Windows Is Putting a Blue Box Around Everything I Focus on
 
            There's nothing like a
              brush with death to focus your attention.            
The global economic
              collapse has been like a brush with death for business. It has changed our
              perspective and will have lasting aftereffects on our behavior. Last week I
              read a report called "Responsible
              Luxury" released by the World Jewelry
              Confederation. The report
              argued that because of the economic downturn, there are new motivating factors
              behind consumer decision making. We have entered an era where consumers prefer
              to buy products from a company with a good reputation for social
              responsibility. The report also suggests that this turn of events will propel
              companies in the distressed luxury market to adopt conscientious business
              practices as the only option for survival.            
This is good
              news for the diamond industry, which has long been criticized for fueling
              unrest, particularly in diamond-rich central
              and western Africa. More to the point, it's great news for the countless
              families, communities, and countries ravaged by the effects of 'conflict' diamonds.            
Influential industry brands are stepping up to support the
              "responsible luxury" trend. Recently Tiffany
              & Co., the world's premier jeweler and the
              gold standard (pun intended) of the luxury industry , stated that they
              are actively embracing corporate social responsibility (CSR). As regards
              large-scale mining, Tiffany pledges to strive to
              source gemstones and precious metals from mines that operate at the highest
              standards of social and environmental responsibility.            
This is important
              because Tiffany has a 19 percent share of the global
              jewelry market. This move is sure to be a catalyst for change. What it means is
              that Tiffany has the opportunity to set standards for best practices. Ethical
              jewelry currently accounts for less than 1 percent of the $56 billion market in
              annual jewelry sales. But when a revered brand like Tiffany
              proactively engages in CSR, it is bound to have powerful cascading effects across
              the entire luxury goods industry.            
This is also
              a smart business move for Tiffany, because consumers are becoming increasingly
              conscientious about the origins of the products they buy. An excellent study on
              this topic from Cone titled "Consumers
              Like Companies With Cause," states that causes help to convert new
              customers and revealed that 83 percent of U.S. consumers have a more
              positive image of a product or company when it supports a cause they care
              about. What's more, the study reveals that consumers are asking for
              transparency; 90 percent of consumers surveyed confirmed that they want
              companies to tell them about the ways in which they are supporting causes.            
On the consumer behavior
              front, 80 percent of Americans say they are likely to switch brands to buy a
              product equal in price and quality from a company that supports a cause, and 19
              percent will even buy a more expensive brand. This should be music to the ears
              of the luxury goods companies, which desperately need to spark beleaguered
              consumers to spend more this holiday season.            
These are still early
              days to demonstrate the inherent value of CSR from the perspectives of consumer
              mindshare, market share, and profitability. It will take time for C-suite and
              boardroom discussions to reevaluate a company's social contract with the
              environment and the communities in which they do business.            
Still, I often talk
              about CSR being a tsunami that will wash over business and change everything. I
              firmly believe this is so. Tiffany is leading a big change by setting an
              example in a little blue box.            
Michael J. Kowalski,
              Chairman and CEO of Tiffany & Co put it this way: "Tiffany & Co. is committed to crafting our jewelry
              in ways that are socially and environmentally responsible. It is simply the
              right thing to do: Our customers expect and deserve nothing less."            
New York City • Great Leaders Conference • BRANDFog
Source: https://www.fastcompany.com/1692415/sometimes-big-change-comes-little-blue-box
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