Firms commit to sustainability in order to meet stakeholders needs (Crane et al, 2008) whilst they innovate to convert demand changes into wealth opportunities (Forcadell & Aracil, 2017, 2019; Mishra, 2017). There is an important amount of research linking innovation and sustainability from different angles (Barnett, 2007; Ratajczak and Szutowski, 2016). From a macro perspective, the process by which sustainable strategies at the company-level scale up to the macro level was addressed by the United Nations in the Sustainable Development Goals (UN, 2015). This initiative constitutes the most important program aimed at fostering sustainability in collaboration with governments and private companies (Horn and Grugel, 2018). The Sustainable Development Goals directly approach industry innovation as one of the specific goals as well as indirectly in most of the goals.
In this Special Issue, we are interested in extending and deepening analyses of the relationship between sustainability and digitalization. The body of literature on the sustainability–digitalization relationship is still at the embryonic stage (Brenner, 2018) with few exceptions (Flyverbom et al, 2019; Scherer et al, 2016). Digitalization of business activity is referred to the strategic transition from a traditional to a digital approach (Barnir et al, 2003), affecting the business as a whole (Bleicher and Stanley, 2016; Steiber and Alange, 2015). The digitalization process, as opposed to earlier technological advances, is sudden. In particular, the Internet conceptualizes a rapidly changing environment (Eisenhardt and Sull, 2001; Salmador and Bueno, 2005) in terms of industry definition and strategy-formation processes. Today, 40% of the world’s population is digitally connected versus just 5% in 1995 (OECD, 2018). This means that we are in the early stages of the digital era, which opens up a wide range of opportunities but also presents important challenges for firms and society as a whole. The imperative digital transformation grants a deep rearrangement of industry boundaries, shifts in consumer preferences, and a strong remodeling of how competitors and stakeholders interact with the organization. In this context, digital technologies offer the opportunity to create competitive advantages whilst, at the same time, they constitute a challenge to survive in this hyper-dynamic environment. From a firm-level perspective, digitalization allows firms to increase their efficiency (Loebbecke and Picot, 2015) and reach new clients and/or markets (Autio and Zander, 2016). From an individual perspective, digitalization meets the requirements of agility, transparency, and 24/7 product availability. From a society level, digitalization can improve productivity growth, transform private and public services and enhance social wellbeing (OECD, 2018). However, there are several drawbacks within the digital transformation, such as its impact on jobs whereby is human labour being replaced by machines (Loebbecke and Picot, 2015) as well as important issues regarding data collection, security and privacy.
The rise of the digitalization is urging us to rethink corporate sustainability. We are particularly interested in considering novel concepts in new contexts and developing new relationships to enhance our theoretical and managerial understanding of sustainability in the digital age. This Special Issue invites contributions that extend existing research on sustainability by incorporating the current digital environment. Contributions to this Special Issue should relate to corporate sustainability and digitalization from a broad-minded perspective regarding phenomena, contexts and theoretical approaches. We encourage wide-ranging methodological approaches, including conceptual, quantitative or qualitative papers. Specifically, we view the potential for advancement in this field on the following levels: society (country, institutions, and developed vs. developing), industry/market and firm (corporate, competitive and intra-firm). Specific topics within the intended scope of this Special Issue include, but are not restricted to, the following:
Society
Industry
Firm