The Malta Independent on Sunday

Transformi­ng social responsibi­lity to social advocacy for legacy

Corporate Social Advocacy is not a new entry in the dictionary of business buzzwords. It is new, yes – but it is not a buzzword. CSA is a researched area of corporate action where brands become more tangible and more socially relevant.

- Jesmond Saliba

Internatio­nal research shows as well that millennial­s are giving weight to social activity when making choices about their brands, or their work places. We are entering an age of confluence of brand value and community developmen­t that will place businesses in a more prominent position to influence domains outside the convention­al commercial ones. Corporate Social Advocacy (CSA) is the strategic navigation of these waters, and Corporate Identities has already embarked on an ambitious initiative to prepare the business community in Malta for the approachin­g horizon.

Nothing sells like values

Towards the end of the century, companies slowly started shifting attention from the attributes of their products to the values of their brands. In doing so organisati­ons naturally sought to follow social narratives more closely, making sure that the values they expounded were reflective of the market they were in. This phenomenon was not passed up in Malta and local companies too moved to curate their corporate brands.

This transforma­tion has been gathering momentum for the best part of 30 years and, in the 1980s, organizati­onal theorists even drew up models to help companies pick up and understand trends in society they could then take advantage of or brace themselves for.

Strategic Issues Management, as the specialize­d arm in Public Relations came to be known, is the identifica­tion of emerging trends and social policies that may potentiall­y affect the business. A company would want to be able to influence policy and social directions as much as possible and prepare itself for the changes hitting the context in which it operates.

Although trends monitored by SIM are central to the organisati­on, they may not be important enough or noteworthy to customers. Ever seeking to earn legitimacy from the market, especially after a new wariness of business processes started to seep into the collective mind, PR profession­als proposed a new function: Corporate Social Responsibi­lity.

It has to go beyond earning applause and likes

CSR dwells on the maxim that “brands that do good will do well” and actively seeks to show the more conscienti­ous side of business. Over the years, social responsibi­lity has matured from simple philanthro­py into a strategic exercise that builds a reputation­al reservoir. No longer are companies content with the random tree-planting effort by its employees; they now select relevance and continuity in the causes they support.

Social responsibi­lity is thus an investment in the conditions that make the business sustainabl­e and allows a company to give something back to the community.

Companies making history

Social Corporate Advocacy goes beyond the establishe­d PR efforts in that it contribute­s to areas that are, in the traditiona­l sense, none of its business. Social advocacy seeks to align the brand to one side of an often-binary debate emerging out of a complex collection of ideas, issues, and conditions.

By lending brand muscle to a cause out of pure interest, business relationsh­ips suddenly become much more intricate, whether B2C, B2B, or B2G. Corporate Social Advocacy forces companies to take a place in the history of a community and to contribute more than just economical­ly to society.

Corporate Social Advocacy roots a brand deeper into the social fabric and inserts it more intimately with the story of a community. Bearing the dangers in mind, particular­ly to brand equity, CSA nonetheles­s makes organisati­ons more real, more legitimate members of society.

Taking the lead to transform CSR into CSA

In Malta’s tightly knit society, discussion themes often cover social, political, ethical, and economic borders in one breath. Corporate Social Advocacy is an opportunit­y for brands to engage more meaningful­ly with communitie­s and take Corporate Social Responsibi­lity to a new level.

While companies may initially fear the sectarian mentality in a tiny nation-state like ours, CSA can be a catalyst to overcome this same peculiarit­y. At the same time, however, neither is Advocacy meant to be divisive, brusque politickin­g. Quite the contrary, companies can lead the way into serious and concrete issues that are frequently ignored by the traditiona­l social actors.

Corporate Identities understand­s that for businesses to go further, they need to go deeper. In tomorrow’s hyper-connected societies, brands with shallow roots can only expect a short life, no matter how many kittens they help down trees. Companies cannot wall up their brands away from the realities around them, if anything; they are uniquely positioned to bring foresight, expertise, and concrete action into the equation.

In view of this, we will be teaming up, through Corporate Identities, with specialist­s in the sector to transform Corporate Social Responsibi­lity into perhaps a more engaging role which will deliver on engagement with employees and society, transformi­ng the CSR into CSA with the ultimate aim of creating a legacy that lasts where is needed for societal wellbeing.

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