Indian company directors urged to engage

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The directors of companies should engage more with the societies in which they trade, executives of the International Business Leaders’ Forum have said after a visit to economic and social projects in India during the Christmas and New Year break.

They agreed that India presents huge business opportunities but insisted that companies should work with local stakeholders in tackling the problems in their communities.

The forum’s executives saw first-hand how local project leaders and social entrepreneurs dealt with poverty issues such as inadequate education and water access, a lack of solar energy and scant heritage conservation, and tried to promote sustainable tourism and city regeneration.

Richard Edelman, chief executive of the Edelman public relations group and a member of the forum’s board, said: ‘Every year, every chief executive should have a transforming experience that takes you out of your normal path and shakes your presumptions about society.’

Malcolm Williamson, chairman of National Australia Bank Europe and chair of Youth Business International, added: ‘It’s important for top leaders to insist that all their staff get engaged in these issues and have an understanding of them, and that means they have to set an example by getting engaged first.’

The visit took in New Delhi, Jaipur, Udaipur, outlying areas of Rajasthan and downtown Mumbai. It was arranged under the forum’s Crossing Borders programme, which was set up in 2005 to bring business leaders face-to-face with the communities in which they operate and to learn how the two interact.