Schukman: 5 ways to fuse a social mission in your company

June 8, 2015  |  Josh Schukman

Goals

I’ve recently been exploring ways in which traditional companies have been retroactively becoming social entrepreneurs.

JoshS

Josh Schukman

Recall from my last piece that social entrepreneurship is a businessperson that creates a profit and purpose-driven organization in which the business and social missions run in tandem. Our social mission, therefore, becomes a key component of our marketing, branding, and success metrics.

Interestingly, many large companies fit the first half of this definition, yet fall short on the latter by failing to tell the story of their social impact. Timberland, for example, is one of the greatest social entrepreneurs of our time. It outfits the uniforms for thousands of City Year corps members, pays their employees for 40 hours of volunteer time annually, and uses its product channels to empower sustainable suppliers. I’m sure you knew of Timberland, but did you know about its social mission? My guess is no.

Traditional companies can no longer afford not to have a story like Timberland’s. We know that 69 percent of millennial consumers want to know the story of businesses using their influence for social good. This, plus the fact that millenials have over $200 billion of buying power at their disposal, should be enough for any business to make the case for telling their cause-based story.

Here are five simple ways that an established company can become a retroactive social entrepreneur:

1.) Develop a social mission that aligns with your business mission. For example, Kansas City-based Affinity Enterprise Group specializes in supporting residential real estate investors, and a key part of their social mission is supporting efforts that restore blighted residential neighborhoods in cities like Detroit and Kansas City. Affinity’s charitable arm also works with River of Refuge, which provides free temporary housing to working families.

2.) Create a shared vision with your team. This begins at the very top. The leadership of an organization must be unified on the social mission that will be branded as part of its core business. That story and the strategies for telling it must be communicated to all teams within the organization so customers receive a consistent story that is apparent with every interaction. Patagonia is an exemplary retroactive social entrepreneur because they tell their story of sustainable fashion and corporate good at every touch point.

3.) Don’t bury your story. I can’t tell you how many times I go to an established company’s website, try to find more about its social mission, and have to dig through 20 pages before I find the soup kitchen it donates to. Don’t do this. Business is too powerful a force for good to not have its story more loudly told. Find a way to authentically tell the story of the good your company is creating for the world.

4.) Get ‘B-Corp.’ certified. B-Corp Certification is essentially the ‘certified organic’ sticker for social entrepreneurs. There are some big companies — Etsy, Ben & Jerry’s, Patagonia and Warby Parker to name a few — who’ve sought this out because it’s a trusted way of telling consumers that you’re part of a new class of business leader. It’s an affordable certification, and a quick way to show customers you take sustainability and social good seriously.

5.) Be authentic. While today’s consumers are more likely to remain loyal to a cause-driven brand, it is also true that the Internet allows us to spot fakers from a mile away. In this article, I’ve shared several compelling business reasons to become a retroactive social entrepreneur, but if you do this strictly for that purpose, you will not succeed in the long run. You must genuinely believe in the story you’re telling and the change you’re creating for it to resonate.

Josh is the founder of Social Change Nation, whose mission and passion is to provide startup social entrepreneurs with the best possible resources and tools for growing their ventures. He hosts a podcast featuring interviews with the world’s leading change agents and creates online content to help startups make a dollar AND a difference.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Entrepreneur of the Year honorees stepped through a wormhole of fate: Here’s what they found in KC

        By Tommy Felts | December 5, 2025

        The ultra successful all share one common influence, said Peter Mallouk: luck. And for the president and CEO of Creative Planning, good fortune has revolved around Kansas City. It all started when his parents left Egypt and ended up in Brookside, he told a crowd Wednesday evening during the 39th University of Missouri-Kansas City Entrepreneur…

        How UMKC’s top student entrepreneur found shelter (and a path forward) as a founder

        By Tommy Felts | December 5, 2025

        Shapree Marshall’s path began with shared struggle, re-routed to survival — and ultimately made a stop Wednesday evening at H&R Block’s World Headquarters where the startup founder was honored as UMKC’s 2025 Student Entrepreneur of the Year. “My journey into entrepreneurship did not begin with a business plan or a class project,” said Marshall, founder…

        First look: Made in KC’s new Union Station shop boasts all the trimmings (and World Cup timing)

        By Tommy Felts | December 4, 2025

        An influx of holiday shoppers is just the start for Made in KC’s newly-opened store inside Union Station — positioned to take advantage of coming FIFA World Cup traveler traffic — years after the local-first retailer’s owners first envisioned making the quintessential Kansas City destination a home for one of their shops. “We’ve been wanting…

        KC Tech Council reboots its visual identity, teases plans to open new downtown HQ

        By Tommy Felts | December 3, 2025

        It’ll be new year, new look for KC Tech Council as the regional tech advocate relocates to a collaborative headquarters space in downtown Kansas City, as well as embracing a bold brand update — all coded to better reflect a modern, tech-driven ecosystem. “As KCTC powers initiatives that further establish Kansas City as a premier,…