The Connection Between Sustainability and Communications: An Introduction

Part 1 in John Friedman's blog series "The New PR"
Jun 12, 2012 4:30 PM ET
Campaign: The New PR

Posted by John Friedman

The role of communications professional has dramatically and irrevocably changed in recently years. The instant-information age has not only changed the ways in which information is shared, it has exponentially increased the amount of information that people both need and receive.  In media relations the news cycle has expanded to 24 hours; and the increasing prevalence and importance of non-traditional social media (and the increasing influence of bloggers and citizen-journalists) have required more than a change in tactics. These changes in the world around us have fundamentally changed - increased - stakeholder expectations and, as a result traditional communications functions are being redefined as well.  Organizations that wish to communicate with credibility are moving from ‘spin’ and toward ‘transparency,’ inviting and hosting the conversation and are being asked to be increasingly more open about their aspirations and their efforts to achieve them; sometimes even acknowledging their shortcomings. In this way increasingly companies are expected to shift their focus to actions, not spin; action to conduct with initiative and fidelity a company's relations with its stakeholders.

At the same time, the connection between sustainability programs and corporate communications efforts is more than a philosophical one. Because of the strong and increasing importance that employees, customers, clients and communities place on the environmental, social and economic impacts an organization has, many of the duties traditionally assigned to company’s communications departments to build internal buy-in (organizational culture and employee engagement) and reputational capital (external, community and public relations) can best be accomplished by maximizing the effective development, implementation, management and communication of CSR efforts across a company.

In my own experience leading organizational change (including a major restructure and redeployment plan, implementing a new mission, and vision, changing name, logo and graphic identify, mergers and acquisitions) as well as community, public, government and stakeholder relations efforts resulted in my leading a team that was tasked with building a program based on the company’s established corporate commitments to environmental, social and economic progress that would not only motivate employees, but would actively engage stakeholders and provide a greater return on our investment. In the process, the program went from being an “added value” to being integrated into a wide array of company outreach efforts that facilitated recruitment, community support for operations, government relations activities, shareholder outreach and more.     

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John Friedman, an award-winning communications professional and recognized sustainability expert with more than 20 years of experience, is co-founder and vice chair of the board for the Sustainable Business Network of Washington (SBNOW). 

Friedman has served as both an external and internal sustainability leader, helping companies, ranging from small companies to leading global enterprises, turn their values into successful business models by integrating their environmental, social, and economic aspirations into their cultures and business practices. 

His insights on sustainability issues and strategy are a regular feature on Huffington Post.

Friedman authored the e-publication The New PR which outlines how companies must modify the way they communicate to meet stakeholders' changing expectations through five proven keys for developing programs that replace "spin" with transparency and unlock the full potential of a sustainability program to build reputational capital. Friedman is currently working on a new book Your Backyard Is My Front Yard.

He can be reached at johnf@sbnow.org, is @JohnFriedman on Twitter and can be connected on LinkedIn and Facebook