It would not surprise me if you are taken
aback by the title of this blog – it certainly captured my attention when I
first encountered this statement. In 2005, Sir Richard Branson, the founder of
Virgin Group established Virgin
Unite – a non-profit foundation, that works to encourage entrepreneurial
approaches to some of the tough challenges the world is facing. In Branson’s new book, Screw Business as Usual (see YouTube clip below),
he outlines a business that values both the traditional profit-focused model
and promotes a philosophy of caring for people, communities and planet.
You are cordially invited to join the “wake-up-choir”
of business leaders, academics and
philanthropists who are attempting to wake us from our slumber and follow the
path of sustainability – a path that says it is possible to
do good and do well at the same time.
Most of us live relatively unconscious lives
following our routines.We tend to say and do things without much conscious
reason, andwe tend to do the same thing repeatedly expecting a different
result. The first step in the journey of sustainability is awareness. The
unorthodox tittle of Branson’s book Screw
Business as Usual wakes us up.Beside Branson’s voice, I will use four more
voices to help us stay awake: John Ehrenfeld; Chris Lazlo, Nadya Zhexembayeva;
and the late Ray Anderson.
John Ehrenfeld (2008), an intellectual giant
in the field of sustainability, defines sustainability distinctively: “the
possibility that human and other life will flourish on the planet forever.”
According to Ehrenfeld, flourishing can only occur if we pay close attention to
three critical domains that the forces of modernity have dimmed: