Could Fashion Be the Next Big Thing in Corporate Social Purpose?

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A growing breed of fashion brands has adopted social purpose to propel their business models. They are transitioning themselves and the entire industry to be a force for good in the world. And that’s fashionable.

In today’s — and even more importantly, tomorrow’s – world, businesses that succeed will need to re-engineer their operating models, reinvent strategies, and engage in disruptive innovation. Forward-thinking businesses are developing a social purpose as the reason they exist to help navigate the turbulent times ahead – and be part of the solution to society’s challenges.

A recent article in The Globe & Mail outlined how at least some successful players in the fashion industry — an industry responsible for 10 percent of annual global carbon emissions — are overhauling their business models, moving toward products and production that do not exploit people and the planet.

As a contributor to the article, I pointed out that for the industry to fully make the changes that must be made for global benefit, the work must be at the industry level — and that it needs to have government support (see The Sustainable and Just Industry Association Report for examples of how industries such as fashion can advance collectively, and the role of governments to support them via the industry’s associations). We can look at Vancouver-based Textile Lab for Circularity aiming to divert over 20,000 tonnes of apparel that goes into area landfills each year as an example of sector collaboration. Governments also have a role to play, such as in extending producer responsibility — requiring companies to take back end-of-use products for recycling and helping set up sector-wide reverse logistics systems.

In September, Canada will host the World Circular Economy Forum, which will be the first time this forum has been held in North America. Some large Canadian apparel companies have signed the UN Fashion Industry Charter for Climate Action. This is a move in the right direction — a direction that recognizes that the cheap system that moves apparel from the factory to the landfill has to change — and that the new business models being developed will disrupt the industry for good.

Among the disruptions are the fashion retailers setting up repair and reuse outletsPatagonia, for example, has its Worn Wear hub — where you can buy clothing that is vintage, used, recrafted or made from other clothes. You can also attend one of their repair events. Canadian sportswear brand Arc’teryx is thinking “resale, not just retail,” as well. It offers repair services and customers can bring gear trade-ins for discounts. And then there are the “clothing as a service” business models, where you rent the clothes you need for as long as you need and then return them. With the UK’s MUD Jeans and Sweden’s Nudie Jeans, customers lease their jeans, then return them to be recycled into new denim products in a continuous loop of material. The innovation potential in this industry is no less then profound.

Companies such as these and others are part of the new, and growing, breed of businesses that have adopted social purpose to propel their business models. They are transitioning themselves and the entire industry to be a force for good in the world. And that’s fashionable.

 

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About Author

CORO STRANDBERG

Coro Strandberg is President of Strandberg Consulting, which provides strategy advice to companies and industry associations that seek to integrate social and environmental considerations into their purpose, governance, operations and supply chains to create business value and societal benefit.

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