Sustainability matters [videorecording] : business strategies for environmental leadership / William Barnett.

By: Material type: FilmFilmSeries: Publication details: Mill Valley, CA : Kantola Productions LLC, 2010.Description: 1 x DVD ; 58 minutesSubject(s):
Contents:
Does it pay to be green? How environmental practices trigger innovation. Why “greenwashing” makes for a cynical public.
Summary: With a shift in consumer preferences toward products and services that are better for the environment, some companies today compete not only on product features and benefits but also on the environmental impact of their activities. These firms have the potential to revolutionize how business is carried out, says Professor Barnett. His research on competition among organizations and why firms win and lose found that industrial evolution is driven more by innovations developed in response to competitive threats than by explicit corporate strategies. Green businesses—particularly those cooperating with non-governmental environmental organizations or aligning their business models with government environmental policies—can steer their industries’ evolutionary path. And green companies that develop internal leaders at various levels of the organization can influence their supply chain’s business practices, further increasing their environmental impact.
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DVD University of Wollongong in Dubai Main Collection 658.408 BA SU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available T0035191

Does it pay to be green? How environmental practices trigger innovation. Why “greenwashing” makes for a cynical public.

With a shift in consumer preferences toward products and services that are better for the environment, some companies today compete not only on product features and benefits but also on the environmental impact of their activities. These firms have the potential to revolutionize how business is carried out, says Professor Barnett. His research on competition among organizations and why firms win and lose found that industrial evolution is driven more by innovations developed in response to competitive threats than by explicit corporate strategies. Green businesses—particularly those cooperating with non-governmental environmental organizations or aligning their business models with government environmental policies—can steer their industries’ evolutionary path. And green companies that develop internal leaders at various levels of the organization can influence their supply chain’s business practices, further increasing their environmental impact.

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