October 6, 2008


Use of corporate giving seen trailing its value

Eighty-four percent of 700 top executives questioned said they recognize consumers' increased expectations of social responsibility on the part of business, says a report by the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, using research by McKinsey & Co.

While three-quarters said they believed corporate philanthropy was an effective way to meet rising expectations, the report says, only 11 percent of participating companies were found to be truly efficient in their philanthropy in terms of business and social impact.

The study says successful corporate philanthropy achieves good while addressing stakeholder interests, building new market knowledge and areas for innovation, and not only a company's reputation.

"We've entered an exciting new realm for corporate philanthropy," Charles Moore, executive director of the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, says in a statement.

"Enlightened CEOs now recognize an opportunity to not only address elevated stakeholder expectations," he says, "but, through strategic efforts, extend into frontier territory using philanthropy to kick-start business innovations."


Next Webinar

October 23 - Media Relations 101 - Getting attention for your nonprofit, details

Lunch 'n' Learn

December 4 - Women’s giving power: Bigger, better, bolder, details


Nonprofit Jobs

Resource Directory

  • CCS
    Designing successful fund-raising efforts for leading nonprofit institutions worldwide
  • Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation
    actively seeks to promote access, equity, and inclusiveness; and to discourage discrimination based on race, ethnicity, gender, age, socioeconomic status, and other factors...

Our Partners