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...company launched a corporate-social-responsibility (CSR) program, in which it hired thousands of Indian women to sell the company's soaps, detergents and other items in their home villages, most of them too small and remote to rate a visit from a Unilever sales representative. The program, called Shakti (Energy), was meant to aid some of the company's poorest customers, but it has accomplished more than that. The 40,000 or so women working for Shakti's network have proven to be reliable representatives - and their clients reliable consumers - even in a downturn. "Because of the financial crisis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Charity Crunch Time | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

...Programs like Shakti, which successfully mix philanthropy with the bottom line, may show the way forward for companies trying to preserve their CSR programs in the rocky economic climate. Although companies are loath to admit that they are cutting their spending on social programs, nonprofit organizations tell TIME that since the recession hit, several have canceled commitments to help fund projects. "We have had three or four partners pull out since October or November, after we had every expectation of the money," says the head of a small organization in London that runs youth programs in eight countries, mostly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Charity Crunch Time | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

...image. "The p.r. people wanted to know, How prominent will our names be on this?" says Salvatore LaSpada, chief executive of the Institute of Philanthropy in New York. Now, however, partly due to pressure from shareholders and board members demanding tangible results, businesses are favoring programs like Unilever's Shakti that aim to improve the world while boosting profits - or at least aren't perceived to be wasting money. During the recession, "a lot of activities will be linked to how companies can do business differently rather than just philanthropic giving," says Penny Fowler, who heads Oxfam's private-sector...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Charity Crunch Time | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

...more frugal world, it's all about getting more bang for the buck. Consider Puaramita Acharji, a West Bengali woman who joined Unilever's Shakti program several years ago and now earns about $14 a month selling items in her village door-to-door. Small as that sum might be, Acharji says it has changed her life. Instead of being dependent on her husband, Acharji says, she now commands respect in the village. "It is enough to stand on my own two feet," she says. Increasingly, CSR programs will have to do the same...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Charity Crunch Time | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

...been spared this kind of fire-sale is an Art Deco-style mansion on the outskirts of Karaikudi now converted into a boutique hotel, the Bangala, tel: (91 4565) 250221. Chettinadu Mansion, tel: (91 4565) 27308, a similar property, also recently opened as hotel. Tamil Nadu's tourism commissioner, Shakti Kanta Das, hopes hotels like these will propel the region "to the threshold of big-time tourism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Building on the Past | 11/27/2005 | See Source »

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