Shareholders speak up: The SEC’s announcement last November that companies should allow shareholders to vote on any proposals that raise “issues with a broad societal impact” enabled investors to bring a broader range of initiatives to the table.
- Some have been successful: Apple investors passed a resolution that would require the company’s board to bring on a third party to conduct a civil rights audit encompassing issues such as leadership diversity and equitable pay, despite Apple’s opposition to the measure.
- But Amazon investors’ rejection of all 15 ESG-related proposals suggests that many shareholders are satisfied with the company’s approach to its workers and the environment, which could make it even more difficult for unionization movements to gain traction.
The challenges: Part of the difficulty that ESG-minded investors face is the fact that proposals such as allowing Amazon workers to collectively bargain or conducting an independent audit of warehouse working conditions could have serious repercussions on a company’s bottom line—minimizing their appeal to shareholders looking to maximize their investments.
- Large institutional investors, like BlackRock and The Vanguard Group, also tend to have greater influence by virtue of holding bigger stakes. That makes it difficult for more radical proposals, like having an hourly worker join Amazon’s board of directors or ending McDonalds’ use of gestational crates for pigs, to pass.
- Even if these initiatives pass, they’re nonbinding, meaning companies have no obligation to follow through.
The big takeaway: Even unsuccessful proposals can have an impact, since the public scrutiny they generate could force companies to take steps regardless.
- Retailers should focus on ways they can proactively address shareholder and consumer concerns, such as offering a comprehensive strategy to reduce plastic use or responding to workers’ concerns.