Examples of triple bottom line in the following topics:
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- The three pillars—also known as the "triple bottom line"—have served as a common ground for numerous sustainability standards and certification systems in recent years, though a universally accepted definition of sustainability remains elusive.
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- Most arguments both for and against CSR are based on how a company's attempts to be socially responsible affect its bottom line.
- CSR proponents may also argue for the recognition of a "triple bottom line" performance that includes not only financial returns for owners but also social and environmental benefits for the greater society.
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- This type of accounting originated in the early 1990s and is known by various names, including social accounting, sustainability accounting, CSR reporting, environmental and social governance (ESG) reporting, and triple-bottom-line accounting (encompassing social and environmental as well as financial reporting).
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- Strategy involves the action plan of a company for building competitive advantage and increasing its triple bottom line over the long-term.
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- Gantt charts can be used to show the current schedule status using percent-complete shadings and a vertical "TODAY" line.
- Because Gantt charts focus primarily on schedule management, they represent only one of the triple constraints for project management (cost, time, and scope–Gantt charts show only time).
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- Initiation: The initiation stage includes generating the idea, assessing the feasibility and profitability of the project, conceptualizing the operational benefits and the bottom line, and getting approval and resources.
- This integration should be in line with the framework established in the first two stages.
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- The management should also consider how innovations might help or hinder employees in doing their jobs, as opposed to merely considering the immediate effect to the company's bottom line.
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- Because the network structure is decentralized, it has fewer tiers in its organizational makeup, a wider span of control, and a bottom-up flow of decision making and ideas.
- For example, lines of accountability may be less clear, and reliance on external vendors can be quite high.
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- One popular scenario application is called the zero-sum game, where the costs and revenues are equated to see at what level of cost or what level of revenue a zero-sum bottom line can be achieved.
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- Messaging may also be more general but still designed with a company's bottom line in mind.