Campaign to find companies with a conscience is looking for new recruits
▶ Buy Social Corporate Challenge intended to encourage firms to address environmental issues
Acampaign to boost British businesses with a social mission has attracted major names, from banking to pharmaceuticals, but is far from its goal of channelling £1 billion (Dh4.51bn) into the sector by 2020, its founders say.
Pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson, consulting firm PwC and Santander bank have signed up to the Buy Social Corporate Challenge, launched in 2016 by Social Enterprise UK (SEUK), which represents the growing sector.
About a dozen companies participating in the scheme have spent £45 million over the past two years with organisations that aim to address social and environmental issues as well as make a profit, SEUK says.
“We need to recruit many, many, more companies to make the dream of a £1bn spend with the sector a reality,” Peter Holbrook, SEUK’s head, tells the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Britain is seen as a global leader in the innovative social enterprise sector, with about 70,000 businesses that employ nearly 1m people, according to SEUK.
One of the initiative’s aims is to demonstrate that businesses in any sector can buy from social enterprises, going beyond traditional conceptions of corporate social responsibility to include them in core business spending.
The insurance company Liverpool Victoria Friendly Society (LV=) announced recently that it was joining SEUK’s Buy Social Corporate Challenge. As one of Britain’s biggest insurers, it says it spends about £1bn a year across its supply chain.
“If we can look to spend just some of that with social enterprises who are trying to make a difference and help others, then we absolutely should,” the company says.
LV= is already buying from Glasgow’s WildHearts Office, which supplies paper, pens and pencils and uses its profits to fund microfinance schemes in developing countries.
“Through those microloans, it is typically women that set up a business and the funds are used to educate their kids,” says LV=’s head of procurement, Karl Poulsen.
“As a business, it’s costing us no more to do this. In fact, it’s a bit cheaper than our previous incumbent. Why wouldn’t we want to do that?”
SEUK’s chairman, Victor Adebowale, says several other businesses have expressed interest in joining the campaign.
“What you’ve got to do is talk to the unconverted,” he told participants at an event in Parliament.
“If your story is good, why not tell it to someone that hasn’t heard it yet? That’s how we get to a billion.”
With a boom in these new start-up social enterprises, an increasing consensus that mutual models can rebalance the UK economy and deliver inclusive growth, and the never more-urgent need of the social enterprise model across the world, SEUK says its new membership model, implemented last month, will strengthen the collective voice of the sector. It will also build the research base and support a bigger mandate for social and economic change.
Membership for all social enterprises with a turnover of less than £100,000 will now be free.
SEUK will also be enhancing and consolidating its membership offer for larger social enterprises, which will now benefit from more exclusive offers, more opportunities to contribute to policy and lobbying work, as well as more practical support.
“Today, we’re calling on all social enterprises to join our movement. The country’s current economic model is broken, but together we can
use our collective voice and mandate to bring about the change that is so desperately needed,” Mr Holbrook said in a statement on the group’s website.
“Increasingly, more and more people recognise that social enterprise must be the future of business, we are seeing more and more CICs, community businesses, mutuals and co-ops emerge.
“Our message is that together we are much more powerful than we can ever be alone – our country and our world is crying out for economic models that nourish and support our communities rather than extract wealth and exploit. We are building a powerful movement and we need more of you involved.”