Artikel
Autor: Ethisphere
22 Mär 2011
2011 World’s Most Ethical Companies
Alle Tags anzeigen
Avaya
American Express
AFLAC
Accenture
Adobe Systems
adidas
BD (Becton, Dickinson)
Best Buy
British Land
Cisco Systems
Co-operative Group
Caterpillar
Cummins
Colgate-Palmolive
Cement Roadstone Holdings (CRH)
Denso
Electrolux
eBay
East Japan Railway
Ecolab
Eaton
EnCana
Ford
Fluor
Freescale Semiconductor
General Electric (GE)
General Mills
Gap
Henkel
Hitachi
Hartford Financial Services
HDFC
Hennes & Mauritz (H&M)
International Paper
Johnson Controls
John Deere (Deere & Co)
Kesko
Kimpton Hotels & Restaurants
Kao
Microsoft
Marriott
ManpowerGroup
Milliken
Nippon Yusen KK (NYK Line)
National Australia Bank
NYSE Euronext
PepsiCo
Parsons
Patagonia
Rabobank
Philips (Royal Philips Electronics)
Ricoh
Starbucks
Stonyfield Farm
Swiss Re
Stora Enso
Schneider Electric
Salesforce.com
Sonae
Singapore Telecommunications (SingTel)
Sompo Japan
Equinor (formerly Statoil)
Gen Digital (formerly Symantec)
Timberland (part of VF Corp)
T-Mobile (part of Deutsche Telekom)
Target
Texas Instruments
Thomson Reuters
Umicore
UPS
Vestas
Whole Foods Market (part of Amazon)
Westpac
Waste Management
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts
Xerox
The World’s Most Ethical Companies designation recognizes companies that truly go beyond making statements about doing business “ethically” and translate those words into action. WME honorees demonstrate real and sustained ethical leadership within their industries, putting into real business practice the Institute’s credo of “Good. Smart. Business. Profit.”...[T]he World’s Most Ethical Company designation is awarded to those companies that have leading ethics and compliance programs, particularly as compared to their industry peers. This year, there are 110 World’s Most Ethical Companies.