Sustainable Brands Madrid, which took
place June 17, truly was a game of two halves. The first half of the three-hour
online event treated attendees to a selection of positive stories — companies
that are progressing well on their journey towards net zero and beyond, using
the power of brand to bring customers along for the ride.
The second half offered a more cautionary tale, highlighting just how few
companies can rightly claim to be ‘sustainable.’ It turns out there is still
plenty of work to do; and as Marta Blanco
Quesada, President
of CEOE Internacional, reinforced in her opening remarks, “The biggest risk
for the world is if brands fail to positively address the environmental and
social challenges presented by the pandemic — and they don’t build back
better.”
One company determined not to make that mistake is
Interface — the US-based carpet and flooring
manufacturer that first recognised the need to make a positive contribution to
the planet back in the early 1990s. A 27-year veteran of the business, Nigel
Stansfield is the company’s President for all regions outside of the US. Not
only is he responsible for the company’s strategy but also its so-called
climate take-back
commitment
— a promise to help restore the planet. If the company’s previous
sustainability
strategy
centred on doing less bad, this is the next step: to do more good — to be
regenerative and to reverse the damage causing by climate change.
By 2040, Interface will be a carbon-negative
business,
Stansfield said. “It’s about not seeing carbon as the enemy, but rather as a
fundamental building block in our products.” Its Embodied Beauty
collection
of carpet tiles was a world first for carbon-negative
products,
from cradle to gate – and these are set to be the norm in the years to come.
That’s because customers are demanding products with a lower carbon footprint,
according to Stansfield. Interface uses “ecometrics” to support customers on
their journey towards sustainability — helping to quantify the waste, emissions
and carbon impact of purchasing its carpet products. To refurbish a
25,000-square-metre office space using Interface carbon-negative carpet tiles
prevents 7.5 metric tonnes of carbon emissions from entering the atmosphere —
the same as the carbon sequestered by 10 acres of forest a year.
Stansfield signed off by stating how proud he is at what his company has
achieved. “Not many people leave university and want to work for a carpet
business. But they do want to work for a purpose-driven business like
Interface,” he said, adding that he feels saddened “that there are not more
organizations like us taking a leadership position.”
He will have been buoyed by the next business invited to share its story. The
Dutch chocolate company Tony’s
Chocolonely was established in 2005. It has
since enjoyed rapid growth, thanks to building an ethical supply base, something
its customers have really bought
into,
according to the company’s Chief Evangelist, Ynzo van Zanten. “It’s about
having radical transparency. We have direct relationships with seven
cooperatives in Ghana and the Ivory Coast, and we’re building long-term
relationships with farmers — something hardly any chocolate companies do,” he
said.
Moderating the session, Quiero’s Sandra
Pina posed the question: Could
Tony’s, single-handedly, lead a global movement that changes the entire cocoa
supply system? Van Zanten’s simple answer: “Yes,” pointing to the huge traction
the business has had in a relatively short amount of time. “The impact we are
having is much bigger than the amount of beans we purchase. We aim to change the
market — with others taking full responsibility for helping farmers stand strong
in the value chain.”
Forum for the Future CEO Sally
Uren was also on hand to
passionately explain the value of developing sustainable supply chains that not
only focus on protecting the environment, but in raising the standard of living
for farming communities. She highlighted the findings of Forum’s Cotton
2040
project — a multistakeholder initiative bringing together brands, processors,
farmers and standards bodies. It explored new business models that might be
leveraged by the cotton sector — including developing direct-trade models,
predicating finance flows based on maintaining biodiversity on farms, and
helping farmers fund a transition to organic farming practices. “There are lots
of different models out there that could be part of a regenerative supply
chain,” Uren said. “We need to validate them and scale them.”
Companies like Tony’s need to show that it is commercially viable to develop and
support an ethical supply chain. But it also requires a mindset shift, van
Zanten added. “Commercial success should not be the end goal, rather a means to
a goal and purpose. Brands need to realise that it’s not about them. It’s about
their consumers; make them your movement maker, rather than pointing at
yourselves.”
To wrap up the event, it fell on Dimitar
Vlahov, Sustainable Brands’
Director of Knowledge and Insights, to give the audience a reality check. He
shared the latest SB research carried out among 100 companies. It asked each to
self-assess their progress towards becoming a ‘sustainable brand’ against five
critical dimensions: Purpose; brand influence; regenerative operations; net
positive products and services; and transparency and proactive governance. It is
an orientation tool known as the SB Brand Transformation
Roadmap,
created by SB’s global advisory board. Each dimension has five levels — Level 1
for those at the start of their journey; Level 5 for those leading the way, such
as Interface or Patagonia.
The results show that, across all dimensions, very few companies are at Level 5.
In fact, the vast majority claim to be at Level 1 or 2. For example, when it
comes to leveraging the power of brand influence for sustainability, 74 percent
of companies are at Level 1 or 2, and only 13 percent deem themselves to have
reached Level 5.
“Often, a company’s purpose is not specific or inspiring enough,” Vlahov said.
“Then, it’s not being integrated well enough into the company or activated
outside with external stakeholders.”
The final word was reserved for brand strategist and author Andrew
Winston — who is about to publish a
new
book
co-written with ex-Unilever CEO Paul Polman. He described SB’s Level 5
as a “north star; nobody is really at Level 5 yet. That’s because we don’t have
the systems in place to support it.”
However, if companies are to reach for the stars, they need to ask themselves
some serious questions, he added.
“It means rethinking your business — to stop serving shareholders and to serve
the world
instead.
It’s a question for CEOs: Do you understand the issues in the world? And how
much do you care? If you don’t care, you won’t go very far on this journey.”
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Content creator extraordinaire.
Tom is founder of storytelling strategy firm Narrative Matters — which helps organizations develop content that truly engages audiences around issues of global social, environmental and economic importance. He also provides strategic editorial insight and support to help organisations – from large corporates, to NGOs – build content strategies that focus on editorial that is accessible, shareable, intelligent and conversation-driving.
Published Jun 22, 2021 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST