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CSR tips for compliance professionals

Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is closely related to business compliance.  Both CSR and business compliance share the objective to integrate requirements from legal, regulatory, and social expectations with organizational strategy.  Business compliance has the broadest mandate of creating both rules-based and values-based structures and systems to support corporate and employee integrity and adherence to laws, regulations, and norms.  In contrast, CSR has these same goals but focuses on engaging in corporate actions that contribute to social good, generate positive public relations attention, and promote ethics and accountability.

While compliance is often focused on defining internal standards for conduct and strategy in order to follow or improve upon outside requirements, CSR has a much more public posture.  CSR is focused on defining the company’s positions on the environment, reform, justice, philanthropy, community relations, and other outwards-facing social initiatives.  After these objectives are defined, the company then presents and promotes its positions to consumers and society. CSR and compliance both contribute to a company’s mission statement and values, but CSR has a heavier hand in guiding the corporate image that is presented to consumers, industry partners, and society as a whole.  

Given that CSR and compliance both share objectives of instilling corporate value and setting standards for organizational behavior and identity, compliance professionals can take tips from CSR principles to position the overall compliance risk management program.  In addition, compliance strategies can also align with CSR initiatives in order to build momentum and support for both programs in parallel.

For more posts on CSR from a compliance and ethics perspective, check out this post on the political engagement of Patagonia or this post on the CSR Roadmap of Tony’s Chocolonely.  And check back for posts in the future on the CSR values of companies such as Ben & Jerry’s and TOMS.

 

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