Force For Good 2024
PeopleFirst is Alpine’s overarching investing and operating philosophy—we drive results by attracting and retaining extraordinary people.
This philosophy shapes how we invest, how we hire, our recipe for growth and our platform for impact– particularly with employee engagement and development.
The eNPS1 measures employee engagement in the workplace. According to Bain Consulting, scores from 0–40 are good and scores around 40 are considered great. Alpine HQ and portfolio companies track eNPS to ensure that our employees are engaged and that our workplace cultures are thriving.
We offer PeopleFirst executive coaches to leaders at portfolio companies to help them accelerate progress towards their goals, while transforming critical behaviors to unleash their inner hero and deliver tangible ROI.
We asked our portfolio leaders who engaged with PeopleFirst coaches, “What made the coaching experience valuable?” As they share below, the portfolio leaders believe the coaching creates engaged, supported leaders who drive successful outcomes.
Alpine’s ESG Approach and Policy
Alpines recognizes the importance of investing responsibly and conducting the firm’s activities and our investment approach in accordance with applicable legal, ethical, and industry standards and consistent with our fiduciary duties to our investors.
Alpine believes that appropriate consideration of material environmental, social, and governance (“ESG”) factors when making investment decisions and overseeing the management of its portfolio companies is important to investment processes and can contribute to investment returns.2 The firm seeks to ensure its portfolio companies are operated with attention to these concerns and is committed to considering material ESG factors in connection with Alpine’s operations.
2022
Advance DEI goals in the Private Equity Industry.
June 2020
April 2021
Over 5300 participating financial institutions as of December 2023. Includes limited partners (LPs), general partners (GPs) and service providers.
Alpine has experience investing in companies that seek to create positive social impact for customers and communities, with reference to the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), such as behavioral health software, healthcare and education.3 Alpine has identified three out of nine Fund VIII platforms4 and one out of six Fund VII platforms5 as being aligned with one or more of the 17 SDGs.6 This is generally defined as when a majority of revenues or business activities advance one or more of these goals or targets.
Diversity, equity and inclusion efforts are at the heart of our PeopleFirst strategy. We strive to take a systematic approach to mobilizing our firm to overcome structural inequities and create the strongest possible workforce—this includes expanding on our inclusive recruiting model, which focuses on hiring for attributes; creating a culture of belonging; working to expand opportunities for underrepresented individuals in the private equity industry;7 and introducing PeopleFirst solutions to our portfolio companies.
We launched the first set of Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) in 2022, with leaders from across the firm playing key roles in ensuring the groups’ successes.
Each November, Alpine Investors organizes an annual “Giving Week,” a targeted effort to inspire employees to donate personal dollars to nonprofits with missions that span in scope from our local communities to global needs.
All donations made to charities by our team were matched 2:1 or greater by the ASV Foundation during our third annual Giving Week.
As part of our ongoing effort to positively impact our communities, we spent a day volunteering locally alongside our colleagues in November.
On the East Coast, Alpine’s New York-based team volunteered with GrowNYC to help with gardening, bench building and maintenance at McCarren Park in Brooklyn. On the West Coast, the San Francisco-based team volunteered at the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank. They assembled bags of fresh produce, canned goods and other food products for families seeking food assistance. Our office volunteers each packed 24 pounds, for a total of 710 bags and 17,745 pounds of food that were then hand-delivered to people in need around San Francisco.
For all of us at Alpine, being a Force For Good means having a positive impact that spans from our local communities to the world at large. It is a goal that unites and inspires us. We are dedicated to creating thriving businesses in which every employee can live a more purpose-driven life; supporting our communities by giving back and investing responsibly; building workforces that are diverse, equitable and inclusive; and aiding our communities through volunteering and charitable donations.
As we grow, we continue to pursue a deeper understanding of what it means to make an impact. We know how much work is ahead, yet we remain unwavering in our commitment to advancing a culture in which all of our people thrive.
This report includes information on Alpine’s program for incorporating ESG considerations. Such program is subject to Alpine’s fiduciary duties and applicable legal, regulatory, and contractual requirements and is expected to change over time. Case studies presented herein have been provided for illustrative purposes only. Descriptions of any ESG or other achievements or improved practices or outcomes are not necessarily intended to indicate that Alpine has substantially or directly contributed to such achievements, practices or outcomes. Case studies presented contain the opinions of past and present Alpine portfolio company executives. Alpine makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of the information presented here. It should not be assumed that the portfolio companies discussed in these case studies were profitable or that future portfolio companies or experiences will be comparable. Past performance is not necessarily indicative, or a guarantee, of future results. Under no circumstances should these case studies be construed as an offer to sell, or a solicitation to buy, any security or as opinions regarding the provision of investment advisory services by Alpine. Please see Alpine’s Terms of Use on Alpine’s website for disclosures.
Any awards and recognitions presented herein are the opinion of the respective parties conferring the award or recognition and not of Alpine. None of the awards or recognitions herein relate to Alpine’s abilities as an asset manager or are indicative of any asset management client’s experience or prior investment performance. Alpine paid a fee to participate in certain of the awards and recognitions. The receipt of compensation influences, and is likely to present a potential material conflict of interest, relating to any granted award or recognition. There can be no assurance that other providers or surveys would reach the same conclusions as the foregoing.
Certain statements about Alpine made by portfolio company executives herein are intended to illustrate Alpine’s business relationship with such persons, including with respect to Alpine’s facilities as a business partner, rather than Alpine’s capabilities or expertise with respect to investment advisory services. Portfolio company executives were not compensated in connection with their participation, although they generally receive compensation and investment opportunities in connection with their portfolio company roles, and in certain cases are also owners of portfolio company securities and/or investors in Alpine-sponsored vehicles. Such compensation and investments subject participants to potential conflicts of interest in making the statements herein. Results may vary materially and adversely. Please see Alpine’s Terms of Use for additional disclaimers.
AB-1305 Disclosure
Alpine’s carbon footprint, for FY2022, includes three office locations (San Francisco, New York City, and Salt Lake City) and remote employees as of 12/31/2022. The emissions inventory was conducted by the third party Bridge House Advisors in accordance with the World Resource Institute’s GHG Protocol Corporate Standard, reviewing Scopes 1 and 2 (emissions from Alpine’s own operations and electricity consumption) and select Scope 3 emissions (including emissions from employee business travel, employee commuting, purchased goods and certain categories of waste). Alpine’s carbon footprint includes Alpine Operating Group and excludes Alpine’s portfolio companies (“financed emissions”). While Alpine seeks to mitigate its GHG emissions, for the avoidance of doubt, Alpine makes no claims of carbon neutrality or of having achieved significant emissions reductions.
As a part of Alpine’s efforts to help mitigate the climate impact of its operations, Alpine purchased ex ante, nature-based carbon removal credits from the third party Working Trees’ Brazilian carbon project (the “Project”), which is intended to fund the planting of ~28,000 trees across ~300 acres of degraded pasturelands in the Brazilian Amazon. The Project involves a practice called silvopasture, or the planting of trees on pasture with the intent to store carbon, improve pasture productivity, and provide for other ancillary benefits. Pursuant to Alpine’s purchase of ex ante carbon credits, the Project expects to generate carbon credits that will be verified according to the methodology for GHG emissions reductions or removals approved by a third-party carbon standards body and issued through a registry authorized by and in accordance with the rules of such voluntary standards body. Alpine is relying on the representations of Working Trees and makes no independent claims regarding verification or validity of the Project and/or the carbon credits.
Alpine has provided Working Trees with financial and professional development resources through the Alpine Social Ventures program. For the avoidance of doubt, Alpine does not market or sell carbon credits on behalf of Working Trees or any other entity.