March 28, 2024

noussommeslesrepublicains

business is good for you

Verizon unveils new business plan with the goal of going carbon neutral by 2035 and retraining 500,000 employees for emerging tech jobs

3 min read
Verizon unveils new business plan with the goal of going carbon neutral by 2035 and retraining 500,000 employees for emerging tech jobs

Better Capitalism
Better Capitalism
Hans Vestberg
Hans Vestberg

Kevork Djansezian / Getty

  • Verizon announced Tuesday it’s launching a new business plan called Citizen Verizon, which includes a number of socially responsible goals, like becoming carbon neutral by 2035. 

  • Diego Scotti, executive vice president and chief marketing officer for Verizon, said that the company including socially responsible goals in its business strategy is an important distinction. It means the company is encompassing stakeholder capitalism in its business model. 

  • Scotti agreed that more brands are moving toward stakeholder capitalism, the belief that companies should be accountable to not only their shareholders, but to their workers and communities in which they do business.

  • Other companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Unilever have recently shared pledges to become carbon neutral (or carbon negative) in the coming years. 

  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Verizon, one of the country’s largest telecommunications providers, announced Tuesday it is launching a “responsible business plan” with the aim of achieving a range of social and environmental goals by 2030 and 2035. 

In the plan, called Citizen Verizon, the company pledges to be completely carbon neutral (absorb as much greenhouse gasses as it produces) by 2035. The company plans to reduce emissions, deploy renewable energy, and purchase carbon offsets (an offset is a project such as running a wind farm that reduces carbon emissions to compensate for company emissions). 

The telecommunications giant will help train 500,000 young people on digital skills, and offer mentorship opportunities, to help them land emerging tech jobs. The company will also provide an online learning platform to help students and teachers in remote learning settings. 

Verizon’s new goals are part of a larger trend in the business world toward “stakeholder capitalism,” the belief that companies should be accountable to not only their shareholders, but to their workers and communities in which they do business. It’s a move away from shareholder primacy — or the notion, championed by the likes of economist Milton Friedman, that a business’s primary responsibility is to its shareholders. This trend gained popularity in August of last year when CEOs of JP Morgan Chase, Apple, and others declared stakeholder capitalism to be their guiding principle. 

Verizon is also not the only company making environmental commitments. According to Vox, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos committed to being carbon neutral by 2040; Unilever has committed to going carbon neutral by 2039; Microsoft has committed to being carbon negative (absorbing more carbon than it produces) by 2030. 

Diego Scotti, executive vice president and chief marketing officer for Verizon, said the move to create what he calls “a responsible business plan” is an important shift within the company. While corporate social responsibility previously fell underneath the company’s philanthropy division, the move to have it fall under the umbrella of business and strategy is notable, he said. It means the company is incorporating social responsibility into its business plan.

“What we do for society is now at the center of our business strategy. And that was a fundamental change because it started to impact everything that we did,” Scotti said. 

Scotti said Verizon’s plan was developed before the pandemic exposed massive inequality in the US and Black Lives Matter protests swept the country. However, he said recent events make corporate responsibility even more important. 

“If anything, these [crises] have made us more clear and more focused in terms of how we need to respond or act,” Scotti said.  

“People are fed up of BS, of companies selling, selling, selling,” he said, adding that brand affinity now comes from “companies providing value that is real, with stuff that is true, and with stuff that makes a difference.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

Source Article

noussommeslesrepublicains.org | Newsphere by AF themes.