards. CSV acknowledges tradeoffs between short-term profitability and social or environmental goals, but focuses more on the opportunities for competitive advantage from building a social value proposition into corporate strategy.

Ecological accounting challenges

[edit]

A significant challenge of CSV resides in accounting for ecological values and costs that are generated within the realm of agricultural production. Up to 90% of the ecological footprint in food processing can be attributed to land management activities outside the control of corporations. An eco commerce model that accounts for ecosystem services at the production unit (farm) level allows "shared value" to emanate from the production unit outward. Centering the shared value at the farm level allows for utilities, biomass processors, food processors, environmental liability insurers, landlords, and governments to participate in the shared value process.[7] This ecocommerce shared value process accounts for and includes positive [environmental] externalities within the economic system.

Comparison with corporate social responsibility

[edit]

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) differs from Creating Shared Value, although they share the same ground of "doing well by doing good".[8] Mark Kramer, the co-writer of Harvard Business Review article on Creating Shared Value,[9] states in his "Creating Shared Value" blog that the major difference is CSR is about responsibility, whereas CSV is about creating value.[10] Whether it is an extended "new form of CSR" or "shared value", CSV is fundamentally different from the CSR activities of the past.[11]

In a 2013 video for the Huffington Post World Economic Forum, Porter said shared value is a logical progression from CSR because incomes are raised for everyone, not through charity and by being a "good corporate citizen", but by "being a better capitalist – it's a win-win".

CSV is a transition and expansion from the concept of CSR. Business responsibility has evolved from Traditional CSR 1.0 (Stages: Defensive, Charitable, Promotional and Strategic), Transformative CSR 2.0 and to CSR 3.0 what is similar to CSV.[12] Such development of stages by redefining CSR has laid theoretical foundations for companies and society to sustainably and communally overcome societal issues. As capitalism matures, it is companies' duties to break itself out of the traditional CSR by realizing its limitations and try to restructure and pursue new market strategies that value both economic and societal development.

The CSV concept supersedes CSR for it is a way for corporations to sustain in the competitive capitalistic market. Whereas CSR focuses on reputation with placing value in doing good by societal pressure, it generates both economic and societal benefits relative to cost in real competition of maximizing the profits. Instead of being pushed by external factors, CSV is internally generated not confined to financial budget as CSR is. With the advent of CSV and following strong worldwide advocacy for it, companies started to overthink about their vision for their sustainable growth.[13]

Critics, however, argue that Porter and Kramer seem to have "a very particular and limited understanding of CSR, one that neither reflects the academic debates of the past few decades nor captures most of today's CSR practices adequately. (…) Instead of dealing with a contemporary understanding of CSR, corporate social responsibility seems to be used instead as a straw man to rhetorically justify the authors' contribution and its proclaimed originality."[6]

Relational contracting and collaborative business models, including vested outsourcing, have incorporated Porter's and Kramer's shared value principles as the basis for implementing collaborative relationships that creates, shares and expands value for parties in a business or outsourcing relationship.[14]

Academic literature

[edit]

Origins and development of shared value

[edit]

A literature review was conducted into the important early work of 'shared value'. Researchers found some literature focusing on the development of shared value by Porter and Kramer (2006) with most work coming from few sources like the Monitor Group.[15]

More extensively the literature is from development organisations focusing on case studies into the interrelated area of business ventures at the bottom of the pyramid or inclusive business strategies/models.[16]

Outside these case studies, limited literature was found so the paper presented lessons learnt from shared value and interrelated business models to show how they developed and business strategies to engage with the bottom of the pyramid.[15]

The term "shared value" is found in Porter and Kramer's (2006) article, "Strategy and society: the link between competitive advantage and corporate social responsibility" and was a development by Porter of previous thinking on business strategy.[15] This article was the winner of the McKinsey Award for the best Harvard Business Review article in 2006.[1]

From the Corporate Social Responsibility perspective, they observed companies could have worked harder reflecting flaws in CSR that business is pitted against society rather recognising their interdependence; and second, CSR is viewed in a generic sense rather than strategically.[15]

To boost innovation and competitive advantage they say companies need to make CSR part of their core business strategy and researchers saw this as development of Porter's 1985 'Competitive Advantage' work where firms' activities were redefined through their value chains to boost competitive advantage through cost improvements or differentiation.[15]

Their argument that shared value can do both contrasts with Milton Friedman's view that the social responsibility of business is to increase its profits.[15]

Social value activities can overlap with traditional CSR. Efforts to promote sustainability through CSR may cut costs for the company and boost profitability, CSR and core business processes can become indistinguishable from one another, moving to what the authors' term "corporate social integration." By drawing attention to the way society impinges on business (rather than only business on society) it provides justification for solving society's problems as a core business strategy.[15]

Porter and Kramer (2002) "The Competitive Advantage of Corporate Philanthropy", seeks to address the tension of addressing the demand for greater levels of CSR with the demand for short term profits focusing on how a society's 'competitive context' impacts business arguing it is possible to see long term economic and social goals as connected.[15]

Creating shared value

[edit]

The researchers found shared value has not greatly progressed, with subsequent literature focused on the types of models and activities that businesses are undertaking to create shared value.[15]

They claim a slight development was Porter and Kramer's 2011 attempt to broaden the concept of shared value beyond the arena of corporate social responsibility with a greater focus on the nature of capitalism and markets, noting dislocations with current capitalism, emphasising the inherent social nature of markets, and suggesting that by adopting shared value principles business and society will be reconnected creating new innovation and socially imbued capitalism.[15]

Whilst it can be argued that capitalism would certainly change if businesses en masse re-orientated their core frameworks to focus on shared value, there is little analysis on how this would occur. The authors themselves recognise this.[15]

Through innovation in new technologies, operating methods, and management approaches a firm can improve society while increasing their productivity and profitability.[15] Porter and Kramer identify GE, Google, IBM and Unilever as having adopted shared value principles but note that "our recognition of the transformative power of shared value is still in its genesis", and argue that addressing social constraints does not necessarily raise internal costs for firms. In a 2013 article, Pfitzer et al. add Dow Chemicals, Nestlé, Novartis, Mars and Intel to their "Who's Creating Shared Value" list. They cite, for example, a "cross-sector coalition" in Ivory Coast supported by Mars, which was established to "avoid looming cocoa shortages".[17]

To create shared value companies should:-

  • Reconceive products and markets to provide appropriate services and meet unmet needs. For example, the provision of low-cost cell phones developed new market opportunities as well as new services for people living in poverty.
  • Redefine productivity in the value chain to mitigate risks and boost productivity. For example, in reducing excess packing in product distribution reducing cost and environmental degradation.
  • Enable local cluster development by improving the external framework that supports the company's operations, for example by developing the skills of suppliers.[15]

The business perspective

[edit]

The researchers found little evidence of an overall business perspective on the shared value framework, not surprising given the relatively newness of the concept as firms may have been pursuing shared value practices without it being realised as such, especially outside of the US and it was not clear how to measure if a business is pursuing shared value as opposed to overlapping areas of CSR or philanthropic activities. Counterfactuals of non SV approaches in case studies were not offered and tools and strategies to integrate, operationalise and measure shared value are only now being developed.[15]

They found authors that have promoted shared value provide case studies from US based Multinational Corporations (MNCs) that are explicitly pursuing shared value principles and that resource flows could be significant as GE are investing $6bn to improve health-care access through there 'Healthymagination' programme. They found little analysis as to how much this represents of total GE investment or how shared value investment in a sector compares with nonshared value- investment.[15]

The researchers claim Multi National Corporation motivations are mixed with some highlighting climate change and others a desire for employees to have better links with local communities.

They found little documentation outside success stories of influence elsewhere. Porter noted in "Measuring shared value; how to unlock value by linking social and Business Results" that without clear evidence of the impact of the shared value proposition (and tools to measure it) it will be difficult to attract investors.[15]

The researchers propose that shared value may have added to the wider discourse that views the private sector as key for development and profitable business models as consistent with enhancing social impact but make clear that they do not mean that shared value directly influenced the more established interest in inclusive business, with few of the initial inclusive business papers discussing shared value concepts in any detail. They say a more direct influence, consistent with moves in inclusive business, is companies pursuing shared value developed new types of relationships with other organisations like NGOs.[15]

Shared value and the bottom of the pyramid

[edit]

Much focus has been on the application of shared value at the bottom of the pyramid reflecting both greater social needs among this group and the new markets they offer.[15]

The researchers mention Porter and Kramer's example of Hindustan Unilever's innovation in hygiene products distribution, using smaller package sizes, creating new business opportunities and appropriate products for the poor, a classic the bottom of the pyramid model. They also mention Prahalad and Hart's "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid" paper which sets out how attractive the bottom of the pyramid is for MNCs with commercial and social opportunities through mutual value creation by reorientating their core business to provide products for these consumers.[15]

The researchers claim this thesis challenged assumptions that business success and creating social value was not possible at the lower end of the market.[15]

Inclusive business models

[edit]

Direct links between shared value and the bottom of the pyramid were further brought together in a 2007 conference titled "The role of the private sector in expanding economic opportunity through collaborative action" hosted by Harvard CSR Initiative, FSG Social Impact Advisors, and the IFC focusing on how companies could improve livelihoods of the bottom of the pyramid through both new services and new markets.[15]

Two complementary frameworks companies were using promoting shared value were examined by the researchers:

  • "inclusive business models" which aim to directly involve the poor in their value chains
  • "complementary strategies" that aim to enhance the overall environment for such models to flourish, for example by shaping public policy or up-skilling workers.[15]

The researchers used the 2008 UNDP definition "create value by providing products and services to or sourcing from the poor, including the earned income strategies of non-governmental organisations" to describe 'Inclusive business models' as an umbrella term for a range of models.[15]

They show the UNDP paper (2008) "Creating Value for All: Strategies for Doing Business with the Poor" which examines over 50 inclusive business ventures and the partnership between World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) and SNV (2008) which developed the concept in Latin America, captured in "Inclusive Business - profitable business for successful development".[15]

They found whilst inclusive business is closely related to shared value in that both highlight profits motives as being compatible with "doing good", its origins are less centred in CSR strategies, and that Caroline Ashley in her 2009 paper that as the shared value concept moved CSR to be more grounded in business strategy and inclusive business moved sustainable business terminology towards a more profit and less ethical framework.[15]

Within inclusive business there is also less of a focus on gaining competitive advantage through social impact (although that is still one of the potential benefits) with the overriding feature that marries profit with development impact. Inclusive business models can be found in a wide variety of companies, while shared value literature has so tended to be focused on MNCs, and as noted in relation to Hindustan Unilever, a number of business models could be described as consistent with shared value and inclusive business.[15]

Application of inclusive business models

[edit]

The landscape of inclusive business

[edit]

This section provides an insight into both practical development and the types of business strategies being pursued. The researchers of the literature review into shared value found no single framework for shared value or inclusive business models. They found Davis commenting in 2012[18] about how the corporate sector is highly non-uniform and Caroline Ashley's 2009 paper, "Harnessing core business for development impact"[19] illustrating four inclusive business models with different value propositions and the variation in size of inclusive business models:[15]

  • Group A consists of commercial businesses that sell products needed by the poor which possess a high development impact, such as financial services.
  • Group B are companies that impact the poor in the normal course of their activities but take deliberate action to expand and improve this impact, for example, mining companies that improve their local value chains.
  • Group C captures SMEs that are embedded in the local economy and therefore dependent on its development.
  • Group D companies are enterprises that focus on a social product but with a commercial model of delivery.

The researchers found that while much of the literature on shared value concentrates on MNCs, the focus in developing countries is on a range of different company types.[15]

Applying inclusive business models to the bottom of the pyramid

[edit]

The researchers identified a number of constraints for companies attempting to create shared value. They found the IFC[20] presenting the results of a survey analysing the obstacles to companies wishing to incorporate inclusive business models in their value chains. Around 90% of the 167 applicants identified access to finance as one of the main obstacles to their business.[15]

They found other major obstacles included poor infrastructure and lack of qualified labour with the UNDP[21] also identifying further obstacles including a hard-to-reach customer base, suppliers with limited capabilities, limited market information and inadequate regulation.[15]

As inclusive business model products are often entering new markets they tend to be push based requiring high levels of awareness-building and education, unlike pull categories that customers already desire, like low cost cell phones.[22]

They found Lucci's 2012 paper "Post-2015 Millennium Development Goals: What role for business?"[23] identifying two dominant core business models pursued at the bottom of the pyramid: "harnessing innovation capacity" and "leveraging supply chains and the production process".[15]

The first can in part be viewed as the earlier framework of inclusive business models, which aimed to target low-income consumers through product innovation, such as the example mentioned above of Hindustan Unilever marketing products in more appropriate packaging[24][25] which relied on a high return of capital employed, often through shared access services, and a low cost, high volume strategy.[15]

In contrast, they found a 2012 business review paper by Simanis,[26] who argued there was a flaw in this low-price, low-margin, high-volume strategy that MNCs have adopted and only works if two characteristics exist: the ability to leverage existing infrastructure that already serves wealthier customers; and consumers already know how to buy and use the product offering. They found Simanis theorised these characteristics were often missing with him concluding that "because the high costs of doing business among the very poor demand a high contribution per transaction, companies must embrace the reality that high margins aren't just a top-of-the-pyramid phenomenon; they're also a necessity for ensuring sustainable businesses at the bottom of the pyramid."[15]

Simanis's three solutions for generating higher values are

  • a localised base product with final processing prior to sale as close to the target market as possible, saving on labour costs;
  • offering an enabling service to improve the value of the service offered;
  • and to cultivate customer peer groups to drive up aggregate demand.

These received criticism in Karnani's 2007 paper[27] which suggests that costs to serve the poor are still too high and the bottom of the pyramid will not be reached. The researchers found consistencies with an IFC report that a number of its successful models were 'whole pyramid' models, with the 'bottom of the pyramid' segments part of a broader market, allowing companies to leverage existing infrastructure, achieve economies of scale, cross subsidise and manage risk.[15]

Karnani (2007)[27] also argued that as the poor often make choices that are not in their own self-interest like the use of whitening cream in developing countries, consumer-led models that develop new product options may be inappropriate with much of the current discussion around consumer protection and over-indebtedness in microfinance[28]

Karnanis paper also criticises the focus on MNCs in exploiting opportunities at the bottom of the pyramid given the greater development impact that SMEs could potentially have and he argues that inclusive business models frameworks should see the poor primarily as producers rather than as consumers.[15]

London et al.[29] analysed the specific constraints producers face: on value creation that relate to a producer's ability to access affordable and high-quality raw material, financial, and production resources; and on value capture that relate to a producer's ability to access the marketplace, assert market power, and obtain secure and consistent transactions.[15]

The researchers thought London et al.'s focus on producers similar to the broader development of inclusive business models incorporated by UNDP (2008)[21] and in Porter and Kramer[30] with a greater focus on value chain development as opposed to product innovation. Lucci' [23] second major category and she provides the example of SABMiller encouraging the local production of sorghum in Uganda to replace more expensive imports of barley, developing local production alongside more affordable raw materials for their breweries.[15]

Within these broad categories there are a huge range of specific models that companies have adopted. An IFC publication[31] identifies a range of model types which include:-

  • "micro distribution and retail" which leverages existing retail outlets in neighbourhoods where consumers make small, frequent purchases locally, like telecommunication companies selling airtime;
  • "experience-based customer credit" provided by non-financial firms mostly to their own employees, providing access to finance and to the provider companies.
  • "last-mile grid utilities" through a combination of financing, technology and management innovations, mitigate normal constraints extend grid coverage to more distant and often lower-income neighbourhoods;
  • "smallholder procurement" value chain upgrades through aggregation methods;
  • "value for money housing" through a combination of facilitating mortgage financial and new housing products which are appropriate to the poor including support services, such as understanding training in the mortgage process; and
  • "e-transaction platforms" which can bring a range of new services (and therefore new markets) more conveniently and securely to the poor."[15]

Inclusive business (and shared value) ecosystems

[edit]

The researchers wrote that an emerging development in these models consistent across the inclusive business and shared value literature is the types of partnerships that they may involve between companies and other actors.[15]

They found companies need often to enter into broader partnerships to leverage local knowledge or scale up interventions. Lucci[23] highlights two examples of this:

  • the Southern Agricultural Growth Corridor of Tanzania (SAGCOT) where governments and donors commit to investing in infrastructure to incentivise agricultural business
  • longer term platforms that seek to recreate market mechanisms in research and development, such as work by the GAVI Alliance in health vaccines.[15]

They found Davis[18] arguing that the state and corporate sector need a "genuinely symbiotic relationship" which recognises the potential developmental activity that companies undertake as core operations, noting however that this rarely exists.[15]

An emerging development that builds on this is captured in a joint collaboration between the IFC and Harvard's CSR Initiative "Tackling Barriers to Scale: From Inclusive Business Models to Inclusive Business Ecosystems"[32] who suggest that despite some successes, given the levels of investment, inclusive business models record is limited and there are systemic barriers to scale that can only be tackled in collaboration with other players in the private sector, in government and in civil society.[15]

This can be achieved by strengthening 'inclusive business ecosystems' through "strategically engaging the networks of interconnected, interdependent players whose actions determine whether or not their inclusive business models will succeed." This move of focus away from the firm level, similar to market development approaches, such as Making Markets Work for the Poor (M4P).[15]

They conclude the initial stage of the research by identifying that a number of strategies companies have used to strengthen these eco-systems including the bottom of the pyramid awareness-raising and capacity building within the company, research, information-sharing and public policy dialogue.[15]

Lessons learned

[edit]

Measurement and impact

[edit]

Researchers found little rigorous analysis into the impact of shared value mechanisms, with the majority of evidence existing as standalone case studies of mixed analytical rigour. As documented above, many of these are highly positive stories combining evidence of increased revenue growth with first hand stories of social impact and found it was difficult to find a comprehensive and rigorous study into their overall impact.[33] says that feel-good stories aside, it's been nearly impossible to gauge the success of these ventures." And this further complicated in relation to inclusive business models by the variety of business cases for companies operating at the bottom of the pyramid[15][34]

They found London[33] also arguing that the predominant focus in terms of social impact is on income, missing wider social dimensions and ignoring potential negatives like undesirable products becoming more accessible and proposed this as less of the case for inclusive business models, often supported by development agencies that have more experience with the wider dynamics of social impact at the bottom of the pyramid. All current measurement models suffer from standard impact challenges, with the emphasis on tasks completed or products distributed rather than outcomes.[15]

They say there is little attempt to fully attribute a company's impact through the use of counterfactuals and recommend Wach[35] for a description of current methods used.[15]

Establishing attribution to a specific company's intervention is made more difficult given the growing emphasis on partnerships that the bottom of the pyramid approaches entail. As the researchers commentary shows, most of the impact discussion to date has been focused on the contribution of companies to enhancing development.[15]

They call for future research to go a step further and attempt to establish the linkages between pursuing core business model and the subsequent impact on both business and social indicators for example, compared to a counterfactual of a non-core business approach.[15]

Porter et al.[36] discuss the problems of current measurement tools that measure business and social impact separately and provides guidance in how to link social benefit to core indicators.[15]

The creation of shared value is not usually systematically planned through a framework. However, in SYRCS[37] methodology, by using shared value criteria in decision making and using different stakeholders, an step by step framework is provided.[38]

Successful strategies

[edit]

Notwithstanding the limitations in the evidence base there have been a number of reports that have sought to capture and synthesise lessons from successful shared value and inclusive business ventures. In an extensive report looking into various aspects of inclusive business models,[39] Gradl and Knobloch document a range of benefits for business, in particular access to new markets, in terms of access to new consumers and producers and through the potential for cheaper and higher quality production based on growth-intensive sales and the development of new products.[15]

They found that enhanced reputation may also lead to enhanced partnerships from customers, suppliers and governments UNDP.[21] An IFC report into the impact of their portfolio of inclusive business models,[40] found that revenue growth had been the main business outcome for business, whereas development outcomes included expanded economic opportunities for suppliers, distributors and retailers and access to goods and services[15][40]

They found factors which led to successful models included, adaption of products and processes that leveraged networks and to reach significant numbers of low-income consumers; models designed to be appropriate with low-income groups' cash management strategies, also leveraging social networks of the poor; capacity building of suppliers, distributors and retailers and collaborations with other organisations (NGOs, development organisation, social enterprises) to leverage knowledge and infrastructure. UNDP (2008) also highlight that business have had to remove market constraints that would more normally be the province of government, for example by investing in education, energy supply and infrastructure. This is consistent with Porter and Kramer (2006) view on competitive context.[15]

They found Hills, et al.[41] mention a number of external conditions were also identified that successful shared value companies had been able to leverage, including governments' openness to private sector participation in socio-economic development and/or the availability of external funding.[15]

  • Indian government support of ICICI Lombard's weather-based insurance and microfinance providers (through priority lending mechanisms),
  • DFID's support of Vodafone in developing M-PESA.

Strong partners are also important, either through civil society organisations that provide insights into local needs or other companies that share similar philosophies, for example distributors who may also need to adapt their business model. The level of penetration in ICT can significantly lower transactions costs and link informal economies to more established markets.[15]

They found Hills et al.[41] identify two key areas that are essential for successful create shared value companies, "intentionality" and "materiality." Intentionality requires a company or business unit to set specific goals for intended social and financial benefits with clear guidelines that can guide resource allocation decisions along the way and recommend looking at Gradl and Jenkins.[32] A number of company factors are identified that help successful implementation, these include: a culture of innovation that allows experimentation, together with a long term outlook; senior management embracing shared value principles; cross department buy in; and strong local buy in at a local level like affiliates in developing countries. They also stress the importance of building local knowledge through developing local structures and/or strong local partners and employing multidisciplinary teams that are open to new ideas[15][31][39]

The concluded by saying that materiality is important as it incentivises management to support CSV. It represents the extent to which creating shared value is central to the financial performance of a business unit or company and as materiality grows strategies are likely to be scaled up.[15][41]

Shared Value Initiative

[edit]

The Shared Value Initiative (SVI)[42] was created in the fall of 2012 with a commitment to action at the Clinton Global Initiative.[43] The SVI serves as a global knowledge and learning hub for companies and other stakeholders in SV strategies of practice. The establishment of the SVI capitalizes on global momentum surrounding Shared Value by driving new adoption of SV strategies amongst companies while also improving the implementation of SV strategies that have already been put into practice. The SVI engages in four major activities – deepening and documenting knowledge, creating toolkits for implementation, building communities of practice via both physical and virtual engagement opportunities, and serving as a general steward of the concept of Share Value. The founders of SVI have committed to developing the following capacities within the first two years of the initiative: developing and interactive communications platform, developing shared value content and events, and conducting outreach to a wide range of stakeholders by identifying and developing outreach plans for stakeholders critical to shared value adoption and implementation.[43]

The SVI is managed and staffed by the global social impact consulting firm FSG.[43][44] Current SVI programs include shared value executive education, an affiliate program that trains consulting firms on the implementation of SV strategies, an online community portal, and a variety of shared value resources.[45] The SVI also hosts the Global Shared Value Summit, an annual three-day gathering of over 200 leaders from the business, public, and not-for-profit sectors citation.[46]

Criticism

[edit]

The CSV concept started from 2002 and in this article,[47] they hinted the application of Porter's diamond mode.[48] Despite CSV theory is related to the diamond mode which has four endogenous variables, Porter and Kramer (2011) presented three distinctive steps to CSV; (1) reconceiving products and markets, (2) redefining productivity in the value chain, and (3) enabling local cluster development.

The Economist referred to CSV as 'undercooked' without much empirical evidence, noting that CSV's efforts to get corporations to look beyond the bottom line are not new. Also pointed out is the "striking resemblance" of shared value to Jed Emerson's concept of blended value.[5]: 5  Finally, The Economist questions whether CSV is "merely a pious hope" without any tangible improvement on the current way of doing business. A common criticism of CSV is the downplay of trade offs that businesses have to make.[49]

Thomas Beschorner regards the CSV concept, based on "several terminological and conceptual misunderstandings", as a "one-trick pony approach" with little chance that an increasingly critical civil society will buy into such a story.[6] Henning Meyer criticises use of the concept and sets out to extend it, noting that although ostensibly it concerns shared value, its focus is on internal business practices without assessing the social nature of businesses and markets, and it does not show how the pursuit of social value can be put into practice outside the individual firm.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Creating shared value (CSV) is a strategic framework developed by economists Michael E. Porter and Mark R. Kramer, first articulated in their 2011 Harvard Business Review article, which posits that businesses can generate economic profit by reconceiving products, optimizing value chains, and building local clusters in ways that simultaneously address societal challenges such as , , and . Unlike traditional (CSR), which often treats social issues as secondary to profit, CSV integrates societal benefits into core operations to drive , arguing that unresolved social problems represent untapped market opportunities. The framework delineates three primary mechanisms for implementation: reconceiving products and markets to serve underserved populations or improve outcomes, such as developing nutritious foods for low-income consumers; redefining in the by enhancing , worker welfare, and environmental to reduce costs and risks; and enabling local cluster development through investments in supplier networks, , and skills that bolster regional economies. Companies like have applied CSV by reformulating products to combat in developing markets while expanding revenue streams, reporting sustained growth in affected segments. Proponents claim CSV fosters innovation and long-term profitability by aligning business incentives with public goods, with early adopters in industries like healthcare and citing improved stakeholder relations and as outcomes. However, remains limited and mixed; while some firm-level studies link CSV practices to enhanced competitiveness, systematic reviews highlight insufficient rigorous data on causal impacts, raising questions about whether it delivers measurable societal gains beyond . Critics, including management scholars, argue CSV risks conflating profit motives with genuine social progress, potentially enabling greenwashing or prioritizing returns over deeper structural reforms, as it relies on market-driven solutions without addressing power imbalances or externalities like regulatory failures. Academic analyses portray it as an evolution of prior concepts like CSR rather than a , with adoption often driven by managerial trends rather than proven efficacy, underscoring the need for more longitudinal studies to validate its claims.

Origins and Conceptual Foundations

Historical Development and Key Publications

The concept of creating shared value emerged from discussions on reconciling business competitiveness with societal needs, initially articulated by Michael E. Porter and Mark R. Kramer in their December 2006 Harvard Business Review article, "Strategy & Society: The Link between and ." In this piece, the authors argued that companies could address social issues strategically to gain competitive advantages, introducing the notion of "shared value" as points of intersection between societal benefits and economic gains, though without fully delineating the framework. This built on Porter's prior work in competitive , including his value chain analysis from the 1980s, which emphasized internal efficiencies but began extending to external societal factors. The framework was more comprehensively defined in Porter and Kramer's January-February 2011 Harvard Business Review article, "Creating Shared Value," which posited that businesses should redefine their purpose to generate economic value by addressing societal challenges, thereby driving innovation and growth. This publication marked a pivotal advancement, outlining three mechanisms—reconceiving products and markets, redefining productivity in the , and enabling local clusters—and critiquing traditional as insufficiently integrated with core operations. The article's influence spurred practical adoption, with entities like hosting the first Creating Shared Value Forum in April 2009, prior to its full articulation, signaling early corporate interest. Subsequent key publications expanded on the concept, including Porter and Kramer's October 2016 Harvard Business Review article, "The Ecosystem of Shared Value," which emphasized collaborative ecosystems involving businesses, governments, and nonprofits to scale impact. Academic and practitioner literature followed, such as a 2021 systematic review in the International Journal of Management Reviews synthesizing over 200 studies on CSV's evolution and implementation challenges. These works trace the development from theoretical foundations in the mid-2000s to empirical applications by the , amid broader debates on capitalism's societal role.

Core Principles and Theoretical Underpinnings

Creating shared value (CSV) is defined as the policies and operating practices that enhance a company's competitiveness while simultaneously advancing economic and social conditions in the communities where it operates. This approach posits that societal progress and business success are interdependent, with societal harms or shortcomings often stemming from, or exacerbating, economic failures. Unlike traditional corporate , which treats social initiatives as separate from core operations, CSV integrates societal considerations into value creation to drive and growth. At its foundation, CSV rests on the principle that capitalism's primary mechanism for addressing societal needs lies in business rather than redistribution or alone. It redefines and by recognizing externalities—such as or workforce skill gaps—as opportunities for mutual gain rather than costs to be minimized. Core to this is the rejection of an inherent between economic and social objectives, asserting instead that addressing unmet societal needs can unlock new markets, improve , and strengthen industry ecosystems. Theoretically, CSV builds on established frameworks in competitive strategy, extending Michael Porter's concepts of industry clusters and value chains to encompass societal dimensions. It challenges the compartmentalization of and , arguing that isolated governmental or nonprofit interventions often fail to scale solutions effectively, whereas business-led efforts leverage market incentives for sustainable impact. This premise aligns with economic theories emphasizing endogenous growth, where innovation driven by addressing real-world constraints fosters long-term for both firms and societies. By framing social issues as integral to strategic positioning, CSV posits a causal link: enhanced community conditions expand the pool of consumers, suppliers, and talent, thereby reinforcing corporate viability in a feedback loop of shared .

Influences from Economics and Business Strategy

The concept of creating shared value (CSV) draws substantially from Michael E. Porter's frameworks in business strategy, particularly his emphasis on as derived from operational effectiveness, differentiation, and industry positioning. Porter's five forces model, introduced in his 1979 article and elaborated in subsequent works, underscores how external factors shape industry profitability; CSV extends this by treating societal challenges—such as resource scarcity or health deficits—as modifiable forces that firms can leverage for strategic positioning rather than mere constraints. Similarly, Porter's analysis from 1985 identifies activities that create buyer value, and CSV reconceives these by incorporating social productivity gains, arguing that externalities like or workforce skill gaps erode long-term competitiveness if unaddressed. CSV's precursor ideas appeared in Porter and Mark R. Kramer's 2006 Harvard Business Review article, which contended that corporate social initiatives yield competitive benefits only when aligned with core , such as through cost reductions or enabled by societal improvements. This linkage posits that social harms intersecting with business operations—e.g., supply chain disruptions from —represent untapped opportunities for advantage, shifting from to integrated value creation. By 2011, they formalized CSV as a where firms generate economic value by simultaneously advancing societal conditions, critiquing traditional for compartmentalizing social issues outside profit drivers. From , CSV influences stem from recognition of externalities and market failures, where firm actions impose unpriced costs or benefits on , as analyzed in neoclassical theory. Porter and Kramer highlight how externalities, such as from production, necessitate regulatory fixes but also create incentives for firms to innovate solutions that internalize costs profitably, turning societal deficits into market expansions. This approach echoes economic arguments for efficiency in addressing public goods underprovision, but prioritizes entrepreneurial discovery over top-down intervention, positing that interdependent firm- prosperity resolves failures like inadequate or that stifle demand. Porter's cluster theory, detailed in his 1990 book The Competitive Advantage of Nations, further informs CSV by demonstrating how localized ecosystems of firms, suppliers, and institutions enhance productivity through knowledge spillovers and specialization; CSV applies this to societal clusters, where firms invest in enabling conditions like or to boost collective competitiveness. Overall, these influences reframe and as mutually reinforcing, rejecting zero-sum views of versus in favor of symbiotic growth.

Mechanisms and Implementation Strategies

Reconceiving Products and Markets

Reconceiving products and markets entails innovating to align product offerings with unmet societal needs, thereby generating economic value for the firm while addressing social challenges such as , , access to resources, and environmental . Porter and Kramer argue that societal harms from existing products—such as from unhealthy foods or from inefficient use—create opportunities for differentiation and market expansion when companies redesign offerings to mitigate these issues. This approach shifts from viewing social needs as externalities to recognizing them as core drivers of demand, particularly in underserved segments like low-income populations or emerging economies where conventional products fail to penetrate. Implementation requires companies to systematically evaluate their portfolios for societal benefits and drawbacks, then invest in research and development to create solutions that serve both profit and public good. For instance, firms may develop lower-cost, nutrient-enhanced foods for base-of-the-pyramid consumers or technologies that reduce resource consumption without sacrificing performance. Opportunities arise from evolving factors like technological advances, rising consumer awareness of health and sustainability, and demographic shifts toward aging or urbanizing populations. This reconception can unlock new revenue streams; however, it demands upfront investment in understanding local contexts and consumer behaviors beyond traditional market research. A prominent example is General Electric's Ecomagination initiative, launched in 2005 to develop products like more efficient wind turbines and cleaner jet engines, which generated $18 billion in revenues by 2009 and was projected to grow at twice the company's overall rate over the subsequent five years. In , Vodafone's mobile money transfer service, introduced in in 2007, enabled individuals to send and receive payments via basic phones, acquiring 10 million customers within three years and facilitating transactions equivalent to 11% of 's GDP by 2010. Similarly, ' mobile agricultural advisory service in , started in 2009, delivers real-time crop price and weather data to over 2 million farmers, with more than 60% reporting income increases due to better . These cases illustrate how targeting societal gaps can yield scalable economic returns alongside measurable social gains, though long-term impacts depend on sustained execution and adaptation to regulatory and competitive dynamics.

Redefining Productivity in the Value Chain

Redefining productivity in the , as outlined in the creating shared value framework, entails examining a firm's entire operations—not merely for internal efficiency but for opportunities to mitigate societal constraints that inflate costs or limit resources, thereby generating both economic gains for the company and social benefits. This approach recognizes that externalities such as , workforce health issues, and inefficiencies often stem from unaddressed social needs, which firms can internalize to achieve sustainable competitive advantages. For instance, by investing in supplier development or resource conservation, companies can lower input costs while enhancing . Key levers include optimizing by building supplier capacity, which improves input quality and reliability; enhancing through better and ; and prioritizing employee well-being via , , and skill-building programs that reduce and turnover. Logistics and distribution can be streamlined by addressing infrastructure gaps or linked to failures, while after-sales activities benefit from initiatives that minimize waste. These measures contrast with traditional cost-cutting by aligning productivity with societal progress, such as reducing or bolstering local economies. A practical example is Nestlé's efforts in rural supply chains, where the company provided training and to smallholder farmers in developing regions, leading to higher crop yields and milk production—such as a reported 30-50% increase in output in Pakistan's sector—while securing a more stable, cost-effective supply of raw materials. Similarly, firms like have redesigned packaging and sourcing to cut usage in production by up to 50% in certain operations, yielding environmental savings alongside reduced operational expenses. These initiatives demonstrate how redefining can yield measurable returns, though long-term success depends on scalable and local context. Empirical assessments of such strategies remain limited, with systematic reviews indicating that while CSV approaches like value chain redefinition correlate with in resource-constrained settings, rigorous causal evidence on broad profitability impacts is sparse, often relying on case-specific outcomes rather than large-scale . Critics note potential overemphasis on voluntary without regulatory enforcement, yet proponents argue it fosters resilience against risks like resource scarcity.

Building Supportive Industry Clusters

Building supportive industry clusters in the creating shared value (CSV) framework entails firms strategically investing in the ecosystems surrounding their operations to develop complementary suppliers, , , and skilled labor pools, thereby enhancing while simultaneously fostering local and . This approach recognizes that isolated company activities often face constraints from underdeveloped local conditions, such as inadequate transportation networks or insufficient specialized , which elevate costs and risks. By addressing these through collaborative initiatives—such as partnering with educational institutions for vocational programs or subsidizing supplier upgrades—companies reduce dependency on distant or unreliable inputs, lower transaction costs, and stimulate spillovers that benefit the broader region. The mechanism operates via a virtuous cycle: enhanced local clusters improve firm (e.g., through just-in-time supply chains and reduced expenses), which in turn generates higher wages, tax revenues, and reinvestments into community infrastructure, amplifying societal welfare without diluting profit motives. Porter and Kramer emphasize that this differs from by tying investments directly to competitive advantages; for instance, a firm might fund regional R&D hubs to access cutting-edge materials, yielding innovations applicable firm-wide while building a talent pipeline that retains skilled workers locally. Empirical analyses of cluster initiatives, such as those in Italy's region, demonstrate that variables like inter-firm collaboration and institutional support explain significant portions of both business performance metrics (e.g., export growth) and social outcomes (e.g., rates exceeding national averages by 15-20%). Real-world implementations include the , where public-private partnerships since the 1950s have cultivated and IT clusters, attracting over 50,000 high-tech jobs by 2010 and contributing $20 billion annually to the state economy through knowledge-sharing ecosystems that support anchor firms like and . In the automotive sector, Italy's "Motor Valley" cluster—comprising Ferrari, , and —has leveraged geographic proximity and joint training programs to achieve a 25% premium over non-clustered peers, while creating shared value via 70,000 direct jobs and ancillary supplier networks that bolster regional GDP. These cases illustrate causal links: cluster investments correlate with firm-level cost savings (e.g., 10-15% in ) and macroeconomic multipliers, such as induced effects estimated at 1.5-2.0 times direct hires in supported industries. However, success hinges on alignment with firm strategy; mismatched efforts, like generic infrastructure grants without operational integration, yield negligible returns, underscoring the need for targeted, data-driven interventions over broad subsidies. Challenges persist in measuring long-term impacts, as short-term studies often conflate with causation, yet longitudinal evidence from cluster policies in regions like analogs shows sustained shared value, with innovation rates 30-50% higher due to dense supplier-buyer interactions. Firms adopting this CSV pillar, such as those in Nestlé's cocoa clusters in (investing $10 million annually in farmer training and certification since 2009), report yield increases of 40% for suppliers alongside reliability gains, though scalability varies by institutional quality in host locations. Overall, building clusters advances causal realism by prioritizing interdependencies over isolated CSR, with verifiable gains in dual economic-social metrics when executed with rigorous .

Comparisons with Alternative Approaches

Distinctions from Corporate Social Responsibility

Creating Shared Value (CSV) diverges from (CSR) by embedding societal needs directly into a company's competitive , rather than treating social initiatives as ancillary obligations or philanthropic add-ons. Porter and Kramer argue that traditional CSR often functions as a cost center, focused on compliance, , or mitigating business harms through separate programs, which limits its scale and impact since it does not fundamentally alter core operations. In CSV, social and environmental challenges are reframed as opportunities for and growth, generating economic value alongside societal benefits in a non-zero-sum manner. A core distinction lies in strategic integration: CSR activities, such as sustainability reporting under frameworks like the , are typically disconnected from and viewed as responsibilities to offset externalities, potentially leading to trade-offs between social good and shareholder returns. CSV, by contrast, pursues shared value through three mechanisms—reconceiving products and markets to serve underserved populations, redefining productivity along the by reducing externalities like resource waste, and enabling local cluster development—which align social progress with enhanced competitiveness and profitability. For instance, initiatives like ' exemplify CSV by addressing environmental needs through product innovation that opens new markets, unlike CSR's more peripheral efforts. Critics, including some business ethicists, contend that CSV overlaps significantly with "strategic CSR," which also links social initiatives to business advantages, suggesting Porter and Kramer's framework may underemphasize the novelty and risks of conflating profit motives with societal welfare without addressing power imbalances. Nonetheless, proponents maintain CSV's emphasis on first-order value creation—profits that inherently produce societal gains—overcomes CSR's limitations, such as moralistic or short-term compliance, by reorienting toward systemic solutions. Empirical analyses support that CSV-oriented firms, by prioritizing integrated strategies, achieve superior long-term performance compared to those reliant on disjointed CSR, though measurement challenges persist in isolating causal effects.

Relations to ESG Investing and Stakeholder Models

Creating shared value (CSV) shares conceptual overlaps with , which posits that firms should generate returns for all constituencies—including employees, customers, suppliers, communities, and shareholders—rather than prioritizing shareholders alone, as originally outlined by in his 1984 book Strategic Management: A Stakeholder Approach. CSV extends this by embedding stakeholder considerations into competitive strategy, emphasizing innovations in products, value chains, and clusters that yield mutual economic and social gains without inherent trade-offs. Unlike stakeholder theory's broader focus on relationship management and ethical balancing of divergent interests, CSV provides operational mechanisms—such as reconceiving markets to serve underserved populations—for quantifiable value creation that enhances firm profitability while addressing societal challenges like or access. In relation to ESG investing, which assesses corporate performance across environmental, social, and governance criteria to inform portfolio allocation and risk adjustment, CSV differs in its proactive, strategy-centric approach over ESG's often retrospective, compliance-oriented metrics. ESG frameworks, popularized since the 2000s through indices like the ESG Ratings launched in 1990s iterations, prioritize screening for sustainability risks and ethical alignment, but critics including CSV originators and Mark Kramer argue this can devolve into superficial reporting without driving innovation or returns. Porter, George Serafeim, and Kramer (2019) explicitly state that ESG fails where it treats issues as checklists rather than opportunities for , contrasting with CSV's focus on integrating social needs into core business models to produce scalable economic value, as evidenced by cases like Nestlé's fortified nutrition products yielding both health improvements and revenue growth. Empirical analyses support this distinction, showing ESG correlations with financial performance vary widely (e.g., meta-studies finding neutral to positive but inconsistent alpha generation), whereas CSV-linked initiatives demonstrate stronger causal links to long-term profitability through productivity gains. Despite synergies—such as both promoting societal integration—CSV critiques ESG and stakeholder models for insufficient emphasis on causality and measurement; for instance, stakeholder approaches risk diluting focus without tying social efforts to business metrics, while ESG investing may overlook how societal externalities like supply chain inefficiencies create untapped value pools addressable via CSV. Porter and Kramer (2011) position CSV as a synthesis that operationalizes these ideas, urging firms and investors to prioritize initiatives where social progress directly reinforces economic competitiveness, as in industry clusters fostering local supplier development. This relational framework has influenced hybrid models, but distinctions persist in accountability: CSV demands rigorous impact quantification beyond ESG's disclosure standards like those from the established in 1997.

Contrasts with Shareholder Primacy Models

Shareholder primacy models, as advanced by economist in his 1970 New York Times essay, assert that the sole responsibility of corporate executives is to maximize returns within legal and ethical bounds, treating social objectives as secondary or the domain of government and individuals. This framework prioritizes financial metrics like stock price and dividends, often viewing expenditures on social issues as agency costs that dilute profits unless they yield direct, quantifiable returns. In practice, it has been linked to short-termism, with U.S. public companies increasingly focusing on quarterly earnings guidance, which rose from near zero in the 1950s to over 80% by the 2000s. Creating shared value (CSV) departs from this by embedding societal needs into the core business model to drive economic competitiveness, rather than treating them as externalities or philanthropic add-ons. Porter and Kramer argue that shareholder primacy's narrow focus on internal ignores how unaddressed social constraints—such as inadequate workforce skills or —erode long-term productivity and market opportunities. CSV instead posits that firms create larger economic pies by innovating products for underserved populations (e.g., Nestlé's fortified in low-income areas, boosting sales by 20-30% in targeted markets) or enhancing efficiency through societal improvements, yielding mutual gains that exceed those from cost-cutting alone. While permits social investments only if they enhance , CSV requires proactive integration of social progress as a prerequisite for sustained profitability, challenging the causality that profits precede societal benefits. Empirical analyses indicate that strict adherence to primacy correlates with higher stock volatility during crises, as evidenced by S&P 500 firms with heavy short-term incentives experiencing 15-20% greater drawdowns in the compared to longer-horizon peers. CSV, by contrast, leverages causal linkages between social investments and revenue growth, as in agricultural clusters where supplier training reduced costs by up to 15% while improving yields for smallholders. Critics of primacy, including some legal scholars, note its potential misalignment with duties under evolving interpretations that permit broader value considerations for resilience. This divergence extends to measurement: shareholder primacy relies on financial proxies like , whereas CSV employs integrated metrics tracking societal impacts on competitiveness, such as reduced externalities in supply chains. Porter and Kramer contend that primacy's profit-first logic overlooks first-order opportunities where societal bottlenecks constrain demand, as seen in healthcare markets where addressing access issues expanded global revenues for firms like GE by billions annually. Ultimately, CSV reframes shareholder interests as advanced through expanded societal value creation, not isolated extraction.

Applications and Real-World Examples

Corporate Case Studies of Success

Nestlé has implemented creating shared value through its rural development initiatives, particularly in sourcing agricultural commodities like cocoa and coffee, where it addresses supply chain vulnerabilities by improving farmer productivity and livelihoods. The Nestlé Cocoa Plan, launched in 2009, engaged 179,399 farmers in 2023, providing training on sustainable practices that increased yields by 160–470 kg per hectare in Côte d'Ivoire. This enhancement in yields supported higher farmer incomes—targeting 30,000 families via the Cocoa Income Accelerator Program—while ensuring a more reliable, high-quality supply for Nestlé's products, thereby reducing procurement risks and costs. Similarly, the Nescafé Plan 2030 trained 148,000 coffee farmers across 16 countries, resulting in nearly doubled farm revenue per hectare in Vietnam from 2019 to 2023 through intercropping techniques. Overall, Nestlé trained 497,395 farmers on good agricultural practices in 2023, contributing to 15.2% of key ingredients sourced regeneratively, which bolsters long-term supply chain resilience and operational efficiency. In water management, reduced factory water use by 7.6 million cubic meters from 2021 to 2023, exceeding its target of 6 million cubic meters, through measures and watershed collaborations that preserve local resources essential for agricultural sourcing and needs. These efforts exemplify redefining productivity in the by mitigating resource scarcity, which could otherwise elevate input costs and disrupt production. Dow Chemical Company applied shared value principles to water stewardship by partnering with organizations like The Nature Conservancy to integrate ecosystem services into operations, addressing water stress in manufacturing sites. In Seadrift, Texas, Dow converted 110 acres into wetlands for natural wastewater treatment, providing a cost-effective alternative to conventional methods while improving local water quality and habitat. This initiative reduced freshwater intake intensity by 20% across six water-stressed sites, freeing municipal supplies for communities and lowering operational expenses amid scarcity risks. In Terneuzen, Netherlands, Dow pioneered large-scale municipal wastewater reuse in collaboration with local authorities, enhancing supply reliability for its processes without depleting freshwater sources. Such strategies demonstrate how addressing societal water challenges—through natural infrastructure—yields economic benefits like reduced capital expenditures on treatment facilities and sustained production capacity.

Inclusive Models for Low-Income Markets

Inclusive models for low-income markets within creating shared value frameworks focus on adapting operations to serve base-of-the-pyramid (BoP) consumers—typically those earning less than $3,000 annually—who represent over 4 billion individuals globally with collective exceeding $5 trillion. These models reconceive products through affordability innovations like unit-dose packaging, localized production to cut costs, and community-based distribution networks, thereby generating economic returns via market expansion while addressing unmet needs in , , and . Unlike traditional , they integrate BoP segments into core value chains, creating mutual dependencies where societal improvements enhance and supplier reliability. Hindustan Unilever Limited's (HUL) initiatives in rural India exemplify this approach. Through single-serve sachets for soaps and shampoos introduced in the early 2000s, HUL targeted irregular, low-volume purchasing patterns among BoP households, expanding its customer base from urban elites to over 70% rural penetration by volume. The Lifebuoy soap program, launched in 2002, combined affordable 4-gram tablets with school-based handwashing education, reaching 200 million consumers by 2010 and correlating with a 25% reduction in diarrheal diseases in intervention areas via randomized trials. Project , initiated in 2000, further embeds inclusion by training rural women as distributors, bypassing inefficient wholesale channels. By , it engaged 50,000 Shakti entrepreneurs across 100,000 villages, providing them average monthly incomes of 700-1,000 rupees (about $10-15 USD at the time) while boosting HUL's rural sales growth to 20-30% annually in participating regions. This model yields shared value by generating female employment—enhancing household stability—and creating scalable demand, though critics note dependency on HUL's product margins limits broader . In , Grameen Danone Foods Limited, a 2006 social enterprise joint venture between and , produces micronutrient-fortified (Shokti+) priced at 5 taka (about $0.06 USD) per 40-gram cup for BoP families. Targeting child malnutrition affecting 50% of under-fives, it sources from local smallholder farmers using low-tech "micro-plants" for distributed production. By 2020, operations reached 300,000 children daily, generated sustainable livelihoods for 500 farmers via and training, and employed 200 "Grameen ladies" for doorstep delivery, yielding nutritional outcomes like improved weight-for-age z-scores in consumer studies. 's investment, initially $1.1 million, prioritizes reinvestment over dividends, aligning with CSV by building a ecosystem that sustains demand amid constraints. CEMEX's Patrimonio Hoy in , started in 1998, serves low-income households lacking formal housing finance by offering weekly micro-payments for and aggregates bundled with construction training. Over 500,000 families participated by 2012, enabling incremental home upgrades that increased property values and reduced informal settlements, while securing recurring for equivalent to 1-2% of its domestic sales. These cases demonstrate empirical causality: BoP inclusion drives 10-20% profit margins in adapted segments when scaled, per industry analyses, but requires upfront investments in and to mitigate risks like low and volatile incomes. Success hinges on verifiable metrics, such as health incidence reductions and income multipliers, rather than anecdotal impact claims.

Ecosystem Collaborations and Partnerships

In creating shared value, collaborations involve cross-sector partnerships among businesses, governments, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and other stakeholders to address societal challenges that enhance competitive contexts and industry clusters. These partnerships enable companies to leverage collective resources, local expertise, and scale interventions beyond individual capabilities, fostering mutual economic and social benefits. For instance, Porter and Kramer emphasize that such allow firms to capture value from social progress by collaborating with entities that provide complementary strengths, such as regulatory support from governments or on-the-ground implementation from NGOs. A prominent example is the partnership between Group and , initiated in 2011, which developed low-cost shoes manufactured in to protect low-income populations from diseases like while expanding market access for Adidas. This collaboration combined 's model with Adidas's production expertise, targeting the base-of-the-pyramid market and generating economic value through increased sales volumes in underserved areas. Similarly, H.J. partnered with and the on a campaign starting around 2008, distributing vitamin and mineral sachets to over 5 million children in 15 countries at a cost of $1.50 per child annually, improving nutritional outcomes and supporting Heinz's stability by addressing malnutrition-related agricultural productivity losses. Nestlé's AAA Sustainable Quality Program, launched in 2006, exemplifies agricultural ecosystem partnerships by collaborating with NGOs, research institutions, and over 100,000 coffee farmers across 13 countries to improve yields and quality through training and sustainable practices, resulting in a 40% productivity increase for participating farms by 2015 and enhanced supply reliability for Nestlé. In energy sectors, , an Italian utility, formed alliances with governments and suppliers to shift 45% of its €76 billion power generation to renewables by the mid-2010s, averting 92 million tons of CO₂ emissions yearly while reducing operational costs through ecosystem-wide gains. These cases illustrate how partnerships mitigate risks like workforce health issues—such as Anglo American's treatment program in , which cut absenteeism—or financial exclusion, as in MasterCard's initiatives reaching 200 million individuals in developing markets. Such collaborations require alignment on shared metrics of success, often facing challenges like differing incentives, but empirical outcomes demonstrate reinforced industry clusters; for example, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's partnerships with corporations have bolstered agricultural clusters in developing regions, improving farmer incomes by up to 30% in targeted areas through joint investments in and . Overall, these ecosystems underscore CSV's emphasis on systemic interventions over isolated corporate actions, yielding verifiable returns like cost savings and market expansion tied to societal improvements.

Empirical Evidence and Outcomes

Quantitative Studies on Economic and Social Impacts

A of 242 scholarly articles published between 2010 and 2020 identified limited quantitative on the economic and social impacts of creating shared value, with most studies relying on qualitative case analyses or managerial perceptions rather than rigorous econometric methods. The review highlighted fragmentation in approaches, noting that while CSV initiatives may align social and economic objectives in theory, firm-level data often fail to demonstrate consistent causal benefits beyond traditional business strategies. One quantitative study involving 1,257 Belgian firms examined goal multiplicity, finding that simultaneous pursuit of social and economic objectives positively influenced innovation performance through practices, with regression analyses showing no significant trade-offs between goals and outcomes like . In the industry, an of collaborative systems demonstrated economic gains via improved resource utilization rates (up to 15-20% efficiency increases in modeled scenarios) alongside social benefits such as reduced carbon emissions by 10-25% through shared . These findings suggest potential synergies, though limited to specific sectors and reliant on self-reported or simulated data. A 2024 empirical study of Indonesian firms proxied via five bottom lines (financial, environmental, social, , ) and used over 2-4 year horizons to assess impacts on shared value creation. Results indicated positive effects from financial, environmental, and dimensions on shared value metrics in 2-3 years, but negative short-term social impacts and insignificant contributions, underscoring the need for long-term orientation to realize net benefits. Cluster-based initiatives have shown mixed quantitative outcomes; for example, studies on regional industry clusters reported enhanced firm competitiveness through productivity gains (e.g., 5-10% cost reductions via efficiencies) and social metrics like local increases, yet remains debated due to factors like pre-existing economic conditions. Overall, while isolated positive correlations exist for economic metrics like and , social impact quantification (e.g., emissions or welfare) suffers from inconsistent indicators, and broader econometric evidence using is scarce, often conflating CSV with .

Measurement Methodologies and Data Challenges

Measurement of creating shared value (CSV) typically follows a structured four-step process outlined by Porter and collaborators: first, identifying priority social issues aligned with business operations; second, developing a that quantifies costs, benefits, and risks; third, tracking operational progress through inputs, outputs, and financial metrics; and fourth, assessing results to refine strategies and demonstrate value creation. This approach emphasizes metrics that link social progress directly to business outcomes, such as revenue growth or cost savings, rather than isolated social indicators. For instance, measured its CSV initiative in by tracking increased insulin access for underserved patients alongside a rise in market share to 63% by integrating affordability with improvements. Similarly, Nestlé's cluster development in Rajasthan, , quantified shared value through 13% annual milk volume growth since 2008, tied to farmer training that enhanced local productivity. CSV measurement frameworks categorize initiatives across three levels proposed by Porter and Kramer: reconceiving products and markets to address unmet needs (e.g., Intel's tools boosting student outcomes and product adoption); redefining productivity by addressing societal constraints like (e.g., Hotels Group's Green Engage program reducing energy costs); and enabling local cluster development through partnerships that strengthen ecosystems. These require shared value metrics that capture simultaneous economic and social impacts, often using proxy indicators for intermediate results and distinguishing contribution from full attribution in multi-stakeholder efforts. A proposed for implementation includes scales assessing internal factors like organizational innovativeness and external ones like institutional support, with 65 items across 11 constructs derived from qualitative analysis of small and medium enterprises. Significant data challenges persist in CSV quantification, including the scarcity of robust linkages between social interventions and verifiable business returns, complicating . Timelines mismatch between rapid financial metrics and lagged social outcomes further hinders evaluation, as do attribution difficulties in collaborative ecosystems where impacts diffuse across partners. Measuring indirect effects, such as cluster-wide benefits or large-scale population changes, often relies on incomplete proxies, increasing error risks. The absence of standardized tools exacerbates these issues, with empirical validation limited by conceptual ambiguity and few longitudinal studies, rendering many claims anecdotal rather than data-driven. Overall, while pragmatic aggregation methods help, measurement remains resource-intensive and prone to overestimation without rigorous controls.

Long-Term Performance Correlations

Empirical studies examining correlations between creating shared value (CSV) practices and long-term firm performance have yielded generally positive associations, though the body of rigorous, longitudinal research remains limited, often relying on or proxies for CSV . A of 49 empirical CSV studies synthesized evidence indicating that CSV approaches, such as reconceiving products and redefining value chains, enhance economic outcomes by aligning social problem-solving with business productivity, with positive links to metrics like innovation performance and in sectors including and . In a survey of 1,257 Belgian firms, CSV's integration of social and economic goals correlated positively with , serving as a mechanism for sustained competitiveness and long-term value creation through improved operational efficiencies and market positioning. Similarly, a 2023 analysis of 294 South Korean small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) found that CSV moderates the relationship between entrepreneurial orientation dimensions (e.g., , β=0.268, p<0.01; risk-taking, β=0.131, p<0.05) and financial , amplifying economic benefits and implying stronger long-term resilience when CSV is prioritized. Quantitative evidence from emerging markets further supports these patterns. An Indonesian study using ordinary least squares regression on data (proxied for CSV via five bottom-line metrics) over up to four years revealed that financial and environmental performance positively influence shared value generation within 2–3 years (significant partial effects), while social performance showed short-term negative associations, positioning CSV as a strategic long-term rather than immediate cost. A 2023 panel analysis of Chinese firms empirically confirmed CSV strategies' positive effects on financial performance by facilitating resource acquisition (e.g., market and ), with mechanisms tested via , enhancing sustained profitability amid social responsibilities. These correlations align with theoretical expectations that CSV fosters enduring advantages over traditional CSR by embedding societal needs into core operations, yet challenges persist in isolating CSV's causal impact due to endogeneity, measurement inconsistencies (e.g., reliance on self-reported or proxy indicators), and contextual dependencies in non-Western samples. Longitudinal datasets spanning decades are scarce, limiting definitive claims on stock returns or over extended horizons, though available evidence points to CSV contributing to superior long-term economic viability when authentically implemented.

Criticisms and Debates

Theoretical Shortcomings and Unoriginality Claims

Critics contend that creating shared value (CSV) lacks originality, representing a repackaged version of established concepts such as strategic (CSR), , and , without sufficient acknowledgment of prior scholarship. For instance, Crane and colleagues argue that CSV caricatures traditional CSR as disconnected from , ignoring decades of research demonstrating the for integrating social considerations into core , as seen in works on enlightened value maximization and joint stakeholder interests. Similarly, systematic reviews highlight CSV's overlap with R. Edward Freeman's emphasis on mutual value creation and Rosabeth Moss Kanter's frameworks, positioning it as a restatement rather than a novel paradigm. Theoretically, CSV is faulted for its optimistic assumption of inherent win-win outcomes, failing to grapple with inevitable trade-offs between economic and social value. Crane et al. note that the framework presumes can be seamlessly converted into competitive advantages without externalities or conflicts, overlooking scenarios where addressing societal needs imposes costs that cannot be fully recouped through market mechanisms, such as burdens in multinational operations. This extends to a shallow conceptualization of the corporation's societal role, emphasizing firm-centric solutions over systemic market failures or power imbalances that markets alone cannot resolve. Further shortcomings include conceptual ambiguities and insufficient rigor in distinguishing CSV from philanthropy or mere compliance, leading to critiques of it as a vague lacking empirical grounding or precise criteria. While Porter and Kramer frame CSV as transcending CSR by embedding societal benefits in activities, detractors argue this distinction dissolves under scrutiny, as both involve strategic alignments of business and social goals, rendering CSV's purported innovation illusory. These theoretical gaps, rooted in an idealized view of capitalism's self-correcting nature, limit CSV's utility as a robust framework for navigating real-world business-society tensions.

Practical Limitations and Greenwashing Risks

Implementing creating shared value (CSV) encounters significant practical barriers, including high transaction costs associated with multi-stakeholder coordination and integration into existing value chains, which can deter firm adoption despite potential benefits. For instance, Walmart's initiatives to address issues incurred substantial reporting and auditing expenses, resulting in partner attrition and fragmented outcomes. Even proponents Porter and Kramer acknowledge that not all societal challenges align with a firm's competitive context or can be resolved through CSV approaches, limiting its scope to reconcilable problems rather than systemic or intractable ones. poses another hurdle, as CSV lacks standardized metrics to robustly quantify combined economic and social impacts, complicating and . CSV's emphasis on optimizing legacy business models often yields only marginal sustainability improvements without addressing underlying destructive practices, such as reliance on resource-intensive operations in industries like automobiles. processes within firms systematically favor incremental harm-reduction strategies over disruptive innovations needed for transformative shared value, perpetuating tensions between short-term profits and long-term societal gains. These limitations are exacerbated by organizational and the need for deep reconceptualization of operations, which many companies struggle to achieve amid competing priorities. A key risk is greenwashing, where firms invoke CSV rhetoric to legitimize superficial initiatives that prioritize reputational gains over genuine societal progress, potentially eroding trust in corporate claims. Empirical evidence from an analysis of 8,304 firm-year observations across 1,241 Chinese listed companies (2010–2021) demonstrates that higher greenwashing in sustainability reporting—measured by a mean index of 5.705—significantly diminishes CSV outcomes, with effects partially mediated by information asymmetry and disclosure quality. This negative relationship holds after controlling for firm size and governance, underscoring how exaggerated or unsubstantiated CSV efforts can undermine actual economic, social, and environmental value creation. Critics highlight that without independent verification mechanisms, CSV's flexible framing enables cherry-picking of low-cost social norms for marketing purposes, amplifying skepticism toward purported shared value initiatives. Stronger internal controls and external oversight, such as media scrutiny, can mitigate these risks by curbing deceptive practices.

Ideological Critiques from Market-Oriented Perspectives

From a perspective rooted in Milton 's 1970 doctrine, creating shared value (CSV) ideologically deviates from the core function of the by redefining its purpose beyond within legal bounds, thereby granting unelected executives undue latitude to pursue social objectives at shareholders' expense. Friedman contended that such pursuits amount to taxation without representation, as managers impose personal or societal priorities using resources owned by investors, potentially eroding accountability and inviting arbitrary decision-making over market discipline. Adherents to this view, including finance scholars like Michael Jensen, argue that integrating non-economic goals into corporate strategy fragments objectives, confuses trade-offs, and undermines value creation, as evidenced by Jensen's analysis of multi-constituency models leading to managerial rather than efficient outcomes. Market-oriented economists further critique CSV for presuming that firms can systematically identify and engineer societal benefits superior to those arising spontaneously from competitive profit-seeking, a stance echoing Friedrich Hayek's 1945 emphasis on the dispersed, embedded in prices and voluntary exchanges that no single entity—including corporate planners—can replicate. In free markets, shared economic and social gains emerge causally from self-interested actions constrained by competition, , and property rights, as firms innovate to meet demands while internalizing externalities through efficiency gains, without needing explicit reconception of products or clusters as CSV advocates. Empirical extensions of this reasoning, such as in analyses, highlight how regulatory distortions often necessitate CSV-like interventions, but pure market processes—unhampered by such—yield broader prosperity, rendering deliberate social value creation redundant or counterproductive. Ideologically, CSV risks blurring the vital distinction between private enterprise and , potentially enabling corporatist alliances where businesses partner with governments to frame social challenges in self-serving terms, fostering and over genuine market competition. Critics from this vantage, wary of historical precedents like 20th-century progressivism's erosion of natural rights in favor of , warn that CSV's emphasis on collaborative ecosystems invites , where "shared value" initiatives secure privileges (e.g., subsidies or mandates) that distort incentives and concentrate power, contrary to the decentralized coordination that sustains liberal orders. This perspective prioritizes institutional integrity, asserting that societal welfare is best advanced by firms adhering strictly to economic roles, leaving or redistribution to voluntary action or democratic processes.

Organizational Initiatives and Recent Evolutions

The Shared Value Initiative

The Shared Value Initiative (SVI) was founded in 2012 by Michael E. Porter, a professor at , and Mark R. Kramer, a social impact consultant, in collaboration with FSG, a nonprofit strategic consulting firm focused on social change. The initiative launched as a commitment to the Clinton Global Initiative, aiming to serve as a global hub for knowledge exchange and practical implementation of shared value approaches. It positioned itself as a dedicated to accelerate the adoption of strategies where companies generate economic value by addressing societal challenges in their value chains, rather than through peripheral efforts. SVI's core mission centered on building a network of leaders from corporations, nongovernmental organizations, governments, and funders to collaborate on shared value projects. It facilitated this through curated resources, including measurement frameworks for assessing shared value impacts, purpose playbooks for aligning corporate missions with societal needs, and tools for identifying business opportunities in areas like and . The organization maintained a Leadership Council comprising executives from leading firms to guide strategy and hosted events, such as workshops and summits, to disseminate case studies and best practices. Affiliated with Harvard's Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, SVI emphasized rigorous, data-driven methods to link social outcomes to competitive advantages, drawing on Porter's framework from the 2011 Harvard Business Review article co-authored with Kramer. By 2022, after operating independently for a , SVI transitioned key elements of its programming and community-building activities into FSG's broader portfolio, allowing for deeper integration with consulting services while preserving focus on advancing shared value at scale. This evolution enabled FSG to embed shared value expertise into client engagements across sectors, including and global education, where it supported initiatives like analyses for insurers addressing risks. The shift reflected a strategic pivot toward institutionalizing shared value within established advisory structures, amid growing corporate interest in impact measurement post-2010s trends.

Post-2020 Developments and Corporate Adoptions

Following the , creating shared value strategies increasingly incorporated resilience-building measures, such as diversification and initiatives, while aligning with escalating demands for environmental and regulatory ESG reporting. The Shared Value Initiative maintained its global advocacy, hosting summits and launching awards programs to recognize implementations, including the 2024 Shared Value Awards honoring organizations for impact-driven business models and the 2025 edition announced on August 1, 2025, which spotlighted initiatives challenging conventional practices to generate economic and social gains. These efforts reflected a broader post-2020 toward integrating CSV with regenerative practices and digital tools for scalability, as evidenced by peer-reviewed analyses of approaches enabling firms to align profitability with societal benefits like reduced environmental footprints. Corporate adoptions post-2020 demonstrated measurable progress in embedding CSV into core operations, particularly in and engineering sectors facing resource constraints. , a long-term proponent, advanced its CSV framework through annual reporting; its 2021 report emphasized regenerative systems to enhance and , while the 2024 edition detailed sourcing 21.3% of key ingredients regeneratively (surpassing the 20% target for 2025, with a new 50% goal by 2030), a 20.38% reduction in from the 2018 baseline (en route to 50% by 2030 and net zero by 2050), and provision of 132 billion servings of micronutrient-fortified foods. Specific initiatives included the 2023 Ocean Restoration Program by Europe, targeting 1,500 hectares of restoration by 2030, and the 2024 Gold refill pack reducing packaging weight by 97% compared to traditional jars. Other firms followed suit with targeted CSV applications. Demcon, a Dutch engineering group, issued its 2024 annual CSV overview on May 28, 2025, reaffirming commitment to operational integration of CSV priorities amid supply chain disruptions. In healthcare, Medtronic's post-pandemic adaptations—scaling production during 2020 shortages and sustaining community-focused innovations thereafter—illustrated CSV's role in crisis-responsive value creation, as noted in Shared Value Initiative case analyses. These examples underscore CSV's practical utility in driving verifiable economic returns alongside social outcomes, though adoption varies by industry maturity and external pressures like regulatory shifts.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.