The Visionary CEO’s Guide to Sustainability
Making Business Do Better for Everyone
Making Business Do Better for Everyone
Companies can respond to social issues in ways that are good for both business and society.
The Visionary CEO’s Guide to Sustainability
Companies can respond to social issues in ways that are good for both business and society.
This article is part of Bain’s 2023 CEO Sustainability Guide
Attitudes and expectations about the role of business in society are changing dramatically. The impact of business on the environment (and the consequences of that impact for humanity) are issues of vital importance to many corporate constituencies. Today, however, many more purely social concerns are coming strongly to the fore.
Among employees, new patterns of working and the growing presence of automation and AI are creating insecurity and anxiety, even as labor markets are sometimes empowering workers to make new demands. More and more customers (particularly millennials and members of Gen Z) now make decisions about what products to buy or not to buy based on companies’ performance not only on environmental issues but also on social ones—such as labor standards; human rights; diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI); health; and product safety. And the public at large increasingly believes that businesses need to do more to address social issues.
Business leaders have clearly gotten the message from these corporate stakeholders. In a Bain survey asking global CEOs what they see as the primary role of their businesses, 60% said either “balancing the needs of all stakeholders” or creating “positive outcomes for society.” And more than 85% of these business leaders called social issues urgent concerns for their companies (see Figure 1).
The reasons for this sense of urgency are not hard to understand. Companies face serious reputational and other risks if they violate the new societal expectations for business (not to mention laws and regulations governing corporate behavior). But fear of adverse consequences is far from the only reason for companies to pay increased attention to the social component of environmental, social, and corporate governance efforts. For as many leading companies are discovering, applying a social lens to a business can open up new opportunities for value creation—delivering real, economically sustainable business results while creating substantial benefits for employees, customers, suppliers, local communities, and society at large.
To focus for a moment on just one group of stakeholders and how they are changing expectations for companies on social issues: Customers all over the world are making it clear that they care about the social ramifications of their brand and product choices. While such concerns are not entirely new, they have become quite wide-ranging (see Figure 2).
Most business leaders are well aware of the risks of violating the new social expectations for business. Certainly, they do not want to find their brands and companies attacked on social media or named in the press in damaging contexts. And in the EU, in particular, companies now face risk from new regulatory standards on issues such as human rights in their extended supply chains. But as we found in surveying nearly 300 senior executives, companies that have taken the lead in addressing social issues report that doing so drives better business outcomes in a variety of ways (see Figure 3).
The question, of course, is how exactly to transform action on social issues into economically sustainable business performance. To put it another way, how can companies discover where might lie the previously unrealized opportunities for value creation through an increased focus on social?
As noted above, the category social contains a wide range of issues on which companies today may be expected to respond. The issues for a particular company that will have potential for creating value for particular stakeholders will vary by organization and business context. Any company, however, can begin uncovering the opportunities by applying a social lens to its relationship with four critical groups of stakeholders—namely, local communities, customers, employees, and suppliers—and identifying actions that both address social issues for these stakeholders and deliver results for the business. What follows are examples of such actions, and of companies that have taken them with impressive results.
Improving social and economic conditions in local communities: Communities where companies operate are increasingly critical stakeholders for business. Some companies are looking at these stakeholders through a social lens and discovering how to materially improve conditions in their communities in ways that boost business performance.
Identifying new sources of customer value: Applying a social lens to customers and markets can reveal opportunities to create value for whole new customer segments, including in underserved markets. Many new purpose-driven insurgent brands are tapping into this particular opportunity in niche markets, but established players are also doing so with large customer segments.
Investing in current and future workforces: Given the challenges companies now face in attracting and retaining the right talent, businesses need to shift from being talent takers to talent makers. And making this shift can go hand in hand with pursuing a social agenda for talent. Consider, for example, that 70% of employees are likely to change jobs for a company known to invest in employee learning and development, making investment in upskilling or reskilling a way for businesses to create new opportunities for lower-skilled, lower-paid workers while future-proofing their own talent pools. This is an especially acute issue for energy companies facing the implications of a just transition to green energy for their employees.
Other companies are applying a talent maker lens to address acute talent needs while also pursuing DEI goals.
Enhancing supply chain resilience by building socially responsible supplier relationships: Besides being subject to increased stakeholder scrutiny on issues such as trade practices and human rights, supply chains now face operational disruptions from a variety of factors, including the recent pandemic, war, political unrest, and global and regional economic shifts. By examining their supply chains through a social lens, companies can work effectively with suppliers to ensure fair and equitable practices while also making their end-to-end supply chains more resilient.
Learning to apply a social lens to a company’s many activities and stakeholders, not just to avoid risks but to uncover new opportunities for value creation, can seem daunting. It requires taking a genuinely fresh look both inside and outside the organization to determine where a company may have had blind spots and thinking creatively about social issues in terms not just of obligations but of opportunities. The important thing, however, is to start somewhere, keeping in mind that attending to social concerns involving one group of stakeholders can have beneficial spillover effects with others—for example, as when upskilling employees in changing industries helps keep jobs in communities that depend on them.
To assess where you are starting from, we have compiled a checklist of questions that business leaders can ask regarding the four groups of stakeholders on which we have mainly focused.
No matter where these questions take you, they can set you on a path to new and better outcomes for your company, your stakeholders, and society as a whole.