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Finding the Right Organisation to Work For

A question of ethics...

For most graduates, the appeal of a potential employer will be affected by a variety of factors, such as size, location, employee conditions and their market position. For an increasing number of graduates, an organisation’s corporate ethics will also be significant.

Will the level of care an organisation takes with its impact on the environment, employees, community, and the future influence your decision to work with it? How can you judge employers on these issues?

Terms you need to know

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR):
All aspects of corporate responsibility–community/social/environmental/workplace/
governance. CSR practitioners talk about corporate 'opportunity'–highlighting the opportunity/risk dimension of responsible business practice.

Triple Bottom Line Reporting:
A framework for measuring an organisation’s performance against not just economic, but social and environmental parameters.

Sustainability:
An organisation’s practices “... that meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs...not compromise the environmental, social and human needs of our descendants” – www.wbcsd.org

Global Citizenship:
An organisation’s commitment to CSR practices across its operations, from local to global.

Stakeholder Engagement:
Moving beyond short-term benefits for shareholders to long-term organisational implications for all stakeholders: shareholders, employees, customers, communities, environment, supply chain.

Enlightened self-interest:
Recognition that an organisation’s long-term business interests require that it engages in CSR strategies and sustainable business practices.

Your turn

It is valuable for job seekers to think through their views on the above concepts. A clear understanding of CSR in any workplace will help you think broadly, innovatively and strategically. It is also worth clearly assessing your own values. What do you value and what kind of impact would you like to make in your career? Which areas of CSR do you feel strongly about?

  • Environmental impact, direct or indirect, of an organisation’s operations, products or services
  • Community/social impact of an organisation’s projects, products, services or investments
  • Workplace practices including respectful treatment of employees in recruitment & selection; diversity & equal opportunity; work/life balance; professional development and progression; ethically managed redundancies
  • Marketplace & business conduct, such as responsible behaviour in developing, purchasing, selling and marketing of products and services
  • Ethical governance from board level down, characterised by transparency; risk reporting; effective Codes of Conduct and compliance measures.

Reflect on the organisation you are looking at. What is its core business and how does it impact on the environment and the community? Are its products, processes, services in alignment with your own values?

Research the organisation’s website. Look for values/mission statements, annual reports and other measures and reporting. Are the CSR initiatives strategic and integrated? Is the organisation benchmarking itself using robust frameworks such as the Corporate Responsibility Index and the Global Reporting Initiative?

Look closely at workplace practices, taking note of gender mix, diversity policies, staff retention rates, staff community volunteering and professional development.

Talk to employers at Careers Fairs, employer events and even job interviews. Ask them questions; get the conversation going on these important issues. By asking questions about CSR an organisation learns that this is an important driver in attracting new staff. It is also an opportunity for them to showcase their initiatives, and receive some positive reinforcement.

Some suggested CSR websites

www.corporate-responsibility.com.au
The Corporate Responsibility Index is a rigorous voluntary self-assessment tool measuring the extent to which responsible business practice is integrated into corporate strategy and management.

www.eowa.gov.au
Employers of Choice for Women (EOWA) lists employers that have demonstrated policies and practices supporting women in the workplace.

www.aussi.net.au
The Australian Sustainability Index (AUSSI) tracks industry leaders in corporate sustainability (part of the Dow Jones Sustainability Index).

www.reputex.com.au
Reputex Social Responsibility Ratings externally rate the top 120-listed and privately owned companies in Australia and New Zealand.

www.moss.org.au
Models of Success & Sustainability (MOSS) is a newly established industry body for individuals and organisations interested in Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainability in Australia.

www.careerethics.com.au
You can have your say at this blog site on career ethics.

www.corporateregister.com
CorporateRegister.com is the world’s largest online directory of corporate nonfinancial reports. These include Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), sustainability, environmental and social reports.

And finally

Keep informed; put your well developed research and analytical skills to good use! That doesn’t mean believing everything you read. Issues are complex and there are multiple perspectives, so try and be as informed as possible before making judgements.

Article written by Rosemary Sainty, Career Development Manager, University of Sydney and Founder, Career Ethics and was based on the project 'Ethics and Graduate Recruitment' which was awarded a 2006 Innovations Grant by the National Association of Graduate Careers Advisory Services (NAGCAS).

This article is taken from the 2007-08 edition of Graduate Careers Australia's employer directory Graduate Opportunities .

© 2007 Graduate Careers Australia

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