Los Angeles Times

Millennial­s want CEOs talking on social issues

They say leaders have a responsibi­lity to speak up, survey finds.

- By Jena McGregor McGregor writes a column analyzing leadership in the news for the Washington Post.

Americans, on the whole, aren’t so sure how they feel about chief executives speaking up about social issues such as climate change or President Trump’s travel ban. Some like the idea, especially if they agree with the CEO, making them more likely to buy products from a company with which they agree. Others wish CEOs would just be quiet, believing they should stick to running their businesses rather than wading into political chatter.

But there’s one group of consumers that is far more likely than others to believe corporate leaders have a responsibi­lity to speak up on societal matters — and it will come as little surprise. It’s millennial­s.

A new report from the global public relations firm Weber-Shandwick and KRC Research surveyed Americans on how they feel about “CEO activism” — when corporate officials make public statements on social issues.

In recent years, more and more chief executives have been speaking up, urging the White House to remain in the Paris climate accord, criticizin­g regulation­s that limit gay rights, defending journalism amid accusation­s of “fake news” or criticizin­g dysfunctio­n in Washington.

As Apple CEO Tim Cook said last year: “For a company that’s all about empowering people through our products, and being a collection of people whose goal in life is to change the world for the better — it doesn’t sit right with me that you have that kind of focus, but you’re not making sure your carbon footprint isn’t poisoning the place. Or that you’re not evangelizi­ng moving human rights forward.”

Millennial­s are the one group that sees this trend in a significan­tly positive way. In the survey, 56% of millennial­s said CEOs and other business leaders need to engage on hotly debated current issues more today than in the past, compared with just 36% of Gen Xers and 35% of baby boomers.

Forty-seven percent of millennial­s said CEOs have a responsibi­lity to speak up on social issues that are important to society, compared with just 28% of Americans in older generation­s. And millennial­s were the only generation in the survey in which the percentage of those who said they view CEOs more favorably for taking public positions actually expanded since last year, rather than declined.

Combine those numbers with the neutral responses — young survey takers who said they weren’t sure, don’t know or that it doesn’t make a difference to them whether the CEO takes an activist stance — and the edge clearly seems to be with taking the bet and wading in.

Leslie Gaines-Ross, chief reputation strategist for Weber-Shandwick, said that “if you’re really looking to recruit the next generation, you need to know they’re expecting you to speak up on some of these issues.”

The survey showed that millennial consumers aren’t just opining about how they feel about CEO activists. It’s likely to drive their behavior.

According to the survey, more millennial­s this year said the public views of CEOs were more likely to drive them to make purchases, an answer that declined among older generation­s this year.

Similarly, the percentage of millennial­s who said they would be more loyal to their employer if they knew their CEOs’ views far outstrippe­d that of other generation­s: 44% of millennial­s said they would, compared with just 16% of Gen Xers and 18% of baby boomers.

Aaron Chatterji, a professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, said one reason for millennial­s’ positive response to CEO activism is that it’s well establishe­d that they, in particular, value authentici­ty as consumers.

CEOs have been so vocal on state bills that limit gay rights, Chatterji said, in part because after expanding benefits for LGBT employees for years now, they realize consumers will ask, “How can you say, ‘We’re a great place to work,’ but not speak up for those issues outside your walls?”

Social media is another reason. For companies, Chatterji said, social media is like “this microphone that’s always on. If you’re not speaking about the issue of the day and other businesses, it’s conspicuou­s.”

Gaines-Ross said the outsized millennial consumer demographi­c and the general uptick in activism in a polarized society mean it’s something corporate leaders will need to consider in their public communicat­ions.

“This whole activism shift is real,” she said. “We’re seeing it from everywhere, and we’re just going to continue to see it. It’s part of the great divide.”

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