Responsible Sustainability is Your Business Success Story *

Responsible Sustainability is Your Business Success Story *

Business Has a Sustainability Role

 

It’s become accepted that business has a role to play in improving the environment and dealing with climate change.  What is undecided is how to do that, and for some, what actions are expected.  Generally, companies are comfortable doing business as usual, and few want to threaten their competitiveness in favor of green virtue.

My point is that this is not an either or question.  A growing number of examples, from diverse industries, show that sustainable business practices can be good for business.  Many companies just do the right thing.  While others are spurred to act because their customers expect it.

A good example is Unilever which has developed washing-up fluids that use less water.  And their sales are growing fast, especially in water-scarce markets.  Most of us can name a favorite product or two whose brand is intimately associated with its green credentials.  My point is that sustainability can be much more, that it has a role in any and all sectors.

 

Brewery embraced sustainability reducing green house gas emissions by 30%

Sustainability Can Be Profitable

 

A major brewer identified 150 possible improvements that could reduce Green House Gas emissions—while saving $200 million over five years.  Implementation of the improvements was a major cost savings move which went directly to their bottom line.

 

Sustainability Programs Can Be Complicated

 

The nitty-gritty of sustainability programs can get complicated.  But the principles are actually pretty simple —and should be familiar to most business people.  First, and most important, is to acknowledge that sustainability is important.  The case is often not difficult to make.

In a recent survey of 340 executives, more than 90 percent said risk management—whether from consumers, regulators, or the market—was an important factor in pushing them toward sustainability initiatives.

 

Define Your Sustainability Goals

 

It is important to define targets that are both specific and achievable.  It’s much better to say “Eliminate X million pounds of packaging,” than to use the vague “Reduce the footprint of our packaging.”

A recent analysis found that only one in five companies in the S&P 500 had defined, long-term goals when it came to sustainability.  Despite the fact that more than a third (36 percent) said sustainability was a top-three priority.

 

Set Measurable Sustainability Goals

 

Once the decision is made, define your company sustainability priorities, setting measurable targets.  These should be easy to establish after evaluating their costs and benefits.  To make these goals easier to achieve you may need to create consistent incentives, including those related to executive compensation.

For example, Nike tracks its suppliers on a range of metrics, including quality, timeliness, cost—and sustainability.  Falter for long on any of these, and the consequence is fewer orders.  Result: many more suppliers are hitting their sustainability mark.

DuPont has no trouble justifying its sustainability initiatives to shareholders.  it’s sustainability initiatives are generating billions in revenue from products that reduce emissions.  Intel has a dedicated finance analyst whose job is to calculate the value of its sustainability efforts.

To reduce emissions and improve other environmental metrics in its food chain, Wal-Mart tracks not only Green House Gas output, but also it’s yield, water use, and other factors per ton of food produced.  In addition to achieving environmental improvements, it cut the price of food and vegetables in the United States by $3.5 billion.

 

Develop a Sustainability Culture

 

The point is this, real business sustainability efforts are core business efforts.   Because they are not always easy, they can help a company to raise its game and perform better in all kinds of ways.

 

Business people embracing sustainability as part of their business culture

In mid-2014, McKinsey did a study that found a strong correlation between resource efficiency and financial performance.  Their study discovered that companies with the most advanced sustainability strategies did best of all.

In a study for the Harvard Business School that drew similar conclusions about a higher return on equity and assets for higher-sustainability companies, the authors concluded, “developing a corporate culture of sustainability may be a source of competitive advantage in the long run.”

 

Sustainability Creates Value

 

To think of sustainability as a niche gets it wrong.  To do it right, your business sustainability goals need to be rigorous, goal-oriented, and accountable.  Evidence is building that sustainability initiatives work, and that they are an important factor in creating long-term value.

 

How to Bring Discipline to Your Sustainability Initiatives *

How to Bring Discipline to Your Sustainability Initiatives *

Why Your Business Should Embrace Sustainability

 

Sustainability has become a part of life for many companies.  For many, it’s simply a matter of meeting demands from customers seeking socially responsible goods and services.  For others, it’s about addressing pressure from stakeholders or pursuing their own corporate values.

For still others, business sustainability is a strategic responsibility, especially those in a resource-constrained environment.  Whatever the reason, sustainability is sufficiently pervasive that defining it and executing business programs, products, and practices with an eye to their environmental and social implications has become a demanding managerial exercise.

 

Sustainability Identifies Opportunities

 

For some, sustainability has identified opportunities that they might have otherwise missed.  Whether it was to cut costs, reduce risk, and generate revenues.  Consider the multinational consumer-goods company Unilever, which changed the shape of deodorant to use less plastic in packaging and created a concentrated laundry product that sharply reduces its use of water.

German pharmaceutical company Bayer expects to save more than $10 million a year with a resource-efficiency check it developed to improve operations by using by-products and reducing wastewater. Global chemical company DuPont has recorded $2 billion in annual revenue from products that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and another $11.8 billion in revenue from improvements in nondepletable resources.

 

Why Do Some Struggle Over Sustainability

 

To better understand the challenges that companies face with creating value from sustainability.  We worked with sustainability groups to identify managers to collaborate on analyzing their programs.

What we found is that companies often have more initiatives than they can effectively manage.  The sustainability movement is flexible, including everything from environmentalism, resource management, corporate governance, and human rights.

Some managers in different regions may be enthusiastic about their efforts without taking a company-wide perspective.  In most cases, their efforts are too fragmented to create much value, either for the company or for society.

 

How Sustainability Provides Solutions

 

Thankfully, that kind of problem’s solution is well known.  We found that if they applied performance management principles to their sustainability initiatives most companies would benefit.  Companies must keep their sustainability programs focused, set specific goals, create accountability for performance, and communicate the financial impact.

 

Where To Focus Must Be Agreed

 

Getting leadership attention to sustainability initiatives is one of the biggest challenges companies face.  In a recent report for the United Nations Global Compact, 84 percent of the 1,000 global CEOs surveyed agreed that business “should lead efforts to define and deliver new goals on global priority issues,” but only a third said that “business is doing enough to address global sustainability challenges.”

 

Why Do Some Fail To Focus

 

The problem at many companies is often one of focus.  Two-thirds of companies in a representative sample from the S&P 500 have more than 10 different sustainability focus topics.  Some have more than 30.

That’s too many, making it difficult to imagine how a sustainability agenda with more than 10 focus areas can break through and get the necessary buy-in from leadership to be successful.  If top management doesn’t prioritize, then departments won’t either.

The result is fragmented, decentralized, and not aligned with one another or with overall top-level goals.  This slows the social and environmental impact but also the economic value.  A recent McKinsey Global Survey found that companies having a unified strategy and no more than five strategic priorities were almost three times as likely to be among the strongest performers.  Both financially and on measures of sustainability.

Coca-Cola, for example, has set for itself a strategy it describes as “me, we, the world,” which is it’s approach to improving personal health and wellness among the communities in which it operates and the environment.

The company reports making material, tangible progress on metrics related to three specific areas of focus: “well-being, women, and water.”  The company does not ignore other issues such as climate change and packaging, but it has made it clear that this is where it wants to lead.

 

Why You Need To Analyze Your Value Chain

 

To develop your priorities, it’s important to start by analyzing what matters most along the entire value chain.  You can accomplish this through internal analysis and consultations with stakeholders, including customers, regulators, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).

This process should enable companies to identify their sustainability issues with the greatest long-term potential and thus to create a systematic agenda.  You don’t want to create a laundry list of vague desirables.

 

One Company, BASF Maps it's Sustainability Priorities

After consultations, BASF, the global chemical company, put together a “materiality matrix” exhibit which is shown above.  This chart ranked the importance of 38 sustainability-related issues, based on their importance to BASF and its stakeholders.

This type of exercise helps companies to recognize the important issues early and get internal stakeholders to agree on what will create the most value.  Their focus needn’t be mechanical but should instead reflect discussion on the strategic, reputational, and financial merits of different efforts.

 

Set Specific Sustainability Goals

 

After completing your initial analysis, the next step is to translate this information into external goals that can be distilled into business metrics. These goals should be specific, ambitious, and measurable against an established baseline, such as greenhouse-gas emissions.  Your goals should have a long-term orientation and be integrated into your business sustainability strategy. Finally, the intent of your goals should be unmistakable.

One company stated as a goal: “Reduce the impact of our packaging on the environment.”  From a different company came a sharper version: “Eliminate 20 million pounds of packaging by 2016.”

Along the same lines, “reducing emissions” is a vague and almost meaningless phrase.  It doesn’t say by how much the company should reduce emissions, by when, or compared with what benchmark.  The approach taken by another sustainability leader is stronger and more specific: “Reduce 2005 CO2 emissions by half by 2015.”

 

Build Internal Support For Your Sustainability Goals

 

It is important to build adequate internal support to meet your goals.  Our analysis found that the companies that excelled at meeting sustainability goals made sure that they involved the business leaders responsible for implementing them from the start.

One global manufacturer announced in 2010 that it would reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and energy consumption by 20 percent by 2020.  To reach their goal, they set up energy assessments and energy-management plans, established global programs to optimize procurement and building standards, trained and developed internal “champions” and coordinated best practices, and began to use renewable energy where possible.

They communicated their early wins internally through a newsletter and regular conference calls.  Four years into their ten-year effort, the project is already net present value positive.

 

Encourage Sustainability Innovation

 

Setting ambitious external goals motivates your organization.  It also forces resources to be allocated and promotes accountability.  An analysis of companies that are part of the Carbon Disclosure Project found that those that set external goals did better when it came to cutting emissions.  They also had better financial returns on such investments.

Stronger goals, seem to encourage innovation.  People may feel more motivated to find ways to meet them.  Lack of goals is a sustainability killer: “What gets measured gets managed” is as true of sustainability as it is for any other business function.

And yet that is not happening.  An independent analysis of S&P 500 companies suggests that as of this writing only one in five S&P 500 companies sets quantified, long-term sustainability goals.  Half of the companies do not have any published sustainability goals.

 

Communicate Sustainability’s Financial Impact

 

Despite growing evidence of the value of investing in sustainability, many executives still have doubts.  Senior management gives sustainability lip service but not capital if they do not see financial benefits. “Sustainability metrics can seem like random numbers and don’t do much,” one chemical-industry executive told us. “For our businesses, sustainability efforts have to compete directly with other demands, which means that financial impact is key.”

Nearly half of the research participants reported that the pressure of short-term earnings performance is at odds with sustainability initiatives.  A constructive response is to make the case that sustainability can pay for itself, and more.  This needs to be done rigorously, reinforced with fully costed financial data and delivered in the language of business.

 

Make Sustainability’s Business Case

 

This is much easier said than done.  At Intel, although business leaders were interested in saving water, they saw little financial justification to do so: water was cheap.  Advocates of the initiative were able to calculate that the full cost of water, including infrastructure and treatment, was much higher than the initial estimates.

Saving water, they argued, could create value in new and unexpected ways.  Because of those arguments, Intel went ahead with a major conservation effort.  The company now has a finance analyst who concentrates on computing the financial value of sustainability efforts.

Making the business case for sustainability might sound like an obvious thing to do, but apparently, it isn’t. Only around a fifth of survey respondents reported that the financial benefits are clearly understood across the organization.

 

Measure Sustainability’s Savings

 

Sustainability initiatives can be difficult to measure because savings or returns may be divided across different parts of the business.  Some benefits, such as an improved reputation, are indirect.  It is important, not only to quantify what can be quantified but also to communicate other kinds of value.

An initiative might improve the perception important stakeholders have of the company, the better to build consumer loyalty, nurture relationships with like-minded nonprofits, and inform policy discussions.

 

Create Sustainability Accountability

 

The top reason that respondents gave for their company’s failure to capture the full value of sustainability is the lack of incentives to do so, whether positive or negative. According to the United Nations Global Compact, only 1 in 12 companies links executive remuneration to sustainability performance.

While 1 in 7 rewards their suppliers for good sustainability performance. Among survey respondents, 1 in 3 named earnings pressure and lack of incentives as reasons for poor sustainability results; 1 in 4 named lack of key performance indicators and insufficient resources.

 

Exhibit Good Sustainability Practices

 

In this area, a number of companies exhibit good business sustainability practicesfrom which others learn.  Some are strong when it comes to tracking data and reporting indicators, tracking carbon emissions and energy use, monitoring water use and waste, and recycling.

Adidas demonstrates one useful approach.  The sporting-goods company breaks down its long-term goals into shorter-term milestones.  Its suppliers, for example, are given strategic targets three to five years ahead, as well as more immediate goals to encourage them to focus.  The effort makes it very clear what is expected of suppliers for the current year.

The beer company MillerCoors does something similar.  It tracks and quantifies progress in ten areas, ranging from water to energy to packaging to human rights, using its own sustainability-assessment matrix.  The idea is for MillerCoors to understand its performance, in quantitative terms, in areas that are often difficult to quantify.

 

The Hottest Green Trend is Sustainable Business Practices *

The Hottest Green Trend is Sustainable Business Practices *

Embrace Sustainable Business Practices

 

In a dramatic shift, the fastest growing environmental issue today is sustainable business practices.  While many issues are politically charged, including environmental matters, a major shift in public opinion is happening.

Dramatic changes are ongoing as a consequence of the last Presidential election that will result in less and different federal government regulation and enforcement of environmental matters.  This could include rolling back environmental regulation which was a popular campaign message with the majority that voted for the current President.

 

Environmental regulations may be decreased under the President Trump

Less Environmental Regulations

 

Against that backdrop of less environmental regulation, a national poll earlier this year found that more than half of Americans believe that climate change will not affect them.  Public perception is that “It’s just one of the thousands of other issues that are out there.”

Many political candidates are being advised that it’s not wise to lead with environmental issues, “the environment is not on the top 10 list of issues” that will drive voters.

 

Green Building Practices are Still Popular

 

Environmentally friendly green building practices have remained popular among the majority of consumers.   The sustainable building still maintains the cachet of being “the cool kid on the block.”

 

Environmentally friendly green building practices are still popular

Because of high energy costs and the focus of many on climate change, there is still a great deal of interest in green buildings.  Are you aware of any Sustainable Development projects in your community?

Don’t Ignore the Sustainability Gender Gap

 

There is a definite gender gap when it comes to this issue with women much more interested in sustainability than men.  An in house newsletter at a major mutual fund articulated, “Environmental issues are a top priority to woman customers across all other demographics.”

This is quite a dramatic consideration when women control more than 50% of the nation’s wealth.  A political pollster, just weeks ago distributed a blog post, “Sustainability Isn’t Red or Blue it is the Way to Women Voters.”

Millennials are actually interested in sustainability at higher numbers than women.  A recent market study reported 84% of millennials want to engage with businesses that are sustainable.

 

Voluntary Business Sustainability is Growing

 

Barron’s recently published an article about environmental, social and governance issues, “The New Allure of Sustainable Investing.”  During a legal symposium, a former Department of Justice deputy told a state bar group, voluntary business sustainability is ‘the’ fastest growing area of environmental law and maybe among all law practice areas.”

 

Sustainability is a Business Opportunity

 

Many companies receive inquiries from prospective customers about sustainability today than ever before. Today, environmental, and social issues are two of the fastest growing areas of interest for consumers when considering where they will spend their money.

As part of your Business Sustainability Practices, it is important to develop a written Business Sustainability Policy to clearly state your policy for your employees and customers.

 

Sustainability is a Growing Trend

 

This is not a micro trend, but rather should be viewed in a macro context.  With younger people driving the issue, this is an opportunity for corporations and small business to embrace sustainability.  It’s a win-win issue for both business and consumers.

 

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