Archive for the ‘Future 500 News’ Category

Launching the Oddie Award

September 20th, 2011

From Rebecca Foges, Manager of Stakeholder Engagement

As Future 500’s newest staff member, it is my pleasure to be launching our newest endeavour:

The Oddie Award – it’s a bit like the Odd Couple with a Future 500 twist.

Earlier this year we decided that we should publicly applaud efforts by NGOs and businesses to resolve conflict over a sustainability issue.

Companies and NGOs have historically seen each other as fundamentally different, with often opposing objectives. Today, smart companies and NGOs realise that they can achieve more by working together.

So though it may seem like an odd pairing, business executives and activists can and do sometimes come together on a particular issue, whether it is paper sourcing, energy efficiency or any other aspect of the sustainability agenda.

The Oddie Award will be awarded annually at Future 500’s fundraising to showcase an outstanding agreement between a non-profit and a for profit organization. Some form of conflict must have sparked the process of engagement which then led to a change in company policy and a reduction of pressure from the NGO.

I love the idea of this award and am also excited to spearhead it. I believe that the combined power of the corporate and NGO sector is the best vehicle we have to making real progress on sustainability issues.

Those organisations that are looking beyond the monolithic stereotypes of the ‘other sector’ should be rewarded for their openness and sensitivity. It takes real courage to step outside of your comfort zone and see the issue from the other side.

The Oddie Award is Future 500’s way of encouraging both businesses and NGOs to think outside the box when dealing with our most pressing sustainability issues. Though it has become trite, it is still true that every conflict should be seen as opportunity. Conflict may be seen as a form of engagement that either leads to more entrenched opposition or a step forward for both organisations, leading to a lasting impact on the planet.

Through an agreement, the NGO can help change company practices on the issue and so achieve their campaign goal. The company can show that it is listening to stakeholders and adapting its policies accordingly, thus reducing its reputational risk as well as potential regulatory and financial risk by acting before government or investors require strict compliance.

I look forward to reading the nominations for the award, which will no doubt inspire me in my efforts at Future 500. I hope to see a good mix of small and large organizations, of well known examples and ones that pleasantly surprise me. All of them are worthy of congratulation.

Learn more about the Oddie Award.

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Charting the Digital Planet Revolution

July 28th, 2011
Posted by Juliette Terzieff

The world is changing. A revolution is underway. Driven by a family of technologies that can erase barriers associated with time and distance or raise an individual voice instantaneously onto a global platform, people, organizations and governments around the world are embracing the potential changes this digital revolution can produce. Future 500’s new Tech Planet Journal initiative works to chronicle and shape positive development with broad stakeholder support.

It seems like every day there are news stories from around the world on a dizzying array of topics associated with how the Internet, broadband, microchips and software are changing the way we live and work…

Social media has become more than an outlet to discuss favorite recipes or weekend plans with friends.

Twitter, Facebook, YouTube have become tools of the pro-reform masses across the Middle East, Asia and North Africa. When natural disaster strikes millions the world round turn to those same tools for damage assessments, missing persons’ pleas and donation drives.

Humanitarian agencies and NGOs have begun to look at incorporating Internet-based solutions driven by volunteer communities such as Ushahidi, CrisisMappers and OneStreetMap into existing systems of global humanitarian response. Western governments are providing millions of dollars in funding to support technological fixes to help dissenters sidestep government censorship of the Internet and restrictions to access.

Mobile telephones are evolving into more than just a replacement for traditional rotary phones – morphing into a valuable asset that overcomes infrastructure gaps in the developing world.

Across Africa mobile banking has opened up economic opportunities for the urban poor, women and agricultural communities. Farmers in Asia, the Middle East and Africa are able to avoid some of the worst climate change effects by tapping into mobile solutions to get information on weather patterns.

The field of mHealth is exploding with a huge percentage of development focused on using mobile phones to diagnose, track and deliver care. The drive to improve maternal and child health worldwide continues to draw particular focus.

If it seem like a lot, that’s because it is…and actors worldwide – whether they be individual entrepreneurs, NGOs, companies or governments – are innovating and driving additional applications every single day.

Not every innovation will solve the problem it sets out to address. Not every government embraces technology. Not every community welcomes to the openness, and scrutiny, that comes with access.

These are opportunities and challenges the world will need to address as we move through the 21st century.

The Future 500’s new Tech Planet Journal initiative is working to track and shape the revolution – in part by providing a website clearing house of case studies, organizations, tools, services, and reports that document the current and potential impacts of digital technologies on sustainability, prosperity, and democracy.

Come visit the new Tech Planet Journal site…and let us know what you think.

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Working Together

December 30th, 2009
From Juliette Terzieff, Senior Director, Global Stakeholder Initiatives:

Welcome to the Future 500 blog.

To start the New Year, we are delighted to launch the official Future 500 blog, where we invite you to join us in ongoing discussions, analysis and observations to advance the practice of stakeholder engagement in progressing systemic solutions to society’s critical sustainability challenges.

In the waning days of 2009 I find myself looking back on a tumultuous year full of critical events that affect all the world’s citizens.

Each of us has a stake in our collective future — a future that in 2009 continued to be endangered by global economic turmoil and international policy failures, increasing frequency of natural disasters, effects of climate change and decreasing availability of finite natural resources – to name just a few of the year’s challenges!

(more…)

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