On the Road to Net Zero Certified B Corporation

Our thinking

We regularly share our latest thinking on emerging topics and ideas in the worlds of business, society and the environment, along with our weekly sustainability digest, Friday 5.

Smartening up

19 April, 2021

There’s no question that the business leaders of the future will need a good grasp of social and environmental issues, and how they relate to business success. But despite more business schools including modules on sustainability, there’s still a long way to go for these organisations to really embrace and understand what is needed.  

A story in the Financial Times this week highlights how many schools still base their curriculum content around the shareholder primacy model of capitalism and the pursuit of short-term returns; rather than long-term strategies needed to address complex issues, such as biodiversity, inequality or climate change. Sustainability and ethics, where it is covered, is too often treated as a separate subject, rather than being integrated into the core topics from the outset.  

And that is a problem, because if the leaders of tomorrow are being taught that the non-financial is distinct from, as opposed to inextricably linked to, the financial then how can they deliver the change that is needed? 

MBA application rates were in decline pre-pandemic – though data suggests applications rose last year as the job market stalled – and the return on investment (financial and non-financial!) for students has been called into question.  

If elite business schools want to attract the leaders of tomorrow, it’s time for a rethink. Employers are clear that purpose and sustainability will be at the heart of business strategy in the future. Business schools need to respond by putting a more regenerative and inclusive approach to business at the heart of the way they think about business success – right from the outset.   

By Gemma Coate

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