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Socially Responsible From the Start

Modern entrepreneurs are keen to keep a focus on social responsibility and sustainability across all aspects of their business model.

When Nazeh Ben Ammar went to the beach in his native Tunisia, he found the sea unnaturally blue. Indigo dye, used in the coloring of denim jeans, had been discharged into the sea by a manufacturer. Tunisia is a leading supplier of jeans to the European market, yet what Ben Ammar found upset him.

The company was damaging the environment and failing in its corporate social responsibility (CSR). CSR became a ‘buzz word’ in Tunisian business circles following the Arab Spring, sparked by the Tunisian revolution 10 years ago.

‘Now we are failing in our responsibilities,’ says Ben Ammar, who describes himself as a ‘serial entrepreneur’ and ‘start-up enabler’. He himself cut short his career in the oil industry because of the role fossil fuels play in global warming.

As an alternative to oil, Tunisia and other north African countries have become renowned for their hectares of solar panels in the desert, erected by solar farms. But the historically powerful national trade union body resisted and slowed down the sale of solar power to the national grid because of the need to protect the jobs of union members at the power stations. 

Using Social Responsibility as a Solution
Nazeh Ben Ammar

Ben Ammar, who has a master’s degree in engineering, has founded and then sold seven start-up companies. So, he now talks about SSR—Start-ups Social Responsibility. His family business, Excellencia, where he is President, is a building technology company for big office blocks. Excellencia provides products ranging from air conditioning to intruder alarms and security cameras.

He says that SSR needs to be much more than just a PR tactic but rather the core philosophy of start-up companies. SSR benefits not just the company but also the customers, employees, and the wider community.

SSRs, he says, are committed to improving quality of life, and the security of the workforce and their families, the local community and society at large. They respected the environment and the fragility of nature, by aiming to reduce pollution (solid, liquid and gas) and their carbon footprint.

‘87% of millennials say they believe their company’s success should be measured by more than just financial performance.’ - Deloitte Millennial Survey 2016

He himself has pledged to ‘practise integrity and fair dealing, tolerance and respect’, as he told an online business group on 12 May.

Start-ups with an aim towards sustainability
Nicolas and Elizabeth Soubelet

Nicolas Soubelet from Paris told the forum how he and his wife Elizabeth, a former midwife, founded Squiz as a start-up. It provides recyclable food pouches for children’s school meals. With five children of their own, they realised that traditional single-use plastic and aluminium pouches represented ‘a lot of trash’—some 900 million pouches thrown away in France alone every year, which Soubelet says is an ‘environmental disaster’.

Squiz pouches, decorated with colourful animal motifs for children, can be used at least 50 times. Soubelet measures the company’s success by the number of single-use pouches eliminated: 70 million so far, they calculate. They sell 400,000 Squiz pouches a year and have sold 1.5 million so far.

This, says Soubelet, is in line with the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 12: responsible consumption and production. Squiz employs 16 people and has an annual turnover of one million euros. It is registered as a BCorp (a benefit corporation), which Soubelet says is not just a label but a community of companies that share best practice. BCorps are mandated to address the interest of all stakeholders, including employees, customers, suppliers, and the wider community. They embrace a triple bottom line approach: financial, environmental, and social.

Squiz-Carnaval

Soubelet says the need is to work towards a responsible economy. The company’s mission, he says, is ‘raising awareness and guiding consumers toward a future without waste. Through our brand, we create simple, fun containers that help smooth the transition to a more responsible lifestyle.’ In other words, a circular economy, which aims to ‘reduce, reuse and recycle’.

 

Discussions like this, where idea generation is fuelled by diverse perspectives, is what makes IofC B&E unique. Do you have a mind for business and a heart for making the world a better place? Then participate in the next in the series of discussions, to take place on 10 June. Register today and keep in touch for more information on how you can lead the way in your own organization.