Overfed, but Undernourished: Generation Y's hunger for CSR
Oct 11, 2011 11:55 AM ET
Ask a room of millennials who want to ‘make a difference’, and you’ll trigger a ginormous Mexican wave. An astonishing 70% surveyed by Deloitte’s Volunteer IMPACT Survey favour “companies committed to the community”. 61% reported that this commitment impacts their decision-making when choosing between two otherwise comparable jobs.
Feed up or pay up
That’s great news. But this ‘higher ambition’ is often stopped in its tracks. There's often little opportunity to get involved. For Gen Y, ‘seeing is believing’. Only 58% of employees, surveyed by Leap earlier this year, were even aware of their organisation’s commitment to CSR. That’s wasted nutrients for an engaged workforce!
If ways to engage with community and charity initiatives are not evident, companies risk losing their staff's motivation, engagement and creative innovation that would otherwise spur loyalty, productivity and profitability.
Employers, who fail to feed this hunger, pay for it – literally! PriceWaterhouseCooper reports turnover expenses of £42 billion a year in the UK alone. And this doesn't even account for the costs resulting from low levels of productivity and higher absenteeism.
How to cure the hunger?
Avoid losing your creative, tech-savvy and socially committed Gen Y workforce by delivering the promised goods. Companies with a strong corporate culture successfully communicate their programmes clearly and effectively. They offer long- and short-term nonprofit partnerships and volunteering allowances for employees to share and develop their skills in meaningful and diverse ways.
Keep your workforce engaged and dedicated, so stop spoon-feeding them CSR information, and start nourishing their social passion!
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