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Abstract

This is part of a case series. Almost ten years after launching its radical change programme, Coronilla was finally reaping the rewards of the ambitious and creative re-orientation. In that period, the family pasta business, based in the fertile plains of Cochabamba, Bolivia, had transformed itself from a traditional wheat pasta producer to an exporter of specialised gluten-free pastas and snacks made from Andean grains. Coronilla had pulled itself out of a desperate market situation with the help of risk capital from a Bolivian investment fund. During the worst of the crisis, Managing Director Marta Wille had a sudden revelation: devoting your life to a company, especially during turbulent times, can only be justified if the company has a social purpose. Bolivia's recurrent political and financial instability wreaked havoc on the operations of companies. On top of running their business, entrepreneurs had to contend with periods of hyperinflation, draconian government controls and the vagaries of an emerging market. When she accepted the leadership of the company, taking over from her brother and her father, Marta set a non-negotiable condition to the shareholders: They would let her run the business as she felt best. Marta was taking the reins at a difficult juncture, but there were few credible alternatives, so the shareholders relented. Marta immediately started to make far-reaching changes. She set-up a positive discrimination policy to favour the hiring of women and disabled people in the workforce, and she established Fairtrade relations directly with Andean farming communities to procure raw materials. For her, corporate social responsibility (CSR) was a reason to exist and persist, not a public relations tool. But, was Marta's brand of social entrepreneurship sustainable over the long-term? Marta was nearing retirement and her succession was uncertain. Would the next generation of the Wille family keep this ethos in Coronilla? Would a CEO brought in from the outside perpetuate it? Would the cost of CSR scare away future investors?
Location:
Size:
68 employees
Other setting(s):
2000-2009

About

Abstract

This is part of a case series. Almost ten years after launching its radical change programme, Coronilla was finally reaping the rewards of the ambitious and creative re-orientation. In that period, the family pasta business, based in the fertile plains of Cochabamba, Bolivia, had transformed itself from a traditional wheat pasta producer to an exporter of specialised gluten-free pastas and snacks made from Andean grains. Coronilla had pulled itself out of a desperate market situation with the help of risk capital from a Bolivian investment fund. During the worst of the crisis, Managing Director Marta Wille had a sudden revelation: devoting your life to a company, especially during turbulent times, can only be justified if the company has a social purpose. Bolivia's recurrent political and financial instability wreaked havoc on the operations of companies. On top of running their business, entrepreneurs had to contend with periods of hyperinflation, draconian government controls and the vagaries of an emerging market. When she accepted the leadership of the company, taking over from her brother and her father, Marta set a non-negotiable condition to the shareholders: They would let her run the business as she felt best. Marta was taking the reins at a difficult juncture, but there were few credible alternatives, so the shareholders relented. Marta immediately started to make far-reaching changes. She set-up a positive discrimination policy to favour the hiring of women and disabled people in the workforce, and she established Fairtrade relations directly with Andean farming communities to procure raw materials. For her, corporate social responsibility (CSR) was a reason to exist and persist, not a public relations tool. But, was Marta's brand of social entrepreneurship sustainable over the long-term? Marta was nearing retirement and her succession was uncertain. Would the next generation of the Wille family keep this ethos in Coronilla? Would a CEO brought in from the outside perpetuate it? Would the cost of CSR scare away future investors?

Settings

Location:
Size:
68 employees
Other setting(s):
2000-2009

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