CORPORATE COMMUNITY IN COMMUNITY INVESTMENT
LAIZER EDWIN N.BAPRM 42691
As community investment becomes ever more embedded in company strategies, we help link the needs of the communities in which you operate with your company's need for real return on your investment.
LAIZER EDWIN N.BAPRM 42691
As community investment becomes ever more embedded in company strategies, we help link the needs of the communities in which you operate with your company's need for real return on your investment.
Our
experience of working with thousands of companies and more than 45,000
charities means we’re uniquely placed to:
- Help you identify potential charity partners
Work with
you to develop sustainable
partnerships that create shared value for you and your chosen charities
- Grow your corporate community investment globally through our network of international offices.
- Provide ongoing support for your community investment programme
- Advise you on, employee engagemen including volunteering
- Help you to communicate your community investment successes
Corporate
Community Investment
In the
communities in which we develop and build, Skanska is dedicated to creating
long-lasting value for local societies and our customers – positive legacies
that go beyond concrete and steel. We do this through our structured Corporate
Community Investment (CCI) framework, through which we provide our time, skills
and gifts in kind for mutual benefit.
With CCI,
we concentrate on stimulating local economic development and supporting
educational opportunities in our focus areas of Safety, Ethics, Green and
Diversity and Inclusion. Also, we support technical education related to
project development and construction. As an example of how our sustainability
areas are interconnected, we use project apprenticeships to enhance integration
with local society, linking CCI with Diversity and Inclusion.
Corporate
Culture is Out, Corporate Community is In
Last
month I had the opportunity to attend the great place to work conference in
Dallas. One of the core themes from the event centered on creating and
sustaining corporate culture. Several CEOs talked about this being their number
one challenge not customers, not talent acquisition, but maintaining their
culture.
In fact,
they likened their culture to more of a community. That was the term they used
too community. When I think about creating a community a few things come to
mind:
- Creating shared beliefs, experiences and traditions
- Building authentic relationships
- Supporting the other members of the community
Culture
and community sound very similar. The one thing that’s clear is the measurement
of success. Communities are successful because their members are
successful. For a community to thrive, it needs care and attention. This means
building and growing a community is about people, not programs.
Building
a corporate culture based upon programs will only take the organization so far.
What sustains your culture is developing people for leadership roles, finding
purpose in their work and connecting with the company. It’s what simon sinek
refers to in his book and TED talk as “Start with Why.
Why
(companies do it) How (companies do it) What (companies do)
Lots of
really good organizations know what they do and how they do it. But great
organizations know why they do it. It makes me wonder. Is it possible that
corporate cultures know
what they do and how they do it but corporate communities know why they
do it?
Sinek
takes the conversation one step further. Customers decide to buy from
businesses because they believe in the “why” of a company. From a talent
perspective, is it possible that employees decide to apply because they believe
in the “why” of an organization?
If “why”
is the differentiator, then I completely understand the CEO comments about
community. Community is their “why.” It’s what makes the company great. It
attracts customers. It attractsthe best talen . It creates competitive
advantage in every way.
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