Strategy creation is a logical process that leads to a clear and executable implementation plan

Insights. Aspirations. Targets. Actions.

Creating a sustainability strategy draws upon the established frameworks used in strategic planning. Sustainability can be considered simply as a strategic pillar within a broader business strategy, but it has far-reaching implications for the organisation that will become apparent during our strategy-setting process. As such, the importance of tying sustainability into the broader business strategy will become clear.

Sustainability strategy development can be led by exploring an organisation’s responsibility to the environment and people, but invariably, the organisation will be held accountable by ESG regulation or voluntary disclosures. This means the requirements of these regulations and disclosures will always partly drive a sustainability strategy, which can surprise executives with pre-held views on corporate responsibility. Rhizome strategy consultants can explain how the three drivers of strategy – risk, reward and responsibility – interrelate and the useful purpose ESG disclosures serve to set expectations, benchmark best practice and ensure the focus is on the big picture and material issues.

Creating a sustainability strategy has four steps to success:

Setting a sustainability strategy by 4 steps: understanding, goals, outcomes, capabilities

Firstly, to ensure that sustainability has the same meaning for all involved in the strategy creation process, we will introduce the SASB® Standards designed to identify the sustainability issues most relevant to organisations by sector. Additional global resources will come from the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the World Economic Forum Global Risks report. This leads to a discussion of materiality, its importance to sustainability and double materiality assessments. The most concrete aspects of any sustainability strategy will be the requirements for regulatory compliance. Thereafter, the drivers are market analysis and competitor actions, corporate aspirations, and alignment with existing corporate purpose and values.

What does the organisation aim to achieve based on the insight findings? We will focus on the mitigation of ESG risk, gaining rewards from long-term competitive advantage and addressing the firm’s responsibility to people and the planet. These aspirations (or vision of success) and goals should be broad but supportable and actionable (i.e., will stand up to the challenge of “how”?). We cover the traditional “Where to Play?” and “How to win”, especially to evaluate the opportunities for competitive advantage. We also consider goals such as regulatory compliance or being competitive with peers. For some organisations, aspirations will go beyond sustainability and into having a positive impact.

The outcome is the tangible product or measurable change that occurs as a consequence of pursuing the goal. For instance, a broad goal of being known as an organisation that values responsible and sustainable business practices can be evidenced by voluntarily reporting the UN Global Compact or specific UN SDGs, or for funds becoming EU SFDR Article 8 or 9 rated. For competitive positioning, it could be setting science-based emission reduction targets (SBTi), or achieving ratings in CDP or EcoVadis. Examples in the S&G of ESG include setting representation goals in management and securing ISO27001 (information security management). As a competitive advantage, it might be innovative new product development or supply chain management targets. The selected outcomes and impact need to be measurable and time-bound.

To be viable, the sustainability strategy must be executable. What capabilities does the organisation need to have to deliver the plan? What governance structures, tools and people skills are needed for success? Getting into detail informs the likely costs of the transformational change required to deliver the sustainability strategy. It is the moment to consider priorities, timing and roadblocks. Does the long-term sustainability strategy link to a mid-term strategic plan and short-term delivery plan that can be implemented?

The highlight of AMBITION, ACTION and ACCOUNTABILITY mirrors the Transition Planning Taskforce disclosure framework, widely recognised within the sustainability community as best practice for transition planning. While specific to the transition to a low-carbon economy, this framework is universally appropriate to strategic planning. Furthermore, a TPT designed transition plan will consider the impact on people and a just transition.