For example, if we want to invest in stock, we can evaluate the company as follows:
Have they observed the trends of an adaptive future and applied ethical practices?
Have they captured and harnessed the energy for their niche in the market place?
Next, we want to know if there is a yield or rising stock prices.
Does this company review its performance objectively and accept market place and stakeholder feedback?
Do they employ truly renewable resources, or are they green-washing?
Evaluate what waste is produced and where it goes.
Have they used a natural pattern as a template for their product, service, or business model?
Are all components of their production processes integrative or is it linear, which would lead to externalizing certain costs, like environmental damage or underpaid labor?
Do they make small and incremental changes?
Are they diverse, not just in who they employ, but in the products or services they offer, the suppliers they use, the markets they serve, and the opportunities they create or provide?
Are they using the advantages of change (the “edge”)? Do they capitalize on improvements to humanity or do they push for maintaining the status quo?
And finally, do they have innovative and flexible responses to changes in demand, unpredictability in their supply chain, or the needs of their employees?
For example, if we want to invest in stock, we can evaluate the company as follows:
Have they observed the trends of an adaptive future and applied ethical practices?
Have they captured and harnessed the energy for their niche in the market place?
Next, we want to know if there is a yield or rising stock prices.
Does this company review its performance objectively and accept market place and stakeholder feedback?
Do they employ truly renewable resources, or are they green-washing?
Evaluate what waste is produced and where it goes.
Have they used a natural pattern as a template for their product, service, or business model?
Are all components of their production processes integrative or is it linear, which would lead to externalizing certain costs, like environmental damage or underpaid labor?
Do they make small and incremental changes?
Are they diverse, not just in who they employ, but in the products or services they offer, the suppliers they use, the markets they serve, and the opportunities they create or provide?
Are they using the advantages of change (the “edge”)? Do they capitalize on improvements to humanity or do they push for maintaining the status quo?
And finally, do they have innovative and flexible responses to changes in demand, unpredictability in their supply chain, or the needs of their employees?