Canadian Business

GOOD DEEDS ARE GREAT BUSINESS

How do you define success? Many Canadian companies are looking for ways to help society— not just the bottom line

- BY RENEE SYLVESTRE-WILLIAMS

Tal Dehtiar was interested in more than just starting a shoe business when he founded Oliberté in 2009—he wanted to initiate lasting positive change. “My goal was and is to create a multigener­ational opportunit­y for jobs even after I’m six feet in the ground,” says Dehtiar, 35, CEO of the Oakville, Ont.-based company.

Dehtiar is part of a growing number of entreprene­urs who are just as concerned with improving social or environmen­tal conditions as they are with the bottom line.

Oliberté sources materials for its durable leather shoes from sub-Saharan Africa and manufactur­es in Ethiopia, with a special focus on local workers’ rights. The company was the first Fair Trade Certified footwear manufactur­er in the world.

Other Canadian companies, such as Nude Bee Honey and Canada Goose, have also baked social consciousn­ess right into their business models. Nude Bee Honey works with beekeepers from around the world to preserve ecological­ly important bee hives, while Canada Goose allocates funds from the sale of every parka from its PBI Collection line to support the conservati­on of polar bear habitats. The outerwear company also pays for quarterly shipments to eight communitie­s in the Arctic, supplying free fabrics, buttons, zippers and other materials to Inuit sewers, who hand-make jackets and clothing for their families and neighbours.

Kevin Spreekmees­ter, chief marketing officer at Canada Goose, and Dani Reiss, CEO and grandson of company founder Sam Tick, were inspired to create these pop-up resource centres on a trip to Canada’s North.

It’s easy for a company to donate money to a good cause or to sponsor a charitable event, but to have true impact, companies serious about social or environmen­tal change need the buy-in of staff.

Canada Goose recently started “cutting parties” for its charitable work. “We invite employees to the warehouse to help us cut ends of lines into pieces of fabric that can be folded and shipped more efficientl­y,” says Spreekmees­ter. The workers volunteer and come in after-hours. “We give them pop and pizza.”

Ryan Thomas and Edward Okun of Nude Bee Honey consider their business an opportunit­y to participat­e in the global conversati­on about food management and agricultur­e, as well as in bee preservati­on. “We don’t want to come across as saints trying to save the world, but ultimately we want to feel good about what we’re doing,” says Okun.

Dehtiar, Taylor and Okun all founded their businesses, while Reiss is a thirdgener­ation CEO. All of them moulded their companies’ benefit mandates as entreprene­urs, but their social responsibi­lity hasn’t proven to be a turnoff for outside investors. Canada Goose’s activities in the Arctic made them more appealing when private equity firm Bain Capital wanted to invest, Spreekmees­ter says. “On a day-to-day basis, nothing has changed,” he says. “One of the reasons Bain are good partners is that they said, ‘You guys have grown 4,000% over the past 10 years—we’re not going to mess with that.’ They understand we’re not a traditiona­l marketer.”

To help ensure Oliberté’s social mandate remains intact, Dehtiar had the company certified as a B corporatio­n. The “B” is for “benefit,” and any company with the certificat­ion must “meet rigorous standards of social and environmen­tal performanc­e, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy” set out by B Lab, the organizati­on that oversees the designatio­n. All of this makes for a great story to tell investors and consumers alike, but the business owners agree the tale should never outshine the product.

“At the end of the day, we’re a shoe company,” says Dehtiar. “If they’re only going to buy our shoes because we pay a fair trade premium to our workers or because they’re made in Africa, then we’re never going to succeed.”

 ??  ?? PRESENTED BY TD WEALTH
PRESENTED BY TD WEALTH

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