Finding the Money to Green Your Business
Contrary to the popular misconception that going green is expensive, in a very large range of cases, environmental initiatives don’t raise costs, they lower them
Contrary to the popular misconception that going green is expensive, in a very large range of cases, environmental initiatives don’t raise costs, they lower them
[This post first appeared on a Climate Savers Computing Initiative site. I’ll skip the general intro to the greening topic from the original…] …Five areas
This may be hard for anyone below 40 to fathom, but companies didn’t always fire people to save money. IBM was famous for “full-time employment,”
[My column last week on Harvard Business Online] In a tight economy, with companies spending much less on IT, the tech giants will take growth
It’s always fun to predict what’s going to happen. The risk of being spectacularly wrong is very high, but that’s what makes the exercise so
As we all know, energy prices have skyrocketed. Organizations of all kinds are trying new ways of doing business to cut costs. Some ideas, like Wal-Mart putting doors on refrigerated cases and cutting energy use 70% in that aisle, are head-slappingly obvious. Even seemingly wacky ideas can seem downright wise once you run the numbers.
[Posted at Huffington here] It’s pretty clear that the business world is facing dramatic change driven by environmental concerns. Over the coming years and decades,
‘Is the World Better Off Because Your Company Is In It?’: Examining Corporate Climate Responsibility