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BASF best in class in online sustainability communications

21 nov 2007
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BASF's corporate website - www.basf.com - is the most complete and web savvy in the field of online sustainability communications. Jungle Rating - a Dutch internet consultancy - concludes this after having investigated all sustainability websites of the European sustainability leaders, listed on the DJSI STOXX index. The short list of the top 53 companies has been announced today.

BASF’s corporate website – www.basf.com - is the most complete and web savvy in the field of online sustainability communications. Jungle Rating – a Dutch internet consultancy – concludes this after having investigated all sustainability websites of the European sustainability leaders, listed on the DJSI STOXX index. The short list of the top 53 companies has been announced today.

 

Research in a nutshell

The aim of Jungle Rating’s online sustainability research is to provide insight in the way European sustainability leading companies - listed on the DJSI STOXX index - use their corporate website to communicate on their sustainability performance.
The research consists of:

  1. A benchmark of 53 corporate websites of European sustainability leading companies, consisting of 125 research criteria, based on Jungle Rating’s Online Communications Quality Model (OCQ-model).
  2. An online survey among the 53 selected companies.
  3. Research on trends & best practice examples in the field of online corporate communications.

Website BASF no. 1 - closely followed by BHP Billiton, Centrica, Novo Nordisk & BP

BASF obtains the first place in the ranking, with a score of 67%. BASF publishes topical information (news and case study updates) and offers complete GRI-based performance information, very useful for the professional user groups (socially responsible investors and analysts).

The website also contains several unique features, such as case study videos, flash animations, downloadable Excel sheets and interactive graphs. Tanja Castor, responsible for the sustainability section on www.BASF.com explains that: “sustainability is one of the four strategic guidelines at BASF, so it is extremely important to communicate about it”.

Among the close followers, Centrica’s extensive CSR video interview section and BP’s carbon calculator (enables visitors to calculate their CO2 footprint) must not go unmentioned.

Geert Jan Grimberg, internet consultant at Jungle Rating: “the best performers provide complete and topical information, but also make use of the unique possibilities the web offers in terms of multimedia (e.g. video, rich internet) and personalisation (e.g. interactive graphs, downloadable Excel sheets)”. Very few companies use their corporate website to facilitate a stakeholder dialogue, by means of a weblog or periodical chat sessions.

Trends in the field of online sustainability communications:

Based on this research Jungle Rating foresees a number of trends:

  1. Disclosing topicalities, statements and opinions: Companies use their corporate website more and more to inform stakeholders on topical matters both within their company and in the broader environment (industry / politics).
  2. Creation of an online stakeholder experience: The last years, wave riders have started to experiment with the use of multimedia (images, video and rich internet) on their corporate website and within the sustainability section.
  3. Taking into account individual stakeholder preferences: many techniques are available to personalise information for specific needs, some front runners for example offer alert functionalities, interactive charts and/or podcasts (downloadable audio files) within their online sustainability section.
  4. Establishing an online stakeholder dialogue: Although by far omnipresent yet, some companies start to make use of the various possibilities the internet offers to get a discussion with stakeholders going (e.g. chat, weblog, polls).

What companies say?

The research also incorporated an online survey. In the end, 17 out of all 53 companies participated. The results of the 17 participants confirms the belief that the corporate website is the primary communications channel for communicating on their sustainability performance. Companies indicate that case studies, the incorporation of multimedia, an HTML report and interactive graphs and charting tools are high on the online sustainability agenda in the next two years.

Methodology

In order to assess the quality of online communications, Jungle Rating developed the Online Communications Quality model (OCQ model). The OCQ model has been drawn up after many interviews with corporate stakeholders, like financial stakeholders ((SRI) investors & analysts) journalists, investors, NGO’s and job seekers. We distinguish:

  • Website quality: the extent to which the website is user-friendly, enables interaction, contains multimedia and
  • Content accessibility: the extent to which sustainability information is available and accessible on the website

The model measures the quality of online sustainability communications on a total of 125 criteria.

For more information on the Online Sustainability Research visit our sustainability section.

Top - 53

Rank Company Country Score
1 BASF Germany 67%
2 BHP Billiton UK / Australia 65%
3 Centrica UK 64%
4 Novo Nordisk Denmark 64%
5 BP UK 64%
6 Vodafone Group UK 62%
7 Bayer Germany 58%
8 Deutsche Post Germany 58%
9 DSM the Netherlands 57%
10 Daimler Chrysler Germany 56%
11 Kesko Finland 55%
12 ABB Group Switzerland 55%
13 Unilever the Netherlands / UK 54%
14 Veolia Environnement France 53%
15 Anglo American UK 53%
16 Lafarge France 53%
17 Telecom Italia Italia 53%
18 Tesco UK 52%
19 Aviva UK 52%
20 SAB Miller UK 52%
21 British American Tobacco UK 52%
22 National Grid UK 52%
23 Adidas Germany 52%
24 Renault France 52%
25 Xstrata UK 51%
26 Henkel Germany 51%
27 J Sainsbury UK 51%
28 Stora Enso Finland 50%
29 Royal Dutch Shell the Netherlands / UK 49%
30 Metso Finland 49%
31 Roche Switzerland 49%
32 Telenor Norway 48%
33 Siemens Germany 48%
34 BMW Group Germany 48%
35 Statoil Norway 47%
36 Total France 47%
37 SKF Sweden 46%
38 Danisco Denmark 42%
39 Pearson UK 42%
40 Deutsche Telekom Germany 41%
41 United Utilities UK 41%
42 Akzo Nobel the Netherlands 40%
43 ABN Amro the Netherlands 40%
44 Kingfisher UK 40%
45 UBS Switzerland 39%
46 Balfour Beatty UK 39%
47 Severn Trent UK 38%
48 Barclays UK 38%
49 Syngenta Switzerland 37%
50 Sodexho France 37%
51 Siwsscom Switzerland 34%
52 Alcatel Lucent France 32%
53 Accor France 23%
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3 comments on this article

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Brandon Dorth - 21 nov 2007 17:05

Why are always the bad guys (chemical companies) best in class in sustainability reporting?
Good research by the way

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Geert Jan Grimberg - 21 nov 2007 18:04

@Brandon
thanks for your response.

The top 5 are chemical / energy / mining companies indeed. It might be that those companies feel more obliged to communicate about their impact on mankind and the environment (and therefore put more effort in it).

One of the most interesting conclusions in our opinion is that companies start to make use of multimedia in a relevant / functional way (interviews, visualizing production processes). A couple of years ago companies were mainly using (stock) images of animals and poor people in developing countries.

Geert Jan

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genevieve Quirk - 29 apr 2008 21:22

I am working on the content of a sustainability education website...do you have any tips or a list of the best websites in this domain?

The assignment finishes in 4 days

Thank you

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