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Few forward-thinking business leaders today would deny that the great advances of the industrial revolution brought with them a host of unintended consequences. While most of us owe our high standard of living to the technological innovations developed in the course of the last century -- affordable energy; rapid transportation; fast, low-cost automated production; advanced information systems -- we have inherited, along with our good fortune, a bevy of environmental and social problems.
A cursory list might include: pollution of air, water and
soil from billions of tons of toxic waste; declining biological
and cultural diversity from the harvesting of natural resources;
regulations that merely limit the poisoning of people and
the environment; production and use of materials so dangerous
they will require constant, costly vigilance from future
generations; prosperity measured by activity not legacy.
These are vexing problems. Some might see them as numbingly
so. Yet, thankfully there are many in the world of business
who see today's challenges as opportunities, and rather
than moving blindly ahead, the world be damned, they are
striving to make industry more sustainable.
And here's where things get even more challenging. What,
exactly, is sustainability? Once you've defined what sustainable
business is, how do you effectively pursue this new strategy?
How do you transform your organization from top to bottom
so that your vision of sustainability drives everyday decision-making
and defines short-and long-term success? In short, how do
organizations change and thrive? And what if we could move
beyond sustainability, which suggests the maintenance of
a damaging system, to a truly beneficial and sustaining
model for industry that gives our children a delightful
prospect, rather than simply a less terrifying one?
These questions are at the heart of Bob Doppelt's Leading
Change Toward Sustainability. They are crucial questions.
While some businesses are successfully steering through
the difficult transition from conventional to sustainable
commerce, many others are not. The course is beset with
obstacles, from failures to change ingrained ways of doing
business to misunderstanding the problems at hand. But as
Leading Change Toward Sustainability clearly illustrates,
real change is not only possible, it can be strategically
nurtured and implemented by following a path blazed by the
"early adopters" of the sustainable business vision.
Vision and leadership are key. As Doppelt's numerous case
studies reveal, "exemplary organizations are exceptionally
clear about their purpose." Effective leaders set the
tone, defining their organizations with the clarity of their
vision, conviction and commitment. And their principled
activity. That's why, when Michael Braungart and I wrote
The Hannover Principles: Design for Sustainability
in 1992, we focused on creating a framework for effective,
principled decision-making. Indeed, an entire company's
culture can be transformed when its decision-making framework
becomes infused with a strong, lucid sense of purpose. As
Doppelt says: "Vision provides the goal; principles
frame the path."
Clear vision, however, is not so easily achieved. Since
the early 1990s many businesses trying to operate more sustainably
have defined themselves with strategies aimed at reducing
the impacts of industry by minimizing waste, pollution and
natural resource depletion. While we applaud these efforts,
which can ease ecological stress in the short-term, minimizing
environmental degradation is not a strategy for real change,
nor does it offer an inspiring vision of success.
Real change comes when industrial processes are designed
to be more economically, socially and ecologically beneficial
rather than merely less polluting. Long-term prosperity
depends not on making a fundamentally destructive system
more efficient, but on transforming the system so that all
of its products and processes are safe, healthful and regenerative.
This sustaining vision of industry is both practical and
inspiring. Over the past decade, my colleague Michael Braungart
and I have had the opportunity to build its framework and
put it into practice with some of the world's most successful
corporations, several of which are featured in Leading
Change Toward Sustainability. Through McDonough
Braungart Design Chemistry and William
McDonough + Partners, we've helped companies worldwide
apply specific, ecologically intelligent principles to the
design of products, systems, factories, offices and community
plans. Modeled on natural systems, these fundamental design
principles yield products that are composed of materials
that biodegrade and become food for biological cycles, or
of synthetic materials that stay in closed-loop technical
cycles, where they continually circulate as valuable nutrients
for industry. They yield buildings designed to accrue solar
energy, sequester carbon, filter water, create habitat,
and provide safe, healthy, delightful places to work. Designs
such as these aren't damage management strategies. They
don't seek to retrofit a destructive system. Instead, they
aim to eliminate the very concept of waste while providing
goods and services that restore and support nature and human
society. They are built on the conviction that design can
celebrate positive aspirations and create a wholly positive
human footprint.
Leading Change Toward Sustainability is built on
such convictions. Bob Doppelt understands that a clear,
positive direction coupled with effective principles is
the key to realizing sustaining organizations. He understands
the relationship between inspired purpose and success.
Statements such as 'we will be in full compliance with
the law' and 'we will minimize our environmental and social
impacts' are not visions. They tell people what not to do-what
to avoid. These are backward looking images. They focus
on eliminating something. Negative purposes fail to elicit
the creative energies or passions of employees. This approach
depresses human motivation and underscores the truth of
the old biblical proverb that says, 'where there is no vision,
the people perish'
.Effective visions, in contrast,
provide an absorbing, positive image of the future.
Leading Change Toward Sustainability is devoted
to allowing the people to thrive. While reflecting on the
relationship between vision, leadership and change, it also
offers a vision of its own, limning useful guidelines from
a careful analysis of the successes and failures of leading
corporations striving for sustainability. Like the visions
he praises, Doppelt provides a positive image of the future
that can empower leaders to inspire creativity and commitment
throughout their organizations. After reading Leading
Change Toward Sustainability, those seeking change can't
help but have a more clear understanding of what it means
to say: 'Our goal is to become a truly sustaining organization.'
With the help of this useful book, they just might reach
that laudable destination.
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