Abstract In contemporary competitive markets, sustainability and social responsibility are increasingly discussed as ethical imperatives or regulatory requirements. However, such interpretations often understate their strategic significance within business management. This study reframes sustainability and social responsibility as managerial assets—intangible yet value-generating resources that contribute directly to long-term brand value. Moving beyond compliance-driven and symbolic approaches, the paper conceptualizes sustainability-oriented practices as integrated managerial capabilities embedded in strategic decision-making, organizational culture, and stakeholder governance. Drawing on core theories in business management, including the resource-based view, stakeholder theory, and dynamic capabilities, the study develops a comprehensive managerial framework that explains how sustainability and social responsibility can be systematically leveraged to enhance brand resilience, trust, and long-term competitive positioning. Rather than focusing on short-term financial performance or reputational signaling, the framework emphasizes sustainability as a cumulative managerial process that shapes brand meaning, organizational legitimacy, and adaptive capacity over time. The paper contributes to business management literature by addressing the gap between normative sustainability discourse and practical managerial application. It offers a structured perspective for managers seeking to translate sustainability initiatives into durable brand value while navigating trade-offs between short-term operational pressures and long-term strategic objectives. By positioning sustainability and social responsibility as core managerial assets, this study provides both conceptual clarity and practical guidance for organizations aiming to build enduring brand value in an increasingly transparent and stakeholder-driven business environment.
Eyup Doruk (Wed,) studied this question.