Maurizio Capuzzo
233 posts

Maurizio Capuzzo
@MaurizioCapuzzo
CMO @Sedex improving global supply chain sustainability | 30yr tech marketing veteran | Award-winning brand andemand gen strategist | Ex-Polycom, HP, Motorola
Los Angeles CA Katılım Ekim 2009
748 Takip Edilen371 Takipçiler

Excited that Sedex’s SMETA audit is now #SSCI recognized! This means more trust, better compliance, & stronger ethical sourcing for members. Proud to support responsible supply chains! #Sedex #Sustainability #SupplyChain
Feel free to personalize with your specific experiences or your company’s unique perspective.
Learn more!
sedex.com/knowledge-hub/…
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Why sustainability should be a filter for every business decision
Boards are increasingly asked to make climate-resilient, future-ready decisions while balancing financial, operational and brand performance.
Why wouldn’t they, when S&P estimates that physical climate risks could cost just the world’s largest companies $1.2 trillion annually by the 2050s?
It's impossible to do this effectively without an integrated data infrastructure to support integrated decision-making. Too often, the information boards and executive teams rely on is fragmented, disjointed across different operational departments.
What they really need is insight based on triangulated, cross-referenced sources - so they can map the matrix of impacts corporate strategies could have, and the relationships between external risks across the supply chain. Environmental issues don’t just affect materials and operations - they affect current workers and the wider labor market too.
That’s where technology, scalable data tools, operational integration and, most importantly, Sedex come in. With the right foundation and solutions, supply chain data and due diligence tasks become competitive advantages.
The strongest companies are the ones investing in end-to-end transparency, enabling boards to make informed trade-offs between risk, capital, reputation and operational resilience. Is your supply chain data ready to support this?
reuters.com/sustainability…
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This week, I read an article asking: Has the corporate sustainability movement become unsustainable? It’s a fair question. Today’s economic and political headwinds are undeniable — ESG reporting rollbacks, social pushback and rising compliance costs.
I get why it’s tempting for companies to treat sustainability as another compliance checklist. We’re at an inflection point, but if we only focus on the cost, we miss the real opportunity to treat sustainability as a competitive advantage.
Instead of pulling back, this is the time to double down on what truly works:
Use this “regulatory breather” to strengthen ESG foundations that go beyond reporting and have real impacts on your bottom line and operational resilience –– supply chain transparency, emissions reductions and ethical sourcing.
Invest in the data and tech that gives you visibility across every supply chain tier because sustainability performance starts with knowing where the risks and opportunities lie.
Turn sustainability into an engine of resilience by optimizing energy use, reducing waste and mitigating supplier disruptions before they hit your P&L.
The result? Lower risk, stronger operations, greater brand trust and a long-term edge that no short-term rollback can erase.
hbr.org/2025/04/corpor…
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Sustainability isn’t a cost—it’s a profit engine. Kearney’s data shows 69% of CFOs expect bigger returns from it than traditional investments. But it’s not automatic. Reactive ESG won’t cut it—data-driven integration into ops and strategy is key. Think cost savings, risk mitigation, brand loyalty. When finance, marketing, and ops sync up, it’s a masterpiece. How’s this value hitting in 2025? Is ESG still an obligation or finally an opportunity?
esgnews.com/69-of-cfos-exp…
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🚀 Own the Moment, Lead the Change 🌍
At Sedex, we believe in empowering our team to drive sustainable and responsible sourcing practices worldwide. This year’s Sales Kick-Off is all about stepping up, seizing opportunities, and making a difference.
Together, we’ll align on our goals, learn from each other, and set the tone for a year of growth and impact. Let’s own the moment and lead the change that matters—for our customers, our communities, and the planet.
Here’s to a successful 2025! 🎉
#Sedex #SalesKickOff #LeadTheChange #SustainabilityInAction

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@elonmusk @HuinGuillaume You are marketing! Launching a Tesla into space... what an immense branding idea!"
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@HuinGuillaume We don’t really have marketing at X, SpaceX or Tesla
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@GodsBurnt "Excellence is never an accident. It is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, and intelligent execution." Aristotele
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My mom, Ethel Skakel Kennedy, passed peacefully into Heaven this morning. She was 96. She died in Boston surrounded by many of her nine surviving children and her friends. God gave her 34 grandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren, and the energy to give them all the attention they required. He blessed her with a rich and eventful life. Even as she declined in recent months, she never lost her sense of fun, her humor, her spark, her spunk, and her joie de vivre. She wrung joy from every moment, but for 56 years she has spoken with yearning of the day she would reunite with her beloved husband. She is with him now, with my brothers David and Michael, with her parents, her six siblings, all of whom predeceased her, and her “adopted” Kennedy siblings Jack, Kick, Joe, Teddy, Eunice, Jean, Rosemary, and Patricia. From the day she met my father, her new family observed that she was “more Kennedy than the Kennedys.” She was never more enthusiastic about the afterlife than when she considered that she would also be reunited with her many dogs, including 16 Irish setters — all conveniently named “Rusty.”
The cognitive dissonance that allowed her to keep two inconsistent truths in her heart at the same time without budging made my mother a collection of irreconcilable convictions. Among these was her ironic combination of deep — nearly blind — reverence for the Catholic Church and irreverence toward its clerics. She was at once starstruck by America’s presidents, all of whom she came to know personally, and at the same time skeptical of government and toward all figures of authority. She balanced her contempt for pretension and hypocrisy with a boundless tolerance for error and mistakes in others.
God also endowed her with a perpetual attitude of gratitude that fueled her taste for adventure and an irrepressible buoyancy in a life beset by a continuous parade of heartbreaking tragedies. Her sunny optimism eventually brought my shattered father back to life following the assassination of his brother and then helped her children to thrive after her husband’s assassination five years later.
Among her most defining qualities were moral and physical fearlessness. She was a peerless equestrian and held the high jump record on horseback, jumping 7′9″ on a Quarter Horse. Critics named her among the best female amateur tennis players, and she was a competitive diver. But she did every sport well — from football to skiing, waterskiing and kayaking. Her disciplined stoicism and her deep faith in God enabled her to endure over ten years of pregnancy without complaint. She also suffered the murders of her husband and Uncle Jack, and the early deaths of two of her children. Various air crashes killed both of her parents, her brother, her sister-in-law, and her nephew John. She never enjoyed flying, but her worry never stopped her from boarding a plane. While giving short shrift to her own monumental suffering, she always showed intense compassion for others.
My mother invented tough love, and she could be hard on her children when we didn’t live up to her expectations. But she was also intensely loyal, and we always knew that she would stand fiercely behind us when we came under attack by others. She was our role model for self-discipline, for resilience, and for self-confidence. She deeded to each of her 11 children her love of good stories, her athleticism, her competitive spirit, and the deep curiosity about the world, and the intense interest in people of all backgrounds, which caused her to pepper everyone she met — from cab drivers to presidents — with a relentless cascade of questions about their lives. She also gave us all her love of language and for good storytelling. I credit her for all my virtues. I’m grateful for her generosity in overlooking my faults.

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