Mid-Course
Correction:
Toward a Sustainable
Enterprise: The Interface Model
In 1991, Chelsea Green published Beyond
the Limits, the revision and updating of
The Limits of Growth by Dennis and Donella
Meadows, and Jorgen Randers. Their book
helped greatly to popularize the phrase
"sustainable living." Over time
at Chelsea Green, our publishing program
has sought new and delightful ways to apply
the principles of sustainable living. This
effort has seen new books published on subjects
as diverse as flower farming and building
houses from straw bales.
For the most part, however, sustainable
living is not a valued concept in the business
community, where "growth" is narrowly
defined as synonymous with money, and is
considered by many to be the sole indicator
of success. This is the world in which Ray
Anderson was reared. After graduating as
an industrial engineer from Georgia Tech,
where he also played on the football team,
he followed a traditional and successful
business path, until in 1973 he was bitten
by the entrepreneurial bug and founded Interface,
Inc., a carpet manufacturing company.
Over the next two decades, Interface grew
and prospered, a success by most traditional
business indicators of growth-revenues,
profits, products, and territories. Ray
Anderson, however, found himself growing
increasingly uneasy, a discomfort that became
focused when he read Paul Hawken's book
The Ecology of Commerce. It became instantly
clear to him that the processes of nature
must be incorporated into every aspect of
his life, including his company.
Mid-Course Correction is the personal story
of Ray Anderson's realization that businesses
need to embrace principles of sustainability,
and of his efforts, often frustrating, to
apply these principles within a billion
dollar corporation that is still measured
by the standard scorecards of the business
world. While the path has proved to have
many curves, Interface is demonstrating
that the principles of sustainability and
financial success can co-exist within a
business, and can lead to a new prosperity
that includes human dividends as well.
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