Corporate social responsibility sophistication: Company-specific drivers among early and late adopters

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Corporate social responsibility sophistication: Company-specific drivers among early and late adopters. / Kunkel, Kyra; Wigge, Katharina; Lueg, Rainer.
In: Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management, 2024.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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@article{ca0e414124374132bf6a72751770c8f3,
title = "Corporate social responsibility sophistication: Company-specific drivers among early and late adopters",
abstract = "This study examines the internal company drivers of corporate social responsibility (CSR) sophistication from a diffusion theory perspective. Bertram et al.'s (2015) framework on implementation drivers of innovations is used as our basis to operationalize the internal company drivers influencing CSR sophistication. We conduct fixed-effects regressions on a sample of 1919 international for-profit companies listed on the STOXX 1800 index (17,848 company years over the period 2002–2020) and explore several sub-portfolios. This study finds that management training, board skills, CEO compensation based on total shareholder return, and quality management systems drive CSR sophistication. Management training is the strongest and most consistent driver. Our analyses show that the effects of the identified drivers are strongest for portfolios of companies with previously low CSR sophistication. Moreover, early adopters appear to be motivated to utilize CSR for both economic reasons and legitimacy. While we find that board members with a finance background improve CSR sophistication, we also show that this increase mainly stems from improving governance practices. Last, we show that CSR sophistication notably increased over time, and parallel with the per capita wealth of the country that hosts its headquarters. Overall, this study is the first to investigate the internal company drivers of non-binary CSR sophistication using large-scale panel data, thereby exploring the effects of early/late adoption and the individual pillars of E, S, and G.",
keywords = "board skills, compensation, CSR sophistication, diffusion theory, early adoption, leadership skills, management training, quality management systems, Management studies",
author = "Kyra Kunkel and Katharina Wigge and Rainer Lueg",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Author(s). Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management published by ERP Environment and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1002/csr.2998",
language = "English",
journal = "Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management",
issn = "1535-3958",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Corporate social responsibility sophistication

T2 - Company-specific drivers among early and late adopters

AU - Kunkel, Kyra

AU - Wigge, Katharina

AU - Lueg, Rainer

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s). Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management published by ERP Environment and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - This study examines the internal company drivers of corporate social responsibility (CSR) sophistication from a diffusion theory perspective. Bertram et al.'s (2015) framework on implementation drivers of innovations is used as our basis to operationalize the internal company drivers influencing CSR sophistication. We conduct fixed-effects regressions on a sample of 1919 international for-profit companies listed on the STOXX 1800 index (17,848 company years over the period 2002–2020) and explore several sub-portfolios. This study finds that management training, board skills, CEO compensation based on total shareholder return, and quality management systems drive CSR sophistication. Management training is the strongest and most consistent driver. Our analyses show that the effects of the identified drivers are strongest for portfolios of companies with previously low CSR sophistication. Moreover, early adopters appear to be motivated to utilize CSR for both economic reasons and legitimacy. While we find that board members with a finance background improve CSR sophistication, we also show that this increase mainly stems from improving governance practices. Last, we show that CSR sophistication notably increased over time, and parallel with the per capita wealth of the country that hosts its headquarters. Overall, this study is the first to investigate the internal company drivers of non-binary CSR sophistication using large-scale panel data, thereby exploring the effects of early/late adoption and the individual pillars of E, S, and G.

AB - This study examines the internal company drivers of corporate social responsibility (CSR) sophistication from a diffusion theory perspective. Bertram et al.'s (2015) framework on implementation drivers of innovations is used as our basis to operationalize the internal company drivers influencing CSR sophistication. We conduct fixed-effects regressions on a sample of 1919 international for-profit companies listed on the STOXX 1800 index (17,848 company years over the period 2002–2020) and explore several sub-portfolios. This study finds that management training, board skills, CEO compensation based on total shareholder return, and quality management systems drive CSR sophistication. Management training is the strongest and most consistent driver. Our analyses show that the effects of the identified drivers are strongest for portfolios of companies with previously low CSR sophistication. Moreover, early adopters appear to be motivated to utilize CSR for both economic reasons and legitimacy. While we find that board members with a finance background improve CSR sophistication, we also show that this increase mainly stems from improving governance practices. Last, we show that CSR sophistication notably increased over time, and parallel with the per capita wealth of the country that hosts its headquarters. Overall, this study is the first to investigate the internal company drivers of non-binary CSR sophistication using large-scale panel data, thereby exploring the effects of early/late adoption and the individual pillars of E, S, and G.

KW - board skills

KW - compensation

KW - CSR sophistication

KW - diffusion theory

KW - early adoption

KW - leadership skills

KW - management training

KW - quality management systems

KW - Management studies

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205585100&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1002/csr.2998

DO - 10.1002/csr.2998

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85205585100

JO - Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management

JF - Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management

SN - 1535-3958

ER -

DOI