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Creating Shared Value (CSV) and Creating Competitive Business

Creating Shared Value (CSV) and Creating Competitive Business
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Author(s): Roohollah Ebrahimnejad (Shahid Beheshti University, Iran), Mona Milani (Allameh Tabataba'i University, Iran), Zahra Faraji (Iran University of Medical Sciences (IUMS), Iran)and Leila Nemati-Anaraki (Iran University of Medical Sciences (IUMS), Iran)
Copyright: 2019
Pages: 22
Source title: Handbook of Research on Business Models in Modern Competitive Scenarios
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): George Leal Jamil (Informações em Rede e Consultoria Ltda., Brazil), Liliane Carvalho Jamil (Independent Researcher, Brazil), Cláudio Roberto Magalhães Pessoa (FUMEC University, Brazil)and Werner Silveira (Philharmonic Orchestra of Minas Gerais, Brazil)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-7265-7.ch024

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Abstract

Shared value concept could reshape capitalism and its relationship to society. It's not just about corporate social responsibility or philanthropy. It's a new approach for business strategy regarding social issues. It could also drive the next wave of innovation and productivity growth in the global economy as it opens managers' eyes to immense human needs that must be met, large new markets to be served, and the internal costs of social deficits—as well as the competitive advantages available from addressing them. But our understanding of shared value is still in its genesis. Attaining it will require managers to develop new skills and knowledge and governments to learn how to regulate in ways that enable shared value rather than work against it. A big part of the problem lies with companies themselves, which remain trapped in an outdated, narrow approach to value creation. Focused on optimizing short-term financial performance, they overlook the greatest unmet needs in the market as well as broader influences on their long-term success. Why would companies ignore the wellbeing of their customers, the depletion of natural resources vital to their businesses, the viability of suppliers, and the economic distress of the communities in which they produce and sell? Companies could bring business and society back together if they redefined their purpose as creating “shared value”—generating economic value in a way that also produces value for society by addressing its challenges. A shared value approach reconnects company success with social progress. Firms can do this in three distinct ways: reconceiving products and markets, redefining productivity in the value chain, and building supportive industry clusters at the company's locations.

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