Article
9 minute read 09 January 2023

Advancing the human element of sustainability

Human sustainability rises to the fore of organizations’ sustainability strategies

Sue Cantrell

Sue Cantrell

United States

Karen Cunningham

Karen Cunningham

United States

Laura Richards

Laura Richards

United States

Kraig Eaton

Kraig Eaton

United States

David Mallon

David Mallon

United States

Nic Scoble-Williams

Nic Scoble-Williams

Japan

Michael Griffiths

Michael Griffiths

United States

John Forsythe

John Forsythe

United States

Co-authored by Shannon Poynton and Yves Van Durme.

Enterprises’ initial efforts to address sustainability issues have been largely driven by public relations or brand defense—with less regard for meaningful outcomes. More recent efforts, such as reducing emissions in operations or manufacturing, are producing real but incremental improvement at the fringes of the business. Now it’s time to take the next step to achieve tangible outcomes by focusing on the human element by operationalizing people-enablers in the organization, planning for the right technical and soft or human skills, making work better for humans, and designing for human sustainability. This is where fundamental and lasting change takes root and outcomes can be achieved.

Sustainability issues have a real and existential impact on society and the earth, and organizations are often being called on to play a more central role to create meaningful outcomes for people, the planet, and prosperity.1Many executives understand the importance and the need to make meaningful change, with nearly 70% of surveyed organizations incorporating more sustainable materials or increasing the efficiency of energy use.2 However, just funding sustainable “things” will not produce sustainability outcomes.

The cold, hard truth is that many sustainability efforts only dabble at the fringes of the business and ignore the human element, which is where meaningful and lasting change takes root. For example, many companies have scaled back corporate travel or switched to more sustainable materials, but those actions alone don’t hardwire sustainability into the workforce or the work itself, which is the kind of change needed to cultivate a culture of sustainability that could fundamentally shape a company’s energy and social impact. Humans are the conduits for material and lasting change.

Glossary of sustainability terms

Sustainability. Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Sustainability includes everything needed for an organization to achieve long-term existence, profitability, and growth. It also includes an ambition to ensure that economic, social, and technological progress occurs in harmony with nature so all human beings can fulfill their potential and enjoy prosperous and fulfilling lives, in dignity and equality, in a healthy environment. “Sustainability” is not synonymous with environmental, social, and governance (ESG), but rather encompasses it.

ESG. The framework that organizations use to monitor and report progress against their sustainability agenda.

  • Environmental. Tackling environmental costs, long-term climate risks, and challenges related to natural capital through sustainable business practices and supply chain management. Includes careful management of emissions and stewardship of natural resources including water, agriculture, minerals, land, and other materials.
  • Social. Committing to workforce management practices that advance inclusion, pay equity, health, safety, and well-being, as well as the advancement of human rights, community impact, and societal impact.
  • Governance. Establishing and executing board and leadership policies and practices on decision-making authority, accountability, and reporting transparency. Includes leadership and governance, shareholder rights, executive incentives, and corporate ethics and behavior.

Signals: This trend applies to you if…

  • There is rising pressure from workers and other stakeholders for accountability in creating and promoting good jobs, good work, and good platforms3
  • The communities in which you work are demanding greater transparency about how the organization is creating value in society
  • Your regulators and shareholders are requiring more transparent reporting on human, environmental, and societal measures
  • Your organization is struggling to measure the ROI of sustainability efforts

 

 

 

The readiness gap

In the Deloitte 2023 Global Human Capital Trends survey, 84% of respondents acknowledge that understanding the impact of sustainability on their organization and defining ownership for driving progress and outcomes is important to their organizations’ success. Yet only 21% believe that their organizations are very ready to address such issues.

The new fundamentals

Embed sustainability into purpose, strategy, and culture. Sustainability cannot continue to be a siloed ESG, employee health and safety, or corporate social responsibility initiative. Instead, sustainability priorities should be integrated into how and why organizations operate at all levels throughout the business if they are to experience the behavior change needed to drive tangible outcomes. When asked to identify barriers to achieving sustainability outcomes, Deloitte 2023 Global Human Capital Trends survey respondents overwhelmingly pointed to traditional barriers to change, such as organizational culture, rate of change, funding and resource constraints, and regulations. These identified barriers have in common the externality of control, likely related to the fact that less than 30% feel empowered to take an ownership role in their organization’s sustainability outcomes.

But leaders can shift this thinking by understanding that to make material change, they should make tactical and tangible decisions to weave sustainability into the cultural fabric of the organization and take control of sustainability outcomes. This involves aligning around and telling the narrative of sustainability as a core part of the organization’s corporate purpose, putting a supporting organizational structure and operating model in place, and hardwiring the sustainability strategy into business and workforce practices and the work itself. This can be accomplished by aligning incentives, rewards, and performance management to sustainability outcomes.

Plan strategically for sustainable skills needs. Achieving sustainability outcomes may require the cultivation of new skills, capabilities, and experience within the workforce. An increasing number of organizations seem to be taking note. For example, LinkedIn observed among organizations represented on their platform, significant double-digit growth in organizational demand for skills, such as pollution prevention, environmental policy, and environmental auditing between 2016 and 2022 (57%, 58%, and 67% growth, respectively).4 The Deloitte Economics Institute predicts that there will be an increase in 300 million jobs globally by 2050 in order to transition to net-zero.5 But sustainability skills are both technical and human in nature. Organizations will need more than specialized experts with skills in waste reduction or decarbonization. To truly embed sustainability into their way of being, organizations will need to conduct workforce planning in the context of all skills and capabilities needed to operate in a sustainability-forward culture and future. In addition to the “green” capabilities required, this will involve considering how to instill enduring human capabilities, such as empathy and conceptual thinking, and develop new skills, such as scenario-based decision-making, among workers in the broader ecosystem.

Make work better for humans. In 2021, we wrote about the potential for organizations to design “good jobs” in which job quality is high, workers have a voice, and the organization offers training and skill development.6 Within the context of sustainability, “good jobs” look more like a holistic approach to work, where the health, safety, and well-being of the worker is prioritized and where work output contributes to sustainability outcomes. For example, sustainable fashion company Everlane regularly evaluates labor conditions, wages, training, and the environmental impact of the factories within its supply chain to ensure worker conditions meet their social responsibility standards.7 In 2021, the organization reframed its mission statement to adopt a people-first focus on environmental sustainability, promoting both safe environmental practices and safe work environments.

Design for human sustainability. Many organizations have begun to value not only environmental stewardship, but also human sustainability, or the creation of value for current and future workers and, more broadly, human beings and society. These organizations unleash individuals’ potential and help them become healthier, more skilled, and more connected to a sense of purpose and belonging. Human sustainability differs from political activism or worker engagement in that the intent is to positively impact the humans and communities who touch an organization, rather than the organization itself. In a global survey conducted by Deloitte in 2022, 64% of workers stated they would be more attracted to and remain at an organization that creates value not just for shareholders, but for workers as human beings and greater society as well. Human sustainability has also moved up steadily higher on the corporate agenda. Seventy-nine percent of business leaders agree that the organization has a responsibility to create value for workers as human beings and society in general.8

Our understanding of what it means to create and sustain value is shifting, to the benefit of humans from the board room to the surrounding communities.

 

Current experiments: What leading organizations are exploring

  • Hilton. The hospitality company offers one example of how organizations are pursuing both human and organizational sustainability. In response to talent shortages resulting from the pandemic and increased worker agency, Hilton looked for new talent within communities in need of work. The company hired survivors of human trafficking, refugees, and formerly incarcerated individuals, which created value for the workers and society, and simultaneously, the business.9
  • Interface Carpet Company. The global commercial flooring company’s journey to carbon neutrality began in the mid-1990s, when Interface leaders put environment sustainability at the company’s core by incorporating it into their design philosophy, performance measures, and culture.10 The organization’s core mission, as stated, is to “restore the health of the planet.” This mission has been incorporated into determining what products they design and how, workers’ performance evaluations, and the interactions that drive daily work. The organization has already achieved its goal of carbon neutrality and aspires to become carbon negative by 2040.
  • Apple. In 2021, the global technology company added a modifier to its bonus structure, which could increase bonuses for executives by 10% should they achieve pre-defined sustainability goals.11 The move came after an activist shareholder failed to push through an initial proposal in 2020 but continued to work with Apple executives to implement the change.
  • United States Agency for International Development. Through its Green Cities program, the organization collaborates with local governments to increase access to inclusive green jobs, reduce pollution, advance equity, and create net-zero systems in a multitude of communities across the developing world.12
  • American International Group (AIG). The global financial services and the insurance company have committed to radical transparency through its sustainability reporting, which accounts for the broader ecosystem.13 Published annually, AIG’s sustainability report includes information on third-party emissions as well as data on the composition of its full workforce. The organization has also created a sustainability-focused framework for underwriting which incorporates its sustainability values into the largest body of daily work.
  • Anheuser-Busch InBev. The organization has adopted an ecosystem approach to its sustainability efforts, taking action to help clean the water they source to produce beer, supporting the financial well-being of farmers whose crops are sourced, and helping make safe beer with indigenous crops for consumption in local communities.14 The organization’s aim is to operate within its ecosystem in a symbiotic manner, growing together with its suppliers, consumers, and communities.

Looking ahead

Many organizations are facing mounting pressure from governments, global coalitions, their communities, and, not least, their current and future workforce to address sustainability issues. And that workforce is demanding that organizations dispense with the lip service surrounding sustainability in favor of observable outcomes. In the Deloitte Global 2022 Gen Z and Millennial survey, nearly half of respondents said they have personally put pressure on organizations to act on sustainability topics.15 Thirty percent of workers in a 2021 Deloitte external survey said they would consider switching jobs to work for a company that is more environmentally sustainable.16 If an organization relies on workers and talent—and what organization doesn’t?—it will need to start making meaningful, quantifiable progress quickly. Two essential steps that can help achieve this progress are embedding human sustainability into the organization’s sustainability strategy and promoting behavior shifts across the workforce ecosystem that align with sustainability goals.

Setting aside both internal and external stakeholder pressures and wider societal needs, the benefits to businesses for growing their readiness to lead on these issues is clear. In many ways, the problems represented by sustainability serve as a useful proxy for the entire set of challenges that surfaced throughout the Deloitte 2023 Global Human Capital Trends report. In that light, it should not be surprising that a deeper statistical analysis of the survey data found a clear and predictive relationship between organizational readiness to address challenges of sustainability, inclusion, trust, and purpose and the likelihood of high performance on business and workforce outcomes—the strongest such predictive relationship of any group of items in this year’s study.

Regardless of the ultimate benefits, many organizations tend to struggle to prioritize the need for long-term sustainability over short-term financial results. While culture and funding are reported as top barriers, they will also be key enablers to help achieve future success. In an interview with Christine Dacre, the chief financial officer of TransLink, she noted the criticality of applying both a long-term focus and a human lens. She says, “This work takes time and a lot of investment upfront, which can be tough when you don’t necessarily see the benefits right away. Moreover, you have to look beyond your company at the whole ecosystem, including suppliers, existing infrastructure, and existing technology. You need a lot of collaboration among stakeholders because no one organization can go at it alone.”17

Deloitte’s 2023 Global Human Capital Trends survey polled 10,000 business and HR leaders across every industry, with 105 countries participating. The survey data is complemented by interviews with executives from some of today’s leading organizations. These insights shaped the trends in this report.

  1. The Closing Window Climate crisis calls for rapid transformation of societies; United Nations Environment Programme, Emissions Gap Report 2022, October 27, 2022.

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  2. Deloitte, 2022 Deloitte CxO Sustainability Report, accessed December 9, 2022.

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  3. Jeff Schwartz et al., The worker-employer relationship disrupted, Deloitte Insights, July 21, 2021.

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  4. LinkedIn Economic Graph, Global Green Skills Report 2022, accessed December 9, 2022.

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  5. Laila Takeh and Vesselina Naskinova, A blueprint for green workforce transformation, Deloitte, accessed December 9, 2022.

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  6. Schwartz et al., The worker-employer relationship disrupted.

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  7. Everlane, 2021 Impact Report, accessed December 9, 2022.

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  8. Sue Cantrell et al., The skills-based organization: A new operating model for work and the workforce, Deloitte, November 2, 2022.

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  9. Amber Burton and Paolo Confino, “Hilton is hiring refugees, human trafficking survivors, and the formerly incarcerated to combat hospitality worker shortage,” Fortune, October 14, 2022.

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  10. Interface, “Sustainability is in our DNA,” accessed December 9, 2022.

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  11. Eric Rosenbaum, “Apple’s new executive bonus formula is designed for the fast-changing world we live in,” CNBC, January 16, 2021.

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  12. USAID, “New green cities program: A field support mechanism to advance integrated urban programming,” Climate Links, July 21, 2022.

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  13. AIG, "Reimagining What AIG Can Do," accessed January 1, 2023.

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  14. Deloitte, 2021 Global Human Capital Trends special report, accessed December 9, 2022.

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  15. Deloitte, Striving for balance, advocating for change: The Deloitte Global 2022 Gen Z and Millennial Survey, accessed December 9, 2022.

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  16. Stephen Rogers, We’ve had a lot of time to think, and we’re thinking a lot about time, Deloitte Insights, April 11, 2022.

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  17. Deloitte, 2022 Deloitte CxO Sustainability Report.

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Sue Cantrell, Karen Cunningham, and Laura Richards coauthored our 2023 Global Human Capital Trends discussion on “Advancing the human element of sustainability.”

The authors would like to thank Lane Eisenburg for her leadership in the development of this chapter, and Tina Chung, Bill Fegan, Dan Firestone, and Caitlin Nasseraddin for their outstanding contributions.

Cover image by: Eva Vázquez

 

Human Capital

Deloitte’s Human Capital professionals leverage research, analytics, and industry insights to help design and execute the HR, talent, leadership, organization, and change programs that enable business performance through people performance. 

Kraig Eaton

Kraig Eaton

Principal | Deloitte Consulting LLP
Karen Cunningham

Karen Cunningham

Managing Director | Deloitte Consulting LLP

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