Sign up by Feb. 21 for Circularity, the leading circular economy event 4/29-5/1, in Denver, to save $800.

Article Top Ad

5 ways boards of directors can support sustainability

Blind spots can make a board a danger to the company. Adopt these practices to see what the company needs to change to secure continuity of business. Read More

(Updated on July 24, 2024)
Top image of boardroom by hxdbzxy via Shutterstock

While corporate responsibility has risen as a strategic priority for many companies, boards have not been driving this change. The UN Global Compact LEAD board program conducts extensive surveys and interviews with board members, which have revealed some significant key areas where board members often are not aligned. Those key areas are what sustainability means, what value it brings to the company, whether it adds to (or subtracts from) profit and innovation, what the risks and opportunities of sustainability are and who the most important stakeholders are for the company’s success or failure.

Why is this mismatch a problem? When companies do not manage their sustainability risks, they can lose the license to operate or fail to foresee resource risks and market opportunities, and therefore become unprofitable in the long term. Some sustainability-related investments have a longer-term ROI horizon, which may reduce short-term profitability. However, as boards are responsible for protecting the long-term interests of their shareholders, it is part of a board’s fiduciary duty to understand and consider these risks and opportunities.

The board’s engagement with the company’s sustainability risks sends a strong message to company leaders and employees. If the board is not aligned in its views on corporate sustainability, how can the company expect everyone else to be aligned?

Misalignment on corporate sustainability often results in the overuse of company resources on sustainability efforts, with little value in return. With no clear direction and no apparent interest from the board, sustainability teams can spend valuable time and resources focusing on managing “simple” issues while avoiding those lurking in the blind spots.

Five key practices the board should adopt

To help companies that want to realize the benefits of getting aligned on corporate sustainability, here are five key practices that boards should adopt.

1. Show leadership on sustainability. Boards should establish alignment on what sustainability means for the company and what the company’s business case for sustainability is. This is critical if the board is to drive leadership on sustainability. Boards should set short and long-term sustainability targets — just as they do for financial targets — and ensure that the company’s sustainability strategy and performance are communicated at annual meetings and investor roadshows

2. Establish the right incentives. The right incentive structures are essential to the success of a sustainable strategy. Boards should incorporate sustainability priorities into both the recruitment and remuneration of executives. They also should ensure that leadership and employee performance indicators are designed to incentivize behavior that is sustainable and creates value for the company.

3. Establish a culture of integrity. Boards can help establish a culture of integrity by placing emphasis on communication about sustainability, and by setting an example in how they deal with tough trade-offs between short-term profit and long-term value creation. According to a recent UN Global Compact survey, only 29 percent of companies align government affairs (such as lobbying) with their corporate sustainability commitments. Ensuring that all external communications are aligned with sustainability strategy is essential in establishing a culture of integrity.

4. Oversee implementation and communication. Boards should oversee the implementation of the sustainable strategy and ensure that key targets are being met. They should also take responsibility and accountability for the company’s communication on sustainability issues to stakeholders. This will ensure that management prioritizes sustainability issues, and will add legitimacy to sustainability information in the eyes of stakeholders.

5. Stay informed. It is essential to be aware of changes in the regulatory landscape, keep up-to-date with best practices and understand what peers are doing. Listening to stakeholders is also key: Secure and review a rigorous stakeholder dialogue process identifying current and future issues material to the company, or invite experts and stakeholder representatives to sit on a sustainability advisory board.

Create illumination

As a board member, you can make a big difference by encouraging alignment. Here are a few questions you could pose at your next board meeting to get the conversation started.

  1. Are we aligned on our understanding of the value of our sustainability efforts?
  2. Are we demonstrating the leadership we want to see from our C-suite members?
  3. Are our current incentives motivating the right behavior or are we sitting on a ticking bomb?
  4. Are we establishing a culture of integrity or do we not always practice what we preach?
  5. Are we taking an active role in the implementation and communication of our sustainable strategy?

Once you shine a light into each part of your sustainability efforts, you can start to rule out the possibility of threats that would make company leaders say, “Why didn’t we know?”

Top image of boardroom by hxdbzxy via Shutterstock

Trellis Briefing

Subscribe to Trellis Briefing

Get real case studies, expert action steps and the latest sustainability trends in a concise morning email.
Article Sidebar 1 Ad
Article Sidebar 2 Ad