Sustainable development / CSR
Divertimento orchestra, supported by the Jean-Luc Lagardère Foundation, at the Philharmonie de Paris with the Hachette and Hatier choirs, June 2019 (Paris, France).
By making workforce-related , environmental and ethical issues a central part of its strategy, the lagardère group intends to support the company’s value-creation efforts along with its sustainable and inclusive growth. its commitments in terms of promoting diversity, access to education and environmental responsibility are intended to be performance drivers.
Corporate responsibility as a performance driver
The Lagardère group’s CSR policy is adapted to developments in its activities and changes in society, while also putting the emphasis on its identity and its own values.
It responds to its stakeholders’ growing expectations with regard to protecting the environment, meaning, diversity and inclusion, as well as increasing regulatory constraints on a national and European level concerning non-financial information and matters relating to ethics, vigilance and compliance.
The three core principles of the Lagardère group’s CSR strategy are:
Placing people at the heart of its strategy, by making attention to its human resources a priority. To this end, promoting diversity and gender balance, as well as attracting and retaining talented staff, are the object of regular action plans across all Group entities.
Limiting the environmental impact of its products and services. In addition to common measures across all companies to combat global warming, the Lagardère group has made a particular commitment to addressing two issues specific to its activities: responsible management of paper associated with its publishing operations and responsibility for the food chain in connection with its foodservice operations at transportation hubs.
Sharing the social and cultural diversity of its activities. By means of the content published and distributed by the Group, as well as its various partnerships or cultural and charitable programmes, Lagardère promotes access to education and knowledge while also defending freedom of expression, a wide range of ideas and cultural diversity.
Human resources : responsible and local management
Lagardère has 34,691 employees. It manages its human resources and relations through a network of local HR units, enabling it to address the diversity of the Group’s businesses and locations as effectively as possible, and through a responsible and well-trained management team.
The Group ensures that it manages human resources in a consistent way by creating the frameworks needed to fulfil its workforce-related obligations:
- determining the basic rules of its workforce-related commitment through its Code of Conduct which will be updated in 2020;
- supporting equality between men and women by signing up to charters and expanding the Group’s gender balance network;
- combating all forms of discrimination by raising managers’ awareness regarding decisional bias linked to stereotypes as well as ongoing recruitment testing operations;
- pursuing management-employee dialogue in relation to changes taking place within the Group;
- permanently overseeing working conditions and relations with employees.
The Group is also securing its future by setting up the procedures needed to:
- make it more attractive by highlighting the diversity of its activities and business lines, as well as making employees responsible on all levels;
- retain talent by means of compensation and training programmes, as well as encouraging internal networking.
Focus
Isabelle Juppé
Corporate Social Responsibility Director, Lagardère group
THE LL NETWORK: A LABORATORY FOR EQUALITY AND SOCIAL DEBATE
More than 500 Group employees from all business lines joined the LL Network in 2019 and encourage it to develop its three main objectives.
Firstly, the reason for creating the network was to promote diversity and equality between men and women as a way of boosting creativity and performance. A number of conferences have allowed for discussion about combating sexism, as well as the role and place of men within the framework of gender equality. The network also offered new workshops such as voice coaching or setting up an academy to learn coding, while also extending its mentoring programme with more than 40 mentoring pairs put together since it was launched.
Secondly, networking between divisions has been developed through “Learn about the business lines” breakfasts, which have allowed a number of personalities from the Group (such as Sophie de Closets, CEO of Éditions Fayard and Mélanie Guilldou, Executive Vice-President Foodservice Global at Lagardère Travel Retail) to discuss their business lines and their passions with members of the network.
Lastly, this involves playing the role of an ideas laboratory in order to pass on social changes and share best practices in terms of millennials’ new ways of working or environmental commitments, for example.
Social media workshop during the LL Network annual day, June 2019 (Paris, France).
Commitment to environmental responsibility
2019 was characterised by growing awareness about the climate emergency, spearheaded chiefly by the younger generations. At the same time, demands have increased with regard to sustainable and responsible consumption. In order to respond to these various expectations, the Lagardère group has stepped up its efforts in activities relating to publishing and Travel Retail.
As well as carrying out carbon footprint assessments and purchasing paper from certified sources, Hachette Livre has decided to address the issues relating to reducing use of plastic.
Furthermore, as part of its new PEPS (Planet, Ethics, People, Social) strategy, Lagardère Travel Retail has made a number of commitments concerning the environmental responsibility of its sales outlets, particularly in its foodservice operations.
Lastly, Paris Match, Le Journal du Dimanche and Europe 1 have reported on current social and environmental debates, while the Group’s employees have also committed to a number of environmental initiatives at their workplaces.
Focus
Ambroise Fondeur
Chief Business Officer, Lagardère Travel Retail
A network of “heroes ” in order to better factor in local environmental issues
With its PEPS strategy, Lagardère Travel Retail has set itself ambitious targets to improve the company’s impact on the environment and its communities. Because we firmly believe that the success of this strategy depends on our employees, their local presence and the diversity of their viewpoints, we have developed an international network of “Local Heroes”. True ambassadors of our commitment, more than 30 employees endeavour to achieve concrete progress in terms of responsibility across the entire company by adapting the PEPS strategy to the specific issues of their market.
The role of these “Local Heroes” is to be a real driving force in change by activating initiatives aiming to improve our environmentally-friendly practices. They are also invited to promote their commitment within the subsidiaries in order to foster the support of the entire company. Lastly, an online bank of best practices allows them to provide information about and assess the impact of their projects.
The motivation of this network – which I have the privilege of leading – is remarkable. Launched in 2019 with the support of Lagardère Travel Retail’s Executive Committee, it has allowed for the emergence of more than 120 initiatives relating to all issues concerning sustainable development.
Presentation of the PEPS strategy during the Lagardère Travel Retail top managers annual seminar, June 2019 (Paris-La Défense, France).
Social and cultural responsibility
The Lagardère group shows its social responsibility in many ways. These include:
- the corporate philanthropy activities of the Jean-Luc Lagardère Foundation and charitable efforts of its entities;
- the Group’s relationships and partnerships with stakeholders in the wider community;
- the Group’s impact on employment in the various countries in which it operates;
- relations with its partners and suppliers.
This social responsibility also extends to two key areas of action.
The first concerns its responsibility as a producer of cultural content. The aim is to promote access to education, culture and entertainment, as well as to defend cultural diversity and a wide range of ideas.
The second relates to the increasingly important role of digital technology in all of the Group’s activities, and is expressed through its specific attention to training employees in this regard, as well as the ethical issues involved in the development of social media, big data and artificial intelligence.
Focus
Conference on book accessibility for the visually impaired at the Hachette Livre head office, February 2020 (Vanves, France).
Sophie Nicolet
Senior Vice-President, Corporate Communications, Hachette Livre
Making our books digitally accessible: an ethical obligation
Hachette Livre uses digital technologies to make its books accessible to people who have difficulty reading.
Since 2018, “natively accessible” digital versions of novels or essays published in France have been available, meaning that they can be used by readers with a Braille keyboard or the audio transcription function on a device (smartphone, PC or e-reader).
In order to extend this digital book protocol as widely as possible, Hachette Livre – with its subsidiaries Hachette UK and Hachette Book Group – signed up to the Accessible Books Consortium’s Charter for Accessible Publishing in 2019.
In addition, initiatives are also emerging within our publishing houses and helping to enhance the range of accessible content. In 2019, Hachette UK partnered with the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) to make 33,000 educational titles from its catalogue accessible for free to people who are blind, partially-sighted or have dyslexia via the RNIB Bookshare platform.
Lastly, Hachette Romans – which publishes French-language young adult literature – signed a partnership agreement with Mobidys to convert around 30 titles from its catalogue into FROG format and thereby make them accessible to dyslexic readers in audio, digital or print version.
Art workshop at the Centre Pompidou’s Studio 13/16, supported by the Jean-Luc Lagardère Foundation (Paris, France).
2019 Key figures
- 34,691 permanent employees.
- 75 % Employeesees based outside France.
- 44 % Female executive managers at the Group.
- 500 Members joined the LL Network in 2019.
- 70 % of the Group’s workforce have employee representation.
- More than 87 % of paper bought in 2019 was certified.
- 30 « Local heroes » investing in the rollout of Lagardère Travel Retail’s PEPS strategy.
- 50 % Food waste reduction target for Lagardère Travel Retail’s foodservice outlets by 2025.
- 16 Countries audited by Lagardère Travel Retail for food safety and hygiene.
- 33 000 Hachette UK educational titles accessible for free via the RNIB Bookshare platform.
- 80 000 Teenagers received in 10 years at Studio 13/16 at the Centre Pompidou with the support of the Jean-Luc Lagardère Foundation.
- 1 000 Hachette UK employees committed to solidarity actions deducted from their working hours in 2019.