Also: Amazon attrition, U.K. crisis, and JPMorgan's Carlos Hernandez. Good morning.
After yesterday’s post suggesting 59% of CEOs may “pause” or “reconsider” their ESG plans, I got a call from Clarke Murphy, who was CEO of search firm Russell Reynolds for a decade and now leads the firm’s board practice. “Is interest in ESG waning?” I asked. His answer:
“Not in the slightest. If anything, it has surged ahead over the last six months.”
Murphy uses the word “sustainability,” instead of the acronym ESG, in part because it is broader. And he says the focus today is not on the cost of sustainability, but rather on sustainability as a means of both cost control and competitive advantage.
“Everyone talks about cost. But people are creating revenue and reducing cost, particularly around supply chains…European boards have been on this hard for a while, embedding ESG competencies into their governance and in how they are running their CEO searches. Now it’s happening in the U.S. And it’s just getting going.”
Murphy has a new book out called Sustainable Leadership, and he says he is getting requests to speak on the topic from numerous conferences and boards all over the country (not just the “woke” coasts). I asked him how he explained the survey result suggesting 59% of CEOs are pulling back. “I’d like to see the market capitalization of the 59%.” His theory: they are smaller firms. Big companies, he believes, are totally on board, “measuring it, funding it, analyzing it, embedding it.” And it is only a matter of time before smaller firms will have to follow suit—in part because the big companies they service and supply demand it.
More news below. And check out Ellen McGirt’s and my interview with Wharton dean Erika James, in the latest episode of Leadership Next, on Apple or Spotify.
Alan Murray @alansmurray alan.murray@fortune.com
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Amazon attrition
Amazon loses around $8 billion a year to the company’s extraordinary staff churn, according to leaked documents that suggest Amazon is not tracking enough data as it works to train and promote its workers. Engadget
U.K. crisis
The new British Chancellor Jeremy Hunt yesterday cancelled pretty much the entirety of Prime Minister Liz Truss and former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s “mini-budget,” in a bid to undo catastrophic damage to the country’s financial stability. Now the U.K.’s central bank, which spent the first half of this month buying vast quantities of government bonds to stabilize the markets, is reportedly again delaying the sale of those gilts due to market fragility. Financial Times
JPMorgan executive
JPMorgan investment and corporate banking chief Carlos Hernandez has announced his retirement. The Jamie Dimon ally has been with the bank for 36 years, and will leave in the first quarter of next year. Wall Street Journal
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A case for strategic intelligence to help manage emerging risks As ESG risks and opportunities increase, a dynamic approach to enterprise risk management powered by strategic intelligence can help integrate ESG into your core business operations. Learn how companies can leverage these tools to inform risk management and calculated-risk taking. Read More
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