The Tomorrow’s Value Rating of the 15 largest ICT companies in Silicon Valley has revealed that many of them are developing innovative corporate responsibility practices but on the whole they appear to be falling below the standards stakeholders expect when it comes to day-to-day CR management.
HP and Intel lead the way in the Rating and are the only two companies assessed to score above 50 per cent.
In general, the companies covered by the Rating fare well in its Innovation domain, displaying a range of leading-edge practices. For instance, they have begun participating in ICT industry initiatives such as the Electronic Industry Code of Conduct and the Global e-Sustainability Initiative. Some are also discussing how their products, services and initiatives tie into the broader goal of generating positive change in society.
However, the Rating finds that day-to-day CR management practices are weaker. In particular, companies are failing to discuss in their reporting many of the socio-economic issues of concern to stakeholders such as employee development, community investment, labour standards, economic contributions and supplier development. On the issues that they do acknowledge, companies rarely discuss how – if at all – they have responded to these concerns.
The team from Two Tomorrows that carried out the Rating has identified an opportunity for one of the Silicon Valley companies to position itself as a clear leader in corporate sustainability. Of course, this requires serious investment – in communications and in operating effective management systems – as well as genuine commitment from top management.
The companies assessed in this Tomorrow’s Value Rating were the 15 largest ICT companies in the San Francisco Bay area according to the Mercury News, which ranks these companies by sales.
Benchmarking
We benchmark your organisation’s sustainability performance using the Tomorrow’s Value Rating methodology.

Join our mailing list
Two Tomorrows