More
companies are managing sustainability to improve processes, pursue growth, and
add value to their companies rather than focusing on reputation alone.
October 2011
Many
companies are actively integrating sustainability
principles into their businesses, according to a recent McKinsey survey,1 and they are doing so by pursuing goals
that go far beyond earlier concern for reputation management—for example,
saving energy, developing green products, and retaining and motivating
employees, all of which help companies capture value through growth and return
on capital. In our sixth survey of executives on how their companies understand
and manage issues related to sustainability,2 this year’s results show that, since last
year, larger shares of executives say sustainability programs make a positive
contribution to their companies’ short- and long-term value.
This
survey explored why and how companies are addressing sustainability and to what
extent executives believe it affects their companies’ bottom line, now and over
the next five years. In a related opinion piece, “Putting it into practice,” at the end of
this survey, the authors argue that more businesses will have to take a
long-term strategic view of the issue by identifying and pursuing
sustainability opportunities that hold the highest value potential.
On
the whole, respondents report a more well-rounded understanding of
sustainability and its expected benefits than in prior surveys. As in the past,
they see the potential for supporting corporate reputation. But they also
expect operational and growth-oriented benefits in the areas of cutting costs
and pursuing opportunities in new markets and products. Furthermore,
respondents in certain industries—energy, the extractive industries,3 and transportation—report that their
companies are taking a more active approach than those in other sectors,
probably as a result of those industries’ potential regulatory and
natural-resource constraints.
A
more active agenda
There
are some noteworthy changes since our 2010 survey4 in the actions executives report their
companies are taking on sustainability, their reasons for doing so, and the
extent to which they have integrated sustainability into their business. For
instance, the share of respondents saying their companies’ top reasons for
addressing sustainability include improving operational efficiency and lowering
costs jumped 14 percentage points since last year, to 33 percent. This concern
for costs replaces corporate reputation as the most frequently chosen reason;
at 32 percent, reputation5 is the second most cited reason, followed
by alignment with the company’s business goals, mission, or values6 (31 percent) and new growth opportunities
(27 percent), which climbed 10 percentage points since last year.
Therefore,
it’s not surprising that the areas where most executives say their companies
are taking action are reducing energy usage and reducing waste in operations,
ahead of reputation management (Exhibit 1). Fewer respondents report that their
companies are leveraging the sustainability of existing products to find new
growth or committing R&D resources to bring sustainable products to market.
Yet both of these are important ways sustainability can drive growth: organizations
that act in these areas are the likeliest to say they’re more effective than
their competitors at managing any other sustainability initiatives. These
results suggest that companies may be better able to find a competitive
advantage when pursuing growth activities than operational activities.
Companies are also integrating
sustainability across many processes, according to respondents: 57 percent say
their companies have integrated sustainability into strategic planning (Exhibit
2). The most integrated area is mission and values, followed by external
communications, while the least integrated areas are supply chain management
and budgeting. That said, sustainability has stayed at about the same place on
CEOs’ agendas, and about the same share of respondents say they have formal
programs to address it (Exhibit 3). The share of respondents saying their
companies effectively manage sustainability has even shrunk somewhat. Starting
last year, we used these three characteristics to define a group of
“sustainability leaders,”7 companies that are more adept at
capturing value through sustainability along various measures that the survey
asked about.
Leading
the way with a strategic approach
In
general, respondents from companies in the leaders’ group say their companies
do more on every aspect of sustainability; this is especially true in the areas
of growth and risk management that, along with return on capital, are three
ways in which sustainability can create value based on McKinsey research8 (Exhibit 4). For example, 94 percent say
their companies have integrated sustainability into strategic planning, versus
53 percent of all other respondents. Compared with the integration of
sustainability into other processes, however, the leaders’ supply chains and
budgets are less integrated; respondents at other companies report this pattern
as well. In addition, respondents in the leaders’ group are more likely than
other respondents to report that their companies are pursuing each of the 13
actions related to sustainability listed in the survey, and they rate
themselves more effective at taking action, relative to competitors, more often
than the rest of respondents do.
Executives
in the leaders’ group are also more likely to say their companies are taking
higher-level, more strategic actions: much higher shares of leaders are
managing their business portfolios to capture trends in sustainability and
committing R&D resources to sustainable products. Furthermore, just 9
percent of respondents at these companies say they have sustainability programs
in place to respond to regulatory requirements, compared with 25 percent of all
other respondents. Those in the leaders’ group are more likely to say instead
that sustainability is aligned with their goals, mission, and values (59
percent versus 28 percent of all others) and that it strengthens their
competitive position (43 percent versus 24 percent).
It’s
likely related that executives in the leaders’ group are more than twice as
likely as all others to say their companies capture value from sustainability
opportunities. Indeed, 30 percent say they are capturing all the value they
can, versus 9 percent of all others. And while all respondents struggle with
the pressure of short-term earnings performance as a barrier to value creation,
the leaders struggle less with leadership, systems, and processes that enable
organizations to drive value through sustainability (Exhibit 5).
Executives
whose companies fall into the leaders’ group also report that employees at all
levels are far more knowledgeable about their companies’ sustainability
activities—and that sustainability is more important for attracting and
retaining employees—than respondents at other companies.9 This finding suggests that the
integration of sustainability extends far beyond business practices at these
companies.
It’s
important to note that the mix of industries represented in the leaders’ group
differs from the full group of respondents to the survey. A handful of
industries—arguably those with a higher impact on environmental issues such as
resource use and emissions, whose need to be more proactive on sustainability
to effectively manage their future business is more urgent—are overrepresented:
energy, extractive industries, manufacturing, and transportation. Relatively
few respondents from finance, retail, and business, legal, and professional
services are in the leaders group.
Value
creation and industry
The
fact that some industries are overrepresented in the leaders’ group highlights
differences in emphasis on and effective management of sustainability across
industries. This carries over to value creation. Overall, the relationship
between sustainability and quantifiable value is still somewhat unclear,
executives indicate: about one-third of respondents say they don’t know how
much sustainability initiatives add to shareholder value at their companies. In
addition, the share that rate sustainability’s contribution to short-term value
as positive has only inched up since last year’s survey, to 48 percent.
However,
respondents do cite several different levers for value creation over the next
five years. Among the top are managing corporate reputation, capturing
sustainability trends in the business portfolio, and committing R&D
resources to sustainable products; across industries, the relative importance
of each effort varies (Exhibit 6).
Respondents
at consumer and B2B companies diverge on the levers that could drive
longer-term value creation. Respondents in both groups expect reputation to add
a similar level of significant value, or more than 11 percent of shareholder
value—indeed, it’s the most frequently selected action by respondents at
consumer companies. Among B2B respondents, however, the highest share (23
percent) say managing their business portfolios to capture sustainability
trends adds significant value to companies in their industries, compared with
15 percent of consumer respondents. Achieving higher prices or greater market
share through sustainable products, committing R&D resources, and
responding to regulations has more value potential for B2B companies,
executives say, while those at consumer companies see more potential in
managing sustainability through the value chain, water use, and waste.
Across
industries, executives also differ in how they view barriers to value creation.
Those at extractive firms point to a lack of capabilities (25 percent versus 15
percent of all respondents) and lack of incentives tied to sustainability
performance (42 percent versus 32 percent) as being bigger barriers than they
are for respondents in other industries. Higher shares of transportation
respondents than the average also cite lack of incentives (45 percent), while
fewer executives at energy firms select most of the barriers presented, perhaps
suggesting that they’ve been thinking about sustainability and value longer
than others. Some in the energy sector do still cite key performance indicators
(KPIs) and integrating sustainability into their performance management systems
as concerns. Executives at retail firms are more likely to report
barriers—except for organizational structure and a disconnected sustainability
department—than the average.
Looking
ahead
- Companies are not doing as much to integrate sustainability into internal communications or employee engagement as they are into other areas of business, such as strategic planning. With 53 percent of respondents saying company performance on sustainability is at least somewhat important to attracting and retaining employees, companies that take action are more likely to gain an advantage in employee retention. The leaders are better at engaging employees on this issue (and at keeping employees at all levels more informed), suggesting that it’s possible to make the most of this opportunity in sustainability.
- Our experience in working with companies in different industries on sustainability aligns with the survey findings that different industries use different levers (growth, return on capital, and risk management) to create significant value. There’s no single way to create value from sustainability, so knowing where the biggest opportunities for value creation are in an industry—and where the risks and barriers lie—can serve as a guide for developing sustainability strategies.
- Coupled with the shift in reasons for pursuing sustainability, from reputation management to operational improvements and new growth opportunities, the overall high degree of integration seems to indicate that companies have become more businesslike about their sustainability agenda. Most companies, however, are still struggling to factor sustainability into the “hard” areas of their business, such as supply chain and the budget, so there is still a lot of potential to drive further integration and increased value creation. Where leaders and all others diverge most is around KPIs, organizational structure, and leadership engagement; these may be high-potential areas for companies striving to become sustainability leaders.
Putting
it into practice
Companies
should integrate environmental, social, and governance issues into their
business model—and act on them.
Sheila
Bonini and Stephan Görner
Sustainability
has long been on the agenda at many companies, but for decades their
environmental, social, and governance activities have been disconnected from
core strategy. Most still take a fragmented, reactive approach—launching ad hoc
initiatives to enhance their “green” credentials, to comply with regulations,
or to deal with emergencies—rather than treating sustainability as an issue
with a direct impact on business results.1
That’s
no longer enough. Material risks not only to a company’s reputation but also to
the bottom line come from many, often unpredictable directions in an era of
constrained resources and tighter regulatory requirements, as well as growing
demand for sustainable products and services, good corporate governance, and
social responsibility. Where such challenges arise, opportunities also lie:
McKinsey estimates that the clean-tech product market, for example, will reach
$1.6 trillion by 2020, up from $670 billion in 2010. The World Resources
Institute estimates that people at the bottom of the income pyramid, who earn
less than $3,000 a year, embody a global market of more than $5 trillion.2
Our
research finds that a handful of companies are capturing significant value by
systematically pursuing the opportunities sustainability offers. We believe the
trend is clear: more businesses will have to take a long-term strategic view of
sustainability and build it into the key value creation levers that drive
returns on capital, growth, and risk management (Exhibit 7), as well as the key
organizational elements that support the levers. Each company’s path to
capturing value from sustainability will be unique, but these underlying
elements can serve as a universal point from which to get started.
Approaching
sustainability
Our
survey produced insights into the specific practices of a small group of
companies that treat sustainability holistically. At all of them, it is a
top-tier item on the CEO’s agenda, a formal program is in place to address it,
and executives embed it in business practices and manage it actively. Much higher
shares of respondents at these leading companies report that they are pursuing
each kind of value-creating activity related to sustainability and integrating
the organizational elements—mission and values, systems and processes, internal
and external leadership, and organizational design—that support such
initiatives.
The
leading companies from our survey can thus serve as a model for others. Make no
mistake, however: capturing sustainability’s full value potential is
complicated. In essence, a company must first determine its baseline
performance on sustainability issues and then decide on a portfolio of
initiatives to create value in those areas. But while many companies understand
the impact of their own operations on issues from carbon emissions to human
rights, they often have little or no understanding of the impact of the entire
value chain.3 Moreover, most companies do not actively
seek opportunities to invest in any area of sustainability4 and therefore miss potential growth
opportunities.
Opportunities
to create or preserve the most value vary greatly among industries (Exhibit 8).
An extractive-services company,5 for example, could significantly reduce
its costs through better management of energy and water. A retail company could
reduce its resource intensity and costs by revamping its supply chain, since
the biggest environmental impact within that sector can often be traced to raw
materials, such as the agricultural products used in food or apparel. An energy
company may have more opportunities than companies in other industries to
create value through new products—for example, by commercializing investments
in smart grids.
Creating
value
Integrating
sustainability into strategic initiatives is especially important because these
issues play out over the long term. It’s easier for companies where they are
core concerns to understand trends and make strategic bets in advance of
consumer preferences, stakeholder pressure, or regulation. GE, for example,
placed early bets on climate change: in 2004, before Al Gore and Hurricane
Katrina made this a top-of-mind issue, the company resolved to double its
research investments and sales in clean technology. It also promised to “green”
its own operations. As a result, GE’s Ecomagination division has been a
tremendous growth engine, with product sales reaching $18 billion in 2009.
Other companies too have found instructive ways to build sustainability into
drivers of value.
Returns
on capital
Most
companies creating value through sustainability look first to improving returns
on capital, which often means reducing operating costs through improved
natural-resource management (such as energy use and waste). Dow Chemical, for
example, reported that it invested less than $2 billion since 1994 to improve
its resource efficiency. To date the company has saved more than $9.8 billion
from reduced energy consumption and water waste in its manufacturing processes,
even as it continues to develop innovations. In 1996, through a separate
initiative, Dow also created a set of goals for environmental, health, and
safety issues, and it has ensured their integration into the company’s
processes by tracking progress with clear metrics. As a result Dow, with a 20
percent reduction in absolute greenhouse gas emissions, has gone well beyond
Kyoto Protocol6 targets.7
Companies
are also driving down costs by systematically managing their value chains.
Wal-Mart, for example, expects to generate $12 billion in global supply chain
savings by 2013 through a packaging “scorecard” that could reduce packaging
across the company’s global supply chain by 5 percent from 2006 levels.
Moreover, companies can add value by improving employee retention or motivation
through sustainability activities or by raising prices or achieving higher
market share with new or existing sustainable products. Whole Foods Market, for
instance, raised its sales by 13 percent a year from 2005 to 2009, in an
economy experiencing single-digit growth.
Growth
Companies
that rigorously pursue sustainability also regularly revisit their business
portfolios to determine the potential impact of trends (such as existing or
potential climate change regulations) that could lead to new growth
opportunities. Waste Management, for instance, reinvented itself as a provider
of integrated environmental offerings by adding waste reduction and
waste-to-energy solutions to its services. Companies also screen rigorously for
unmet needs created by sustainability trends in line with their strategies and
identify potential customer segments. ArcelorMittal, for example, embedded sustainability
in its organizational design through a department for scientific analyses of
the life cycles of steel products. The department creates offerings that
minimize steel’s negative environmental impacts—one result of the company’s
investment in innovative solutions. GlaxoSmithKline is looking not only to
philanthropy but also to its business model in addressing diseases in
less-developed markets. By adopting a range of flexible pricing models for
patented medicines and vaccines so that they’re affordable for customers in
those countries—yet still profitable—the company hopes to garner a significant
share of sales in potential new markets.
Risk
management
Better
management of risks that arise from sustainability issues begins with detecting
key risks of operational disruptions from climate change, resource scarcity, or
community issues (such as boycotts or delays in getting permits for
manufacturing). Faced with potential supply constraints, Nestlé, for example,
launched a plan in 2009 that coordinates activities to promote sustainable
cocoa: producing 12 million stronger and more productive plants over the next
ten years, teaching local farmers efficient and sustainable methods, purchasing
beans from farms that use sustainable practices, and working with organizations
to help tackle issues like child labor and poor access to health care and
education. The mining giant BHP Billiton managed its exposure to emerging
regulations by systematically reducing its emissions.
The
choice for companies today is not if, but how, they should manage their
sustainability activities. Companies can choose to see this agenda as a
necessary evil—a matter of compliance or a risk to be managed while they get on
with the business of business—or they can think of it as a novel way to open up
new business opportunities while creating value for society.
About
the authors
Sheila
Bonini is a consultant in McKinsey’s Silicon Valley office; Stephan
Görner, collaborator with Bonini on “Putting it into practice,” is a
director in the Sydney office.
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