80 Years of Corporate Citizenship & Philanthropy Leadership
Jeff Hoffman, NACD.DC
Global I CSR I ESG I Purpose I Culture I Board Director I Philanthropy I Reputation I B2B I B2C I Innovator I Mentor I LGBTQ+
The Conference Board is celebrating 80 Years of Corporate Citizenship & Philanthropy Leadership and Insights.? I am proud to be spearheading this commemoration and I am honored to have been the Chair of last month’s Global Leadership Summit in New York City. ?
Please visit our special 80th commemoration website to learn about The Conference Board’s role in corporate citizenship amp; philanthropy over the last 80 years. This page provides quick links to our historical video and timeline plus the essay I wrote and my podcast interview.
The in-person Summit in New York on December 5th, 2023 took stock of the current state of corporate citizenship/corporate social responsibility in the US and abroad, while providing invaluable context, insights, and guidance to develop and execute the next generation of companies’ corporate citizenship strategies.? Summit URL:? https://www.conference-board.org/events/corporatecitizenship
A bit of background:? During World War II, American businesses increased their charitable giving to respond to needs on the home front and to support the war effort. The Conference Board – already established as a leader in knowledge-sharing among US firms – started to track these?corporate charitable contributions and activities?from 1943 onwards. This was a pivotal moment for corporate philanthropy, which was still emerging after being legally recognized in the Internal Revenue Act of 1935.? Today, The Conference Board through the ESG Center, Councils, Conferences, and Research is helping Boards, the C-Suite, and corporate social responsibility executives navigate and succeed during these turbulent times with trusted insights for what’s ahead.?
Essay:
80 Years of Corporate Citizenship & Philanthropy Leadership
By Jeff Hoffman
November 27, 2023
During World War II, American businesses increased their charitable giving to respond to needs on the home front and to support the war effort. The Conference Board – already established as a leader in knowledge-sharing among US firms – started to track these?corporate charitable contributions and activities ?from 1943 onwards. This was a pivotal moment for corporate philanthropy, which was still emerging after being legally recognized in the Internal Revenue Act of 1935. The Conference Board's efforts played a crucial role in legitimizing the field and cemented The Conference Board’s ongoing leadership in corporate citizenship and philanthropy, a mantle it has held for eight decades.
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Corporate philanthropy grew quickly post-war, as economic expansion fueled the establishment of major corporate charitable foundations. In 1950 The Conference Board launched one of its early?Councils ?to bring together executives from this emerging profession. The?Corporate Contributions Council , as it was called, still exists today as the?Corporate Citizenship Leadership Council ?– bringing together executives from some of the world’s largest corporations to collaborate on pressing societal issues.
Amid social unrest and change in the 1960s and ‘70s, the?Committee for Economic Development (CED) , ?now The Conference Board’s public policy arm, was among the first to recognize the changing “social contract” between business and society. In a?landmark 1971 report , CED observed that business was “being asked to assume broader responsibilities to society than ever before and to serve a wider range of human values”. Subsequently, many companies adopted a “strategic” form of philanthropy that aligned business interests and societal needs through a focus on specific issues relevant to their core business.
As corporate philanthropy grew in size and strategic relevance, employee volunteering also reached new heights. In 1993, The Conference Board published?Corporate Volunteer Programs: Benefits to Business . The first of its kind, this influential report found that corporate volunteer programs were increasingly being valued for their role in meeting business goals and employee objectives.
By the end of the twentieth century, companies were embracing the notion of “corporate citizenship” that went beyond traditional charitable giving and employee volunteering to address the company’s broader role in society.? A?report ?by The Conference Board in 1999 captured this sensibility, observing that?“corporate citizenship as a business has become increasingly global. Companies encounter intensifying competition, and with it, organizational, governing, and technological challenges across national and business cultures... companies increasingly need to consider how best to balance demands for growth against demands from society that widen the primary economic mission of the business enterprise into new areas”.
These “demands from society” widened and intensified further during the opening decades of the twenty-first century. The Conference Board’s approach evolved in tandem, such as launching the?Institute for Corporate Citizenship and Philanthropy ?in 2017 as a focal point for a wide range of Councils and other programs, publications, events, and benchmarking. The institute was later incorporated into The Conference Board’s?ESG Center ?– the leading independent, non-partisan, non-profit think tank in the US focusing on corporate governance, sustainability, and corporate citizenship and philanthropy.
In recent years, a succession of major events – including the COVID-19 pandemic, social and economic upheavals, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the recent humanitarian crisis in Israel and Gaza – has shaped a more challenging and uncertain social, economic, and political environment. Against this global backdrop, the role of corporate citizenship executives has become more complex as they:
The Conference Board continues to operate at the forefront of these trends – providing pioneering programs, publications, and more. In recent years, these have addressed critical topics such as the?COVID-19 pandemic ,?racial equality ,?navigating uncertainty , the?future of cities ,?measuring and reporting ?on citizenship and philanthropy,?natural disasters ,?innovation and impact investing , citizenship’s?return on investment ,?rural America , and the?War in Ukraine .
After 80 years of leadership on corporate citizenship and philanthropy, The Conference Board remains as committed as ever to our mission of supporting our Member companies in addressing their business priorities, while serving a broader public role in helping firms to define and fulfill their evolving role in society. This leadership continued at an?in-person Summit in New York on December ?5th, 2023, that took stock of the current state of corporate citizenship in the US and abroad, while providing invaluable context, insights, and guidance to develop and execute the next generation of companies’ corporate citizenship strategies.
The Conference Board will continue to provide trusted insights for what’s ahead for all companies as we enter a new era of corporate citizenship.
Nonprofit executive with significant experience in social impact, partnership development, corporate social responsibility,skilled volunteering, and leadership development , program design, s
9 个月This is very exciting! Congratulations!!