The Business of Going Green
October 18th, 2007
The business of going green and becoming community and humanity focused has become increasingly popular amongst listed companies around the world.
Businesses have discovered it adds to their bottom line, governments have discovered they can secure votes with it and consumers are doing their bit to contribute to the planet. In fact, ethical investment funds is the fastest growing sector in Australia at the moment.
You know that it has become popular when Rupert Murdoch comes out and promotes that his company will be carbon neutral by 2012. Google are utilising alternative energy sources to power their server farms and Virgin Blue are offering heir passengers the opportunity to help them become carbon neutral.
Capital Raising is an important arm of the IMI Trust service and we are fortunate to come across some amazing companies, who’s innovation is quite astonishing.
Inventors out on their farms in the middle of nowhere, are coming through with breakthrough innovations that will go along way to contributing to the empowerment of our planet. They are quite possibly tomorrows billionaires and millionaires. Overnight success stories that are 10 years in the making and out of the spotlight.
What has been even more amazing is the amount of assistance the Federal and State Governments are providing to assist these technologies and innovations. Australia is often accuse for not ratifying Kyoto, and yet they are continuously sponsoring and investing in companies which can benefit the world. There are a multitude of programs, and people in place to advise and guide companies on the path to commercialisation.
Triple Bottom Line - Corporate Change or Smoke & Mirrors?
April 28th, 2007
The traditional benchmark companies use for success is financial. Money talks. Now, there seems to be a trend towards ‘Triple Bottom Line’ values. Triple bottom line is to achieve success on three levels - Economic, Social and Environmental.
The more cynical of us would think that it is a ploy from marketers to exploit fears over climate change and the lack of community currently pervading society. However, members of Generation X and Generation Y inherantly have a ‘greener’ social compass and a Triple Bottom Line agenda is effective in speaking directly to these groups.
Investors and consumers alike are actively looking for companies, products and opportunities with that fit within a Triple Bottom Line agenda. The focus is no longer just on achieving solid to spectacular earnings from quarter to quarter, just to keep shareholders and employees happy.
Government, and shadow government, are both using Triple Bottom Line metrics to shape policy. Corporates, such as Westpac Bank, are spending millions on advertising to align their brands with consumers who are socially and environmentally minded.
Countries are looking at carbon offsets, people are looking to be carbon neutral, businesses are looking at sustainable practices. And seemingly, for the first time, profit can be generated too from these scenarios. This is why Triple Bottom Line is an important change to the corporate landscape. Historically, companies have looked at social and environmental initiatives to occur at the expense of profits. Today, there can be success on all three fronts: economic, social and environmental.
For instance, governments are allocating resouces and grants to ideas with a triple bottom line bent, corporates are willing to sponsor these initiatives and investors are passionately seeking companies with triple bottom lines to invest in.
In the last few weeks we have come across two powerful companies with solid triple bottom line structures. Companies from isolated rural areas in Australia, in areas that have had it tough because of drought and natural disasters, in recent years. They have now captured the interests of companies and governments worldwide.
This will be interesting space to watch in the coming months as we lead up to a federal election and over the next few years as the impact of triple bottom line companies is felt by society.