Created: Jan 13, 2008
Updated: Feb 06, 2008
Page Status: active

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Non-Profit: Corporate Research Project

Organization Info   Edit

Activities: Educational, Research
We Speak: English
Main Email: N/A
Contact Name: Philip Mattera
Contact Email: pmattera [at] goodjobsfirst.org
Phone: N/A
Address: Washington DC
United States
Local Time: Thu Aug 21 20:00:58

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About  [Edit]

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The Corporate Research Project is a non-profit center that assists community, environmental and labor organizations in researching and analyzing companies and industries. The Project is designed to be a resource to aid activism. Consequently, our focus is on strategic research, i.e., identifying the information activists can use as leverage to get business to behave in a socially responsible manner.

We play this role by: 

  • producing profiles of specific companies or industries. We have done analyses in areas ranging from agribusiness and mining to private prisons and insurance.
  • helping groups identify and obtain access to more specialized sources of corporate information from government agencies, private organizations or commercial vendors. We subscribe to numerous databases and CD-ROMs that would be too expensive for the typical non-profit organization to afford. Based in Washington, DC, the Project has easy access to the Library of Congress and the libraries of all federal agencies.
  • training staff members or activists in research techniques. Corporate research is not an esoteric activity that should be restricted to the initiated few. The Project can help spread business information-gathering skills to everyone in an activist group. This website contains a guide to doing corporate research on the internet.
  • helping to coordinate campaigns in different places involving the same company. Since the Project is working with groups around the country, we are in a unique position to see connections between campaigns whose activists may not know of each other's efforts. When we help a group research a company, we look for ways that information can also be useful to other groups with which we may work.
  • publishing a bimonthly online newsletter covering a variety of topics relating to corporate research. This website includes an archive of back issues of the Corporate Research E-Letter.
Most of our work is used by groups for campaign planning purposes and is not published, but we also produce reports for public distribution. Among the latter are:

The State of State Disclosure: An Evaluation of Online Public Information about Economic Development Subsidies, Procurement Contracts and Lobbying Activities, which was released in November 2007.

A report profiling 12 companies that received large contracts for hurricane cleanup and reconstruction along the Gulf Coast, which was done for Interfaith Worker Justice.

Chapter 1 of A Matter of Trust: How the Revolving Door Undermines Public Confidence in Government--And What to Do About It, which was done for the Revolving Door Working Group;

USDA Inc.: How Agribusiness has Hijacked Regulatory Policy at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which was done for the Agribusiness Accountability Initiative;

Your Tax Dollars at Work...Offshore:
How Foreign Outsourcing Firms are Capturing State Government Contracts, which was done for WashTech (a local union of the Communications Workers of America); and

Corrections Corporation of America: A Critical Look at its First 20 Years, which was done (in collaboration with Stephen Nathan) for Grassroots Leadership.

Apart from those mentioned above, some of our other clients have included:

  • Greenpeace USA
  • Institute on Money in State Politics
  • National Family Farm Coalition
  • Natural Resources Defense Council
  • Oxfam America
  • Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition

The Corporate Research Project is an affiliate of Good Jobs First, which researches and promotes accountability standards for economic development subsidies given to corporations by state and local governments.


 

 

What the Corporate Research Project 
can help you find out about any company

Basic Corporate Information

  Legal name, headquarters address, telephone number and website.
  Company status: whether it is publicly traded or privately held and whether it is a subsidiary of another company. In the case of institutions such as hospitals, we can also determine whether it is non-profit.
  Financial data. In the case of privately held companies this data may be limited and not reliable. In the case of publicly traded corporations, there is an abundance of such information, and it can generally be regarded as reliable. Non-profits also must divulge a great deal of financial data.
  Main lines of business and brief corporate history.
  Merger & acquisition history.
  Location of main operating facilities and other real estate holdings.
  Names and locations of subsidiaries.
  Foreign facilities of U.S.-based companies; U.S. facilities of foreign firms.
  The ranking of the company in lists such as the Fortune 500 and market share data.
  Data on exports and imports.
  The company's main trademarks and patents.
  Names of the company's main outside lawyers, auditors, advertising agencies and pension fund managers.

 

Executives, Directors, Institutional Owners and Creditors
  Names of Top officers, their professional history and their other affiliations. For publicly traded companies, information is available on the salary, bonus and other compensation of these executives, along with data on their holdings of company stock.
  Names of the members of the board of directors, their professional history and other affiliations. For publicly traded companies, information is available on the compensation received by these directors, along with data on their holdings of company stock.
  The ownership structure of the firm. In the case of publicly traded companies, this will include the names of any parties holding 5 percent or more of the shares and a listing of the holdings of institutional investors (money managers such as pension funds and insurance companies).
  Which financial institutions have lent money to the company and which institutional investors hold corporate debt issues (bonds).

 

Reputation, Legal Problems, Regulatory Compliance
  A summary of what has been written about the company in national and local media, in the business press and in specialized trade journals. For publicly traded companies, we can also provide a summary of what has been written about the corporation in reports prepared by Wall Street analysts.
  Company involvement in federal or state litigation or bankruptcy proceedings as well as involvement by executives in such matters as well as in divorce or probate proceedings.
  Tax liens or tax court proceedings involving the company or its Top executives.
  Federal campaign contributions by corporate political action committees and executives. Similar information is available at the state level.
  Data from state and federal agencies that regulate the company's activities. If necessary, we can help you file a Freedom of Information Act request.
  Company involvement in product recalls.
  Environmental compliance record.

 

Labor Relations and Employee Conditions
  Whether all or part of the company's workforce is unionized, what unions the firm negotiates with and what the company's labor relations record has been.
  Worker safety and health record; in some states workers compensation records are available as well.
  Corporate compliance with federal wage & hour regulations (overtime, minimum wage, and child labor rules, etc.).
  Information about the company's employee benefit plans.

 

Government Contracts and Subsidies
  Summary of public subsidies that the company has received.
  A summary of any contracts the company has received from the federal government.
  Whether the company has been barred from doing business with the federal government.

 

Lobbying, Campaign Contributions and Philanthropy
  Which trade associations the company belongs to
  Who lobbies for the company in Washington and who are their other main clients.
  A description of the company's charitable activities and a list of which groups have received corporate contributions.

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