In recent years, a significant change has occurred in how companies view sustainability and the actions required to deliver this. Whereas previously, environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) was considered by many to be a burden—a compliance issue that came with risk and cost—it is now understood as one of the key drivers of long-term growth.
This transformation in attitude has been catalysed by growing customer awareness, more robust regulation and increasing demands in this area from investors and banks. In practical terms, this view of sustainability has meant more companies have set net-zero goals, investments in sustainability issues have exploded and new departments and roles have been created whose purpose is to tackle the organisation’s ESG agenda.
Sustainability research and consulting firm G&A Institute found that more than 96% of S&P 500 companies now publish ESG reports in some form, as do approximately 81% of Russell 1000 companies. Meanwhile, a Bloomberg study found that sustainable investing had $37.8tn in assets under management in 2022, highlighting the value placed on sustainable transformation and growth.
While this change is positive, it may not be enough to resolve the system-wide crisis we now find ourselves in.
The challenges we are presented with today are numerous. Not only are we causing irreversible climate change and crossing planetary boundaries but we are also running out of critical resources and seeing biodiversity loss on a shocking scale.
The resulting issues affect everyone, whether human rights issues, soaring inflation or natural disasters.
The challenge is real. So is the opportunity
Ironically, the preoccupation with growth that drives many companies could be their very downfall as scarcer mean stakeholder needs change and the impact of climate change threatens physical assets, meaning that businesses must adapt and incorporate sustainable practices. There needs to be more than just focusing on the short term; rather, businesses must embed a sustainable approach in their long-term strategy and culture.
While these challenges may seem threatening, they also present an enormous opportunity. Companies able to embrace the changing paradigm stand to reap significant rewards. The business case for sustainability is strong and growing, ranging from reducing costs, increasing revenue, attracting more talent, boosting employee productivity and gaining investment.
So how can companies navigate this challenging environment while taking full advantage of the opportunities that present themselves along the way?
We need a paradigm shift: regenerative business
In our opinion, they must take a regenerative approach to business. This idea involves a strategy that promotes the restoration and regeneration of natural resources and social systems. It goes beyond sustainability and seeks to create positive impacts on the environment, society and economy.
This approach requires a fundamental shift in business practices and is integral for any organisation with ambition for positive impact and growth. Until now, organisations have predominantly focused on their carbon footprint as a metric, which is too narrow to capture the breadth of issues in our current economy.
Companies not looking to reduce impact more widely demonstrate a lack of understanding of the systemic implications of their operations—something without which they cannot hope to put impactful solutions in place.
There are two important points that define a regenerative business model and make it markedly different from a sustainable model.
The first is that a regenerative model takes into account not just the impacts of its own current business but also the impacts of the wider temporal and geographic system in which it operates.
Secondly, the goal of a regenerative business is not merely to limit the impact that it has on the planet and society but to contribute positively to the economy and the world around it—achieving a net positive impact as a result. The graph below shows the differing aims of each approach:
Different business types along the sustainability spectrum. Image: Kearney
While there has been a healthy focus from many companies on becoming sustainable, those trying to become regenerative are few and far between. This doesn’t mean that regenerative aspects in many businesses aren’t there. Renewable resources are becoming more and more sought after in many arenas, often even commanding a premium, while circular markets were valued at $339bn in 2022.
However, the priority now must be to move on from making regenerative gestures, to putting the idea of being regenerative at the core of every business strategy. In this way, the end goal is a regenerative economy, where systemic change has caused a fundamental shift in how businesses impact people and the planet.
Doing so is no mean feat, given the immediate challenges facing businesses. Becoming regenerative is certainly not a priority for many. Despite this, organisations must start to understand the critical nature of becoming regenerative in the long term and start taking steps to achieve this right away.
How to start building a regenerative business
Here are five things to get right for companies starting this journey:
• Articulate your vision for systemic change: through a clear understanding of your purpose, impact and influence, articulate where you believe you can reshape economies.
• Map systems and identify leverage points: based on a mapping of different systems (internal, operations, value-chain and the macro-economy), assess—through an analysis of feedback loops—your role in the system, highlighting where you have the ability to restore social and natural systems by strategically allocating resources.
• Set a regenerative strategy: define how you will deliver value through regenerative outcomes. Understand your key areas of impact and where you can deliver the greatest stakeholder value.
• Review business models: assess your products and services and review how you can deliver value through regenerative practices, for example, through product-to-service models, where the focus is on value of service provided, rather than quantity of goods sold.
• Define and deliver value: understanding that regenerative approaches can drive financial value creation is key to their success and durability. We need sophisticated approaches to understand value creation that consider the financial value delivered across the entire enterprise ecosystem.
By moving beyond sustainability and towards regeneration, we can take on the monumental challenges that lie ahead.
Oliver Dudok van Heel is global sustainability director at global management consulting firm Kearney.
This article first appeared on the World Economic Forum website and is reproduced here with permission under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article here.