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The Stakeholder Approach to Business, Society, and Ethics Chapter 3 Prepared by Deborah Baker Texas Christian University Business and Society: Ethics and Stakeholder Management, 7e • Carroll & Buchholtz Copyright ©2009 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 1 Chapter 3 Learning Outcomes 1. Define stake and stakeholder and describe the 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. origins of these concepts. Differentiate among production, managerial, and stakeholder views of the firm. Differentiate among the three values of the stakeholder model. Explain the concept of stakeholder management. Identify and discuss the five major questions that capture the essence of stakeholder management. Identify the three levels of stakeholder management capability (SMC). Describe the key principles of stakeholder management. 2 Chapter 3 Outline Origins of the Stakeholder Concept Who Are Business’s Stakeholders? Strategic, Multifiduciary, and Synthesis Approaches Three Values of the Stakeholder Model Key Questions in Stakeholder Management Effective Stakeholder Management Developing a Stakeholder Culture Stakeholder Management The Stakeholder Corporation Principles of Stakeholder Management Strategic Steps Toward Successful Stakeholder Management Summary Key Terms Discussion Questions 3 Introduction to Chapter 3 Stakeholders Individuals and groups with a multitude of interests, expectations, and demands as to what business should provide to accommodate people’s lives and lifestyles 4 Origins of the Stakeholder Concept Stake An Interest An interest or a share in an undertaking and can be categorized as: A Right Ownership Legal Right Moral Right 5 Origins of the Stakeholder Concept Stakeholder An individual or a group that has one or more of the various kinds of stakes in the organization 6 Who Are Business Stakeholders? Stockholders Customers Employees Community Competitors Business Stakeholder Groups Suppliers Special-Interest Groups Society General Public Media 7 DuPont’s Stakeholder Groups Shareholders Customers Employees Society 8 Evolution of the Business Enterprise Production View Managerial View Stakeholder View 9 Production and Managerial Views of the Firm Figure 3-2 10 The Stakeholder View of the Firm Figure 3-3 11 Social Stakeholders Primary social stakeholders Secondary social stakeholders Shareholders and investors Employees and managers Customers Local communities Suppliers and other business partners Government and regulators Civic institutions Social pressure groups Media and academic commentators Trade bodies Competitors 12 Who Are Business Stakeholders? Primary Stakeholders Have a direct stake in the organization and its success Secondary Stakeholders Have a public or special interest stake in the organization 13 Nonsocial Stakeholders Primary nonsocial stakeholders Secondary nonsocial stakeholders Natural environment Environmental interest groups Future generations Animal welfare organizations Nonhuman species 14 Core, Strategic, and Environmental Stakeholders Core stakeholders are essential for the survival of the firm Strategic stakeholders are vital to the organization’s success and the threats and opportunities the organization faces Environmental stakeholders are all others in the organization's environment that are not core or strategic 15 Stakeholder Typology Figure 3-4 16 A Typology of Stakeholder Attributes Legitimacy refers to the perceived validity or appropriateness of the stakeholder’s claim to a stake Power refers to the ability or capacity of a stakeholder to produce an effect Urgency refers to the degree to which the stakeholder’s claim demands immediate attention 17 Strategic, Multifiduciary, and Synthesis Views Strategic Approach Multifiduciary Approach views stakeholders primarily as factors managers should manage in pursuit of shareholder profits views stakeholders as a group to which management has a fiduciary responsibility considers stakeholders as a group Stakeholder Synthesis to whom management owes an Approach ethical, but not a fiduciary obligation 18 Three Values of the Stakeholder Model Descriptive Value Instrumental Value Normative Value 19 Key Questions In Stakeholder Management 1. Who are our stakeholders? 2. What are our stakeholders’ stakes? 3. What opportunities and challenges do our stakeholders present to the firm? 4. What economic, legal, ethical, and philanthropic responsibilities does the firm have to its stakeholders? 5. What strategies or actions should the firm take to best address stakeholder challenges and opportunities? 20 Who Are Our Stakeholders? Figure 3-6 21 What Are Our Stakeholders’ Stakes? Identify the nature/legitimacy of a group’s stakes Identify the power of a group’s stakes Identify specific groups within a generic group 22 What Opportunities and Challenges Do Stakeholders Present? Opportunities • Build productive working relationships with stakeholders • The potential for cooperation Challenges • Representative of how the firm handles its stakeholders • The potential for threat 23 Factors Affecting Potential for Threat & Cooperation Figure 3-7 24 Stakeholder/Responsibility Matrix Stakeholders Economic Legal Ethical Philanthropic Owners Customers Employees Community Public at large Social Activists Other Figure 3-8 25 What Strategies or Actions Should Management Take? Do we deal directly or indirectly with stakeholders? Do we take the offense or the defense in dealing with stakeholders? Do we accommodate, negotiate, manipulate or resist stakeholder overtures? Do we employ a combination of the above strategies or pursue a singular course of action? 26 Diagnostic Typology of Organizational Stakeholders Stakeholder’s Potential for Threat to Organization High Low Stakeholder Type Mixed Blessing Stakeholder Type Supportive Strategy: Collaborate Strategy: Involve High Stakeholder’s Potential for Cooperation with Organization ? Stakeholder Type Nonsupportive Stakeholder Type Marginal Strategy: Defend Strategy: Monitor Low Figure 3-9 27 Summary of Four Stakeholder Types … managers should attempt to satisfy minimally the needs of marginal stakeholders and to satisfy maximally the needs of supportive and mixed blessing stakeholders, enhancing the latter’s support for the organization. 28 Levels of Stakeholder Commitment 1. Basic Value Proposition 2. Sustained Stakeholder Cooperation 3. Understanding Broader Societal Issues 4. Ethical Leadership @ http://www.corporate-ethics.org/ 29 Effective Stakeholder Management Stakeholder culture Stakeholder management capability Stakeholder corporation model Principles of stakeholder management 30 Developing a Stakeholder Culture Agency Corporate egoist Little concern for stakeholders Instrumentalist Moralist Altruist Great concern for stakeholders 31 Stakeholder Management Capability Transactional level Process Level Rational Level 32 Stakeholder Engagement Stakeholder Engagement An approach by which companies implement the transactional level of strategic management capability 33 The Stakeholder Corporation Stakeholder inclusiveness Stakeholder symbiosis 34 Principles of Stakeholder Management Key Words Acknowledge Monitor Listen Communicate Adopt Recognize Work Avoid Acknowledge conflicts 35 Principles of Stakeholder Management Figure 3-10 36 Strategic Steps Toward Successful Stakeholder Management 1. Governing Philosophy. Integrate stakeholder management into the firm’s governing philosophy. 2. Values Statement. Create a stakeholder-inclusive “values statement.” 3. Measurement System. Implement a stakeholder performance measurement system. 37 Key Indicators of Successful Stakeholder Management Survival Avoided costs Continued acceptance and use Expanded recognition and adoption 38 Selected Key Terms Stake Stakeholder Production view of the firm Managerial view of the firm Stakeholder view of the firm Primary social stakeholders Secondary social stakeholders Core stakeholders Strategic stakeholders Environmental stakeholders Legitimacy Power Urgency Proximity Stakeholder thinking Stakeholder culture Stakeholder management capability Rational level Process level Transactional level Stakeholder engagement Stakeholder corporation Stakeholder inclusiveness Stakeholder symbiosis Principles of stakeholder management 39