M5 Assignment 1: Required Assignment 2Tracking Progress on Sustainability Goals

    Assignment 1: Required Assignment 2Tracking Progress on Sustainability Goals
    Good intentions must be followed by actions leading to measurable outcomes. Sustainability initiatives and their outcomes are tracked through accountability systems and transparent reporting.
    Click hereto download and review the Top Shelf scenario so far
    Use your module readings the Argosy University online library resources and the Internet to research accountability systems and transparent reporting.
    Use your research to first analyze how the factors apply to Walmarts sustainability index and then to create a transparent sustainability report for Top Shelf. Write a report that includes the following:
    Write a report that includes the following:
    Write a 1012-page report in Word format. Apply APA standards to citation of sources. Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M5_A1.doc.
    Course Project Scenario: Top Shelf Shoes
    Throughout this course you will analyze various factors at a fictitious company called Top Shelf Shoes. In
    each module you will work on an assignment related to this analysis.
    Review the course project scenario:
    Top Shelf was found in 1990 by Tie Woodward. Within five years Top Shelf had established a solid
    presence in the global shoe business with production facilities in Asia and sales throughout the world.
    By 2000 Top Shelf had a share of 45 percent of the global market in shoe sales. In 2001 Top Shelf
    made the Fortune 500 list of privately held companies and Tie was awarded the coveted International
    Business Award. However Tie claimed the real success of his firm could be seen in the stylish Top
    Shelf shoes being worn by everyone from villagers in Africa to rock stars in Hollywood.
    In 2003 a major competitor of Top Shelf began a green marketing campaign to highlight its efforts to
    reduce its environmental footprint with its new Green Shoe. A simultaneous growing concern for
    environmental issues helped spur the sales of Top Shelf’s competitorit gained market share. As the
    competitors sales increased news stories began to question the implications of Top Shelfs business
    practices especially as they related to low cost labor and environmental concerns. Within a fiscal
    quarter Top Shelf sales were down by 10 percent. Tie responded by exclaiming on the Nightly Business
    Report that everyone had to wear shoes and Top Shelf made the best looking and most affordable foot
    fixtures on the planet. Sales fell another 5 percent the following quarter. Ties management team
    attributed this to the competitions green efforts and the bad publicity received by Top Shelf.
    Ties firm hired a middle manager for environmental affairs and launched a green campaign that touted
    a Top Shelf shoe-recycling program with the slogan We make them you wear them well recycle them.
    Its good for your feet and good for the earth. Sales climbed back up 7 percent over the next quarter
    and the boss gave out bonuses to his management team.
    While initial reaction to the marketing was positive especially among longtime Top Shelf shoe wearers
    two reporters Burnstone and Woodwoe broke a story about the impact of air and water pollution at Top
    Shelfs shoe-recycling facility on the outskirts of a major city in Asia. Apparently some of the shoes were
    recycled to produce energy. According to the report by Burnstone and Woodwoe the shoes were being
    burned by low-wage workers without any precautions for the workers health. An increasing number of
    children and elderly in the region began showing up at clinics and hospitals with breathing problems
    dizziness and toxic blood poisoning. Then a worker at the plant collapsed and died in front of the large
    kiln.
    Global news organizations bloggers and YouTube broadcasters quickly picked up the story. The sales
    of Top Shelf began to plummet. By the end of the fiscal year the company saw a 50 percent reduction in
    revenue as compared to the previous year. Growth was no longer the issue. Instead the company was
    faced with the problem of how to stay afloat despite the significant losses and depleting capital. This
    time Tie made no public pronouncements. He laid off the manager of the recycling plant shut down the
    kiln at the plant and on the advice of long-time friend Gifford Pinchot III hired a reputable sustainable
    business consulting firm Sustainable Growth Strategies to advise Top Shelf on everything from public
    relations to substantive changes in the companys labor and environmental policies.
    Assume you are leading the consulting team for Sustainable Growth Strategies. You are responsible for
    the analysis leading to a report with a set of recommendations to put Top Shelf on the path to
    sustainability. Your first task is to prepare a brief paper for Top Shelf that explains the meaning and use
    of sustainability within a business context. Your team reports directly to Tie Woodward. He is a sharp
    hardworking and open-minded leader with a sense of humor. Tie realizes that every day without a
    genuine sustainability plan is bad for business. Therefore he wants to show as soon as possible that the
    company is committed to sustainability. He realizes that there may be advantages in positioning Top
    Shelf as a sustainability leader in the long run.

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