Companies are increasingly motivated by the responsibility they have to stakeholders (including customers and the wider community) and not just shareholders. As a result, they are widening their focus from primarily financial objectives to include social ones such as human rights, diversity and inclusion, health and safety, and community impact.
Key Highlights
- Certifications such as B Corp, donation commitments such as the 1% Pledge, and lists such as the Corporate Human Rights Benchmark (CHRB) and the FTSE Diversity and Inclusion Index provide companies with multiple benchmarks against which they can assess their social impact.
- Companies can no longer do the bare minimum by complying with relevant laws and guidelines regarding social sustainability. They can and will be assessed against their peers by neutral third parties, allowing them to understand their shortcomings and work to improve their practices.
Scope
- This report provides an overview of social sustainability, one of the most important themes for companies across all industries.
- It includes the analyst's comprehensive ESG framework, covering environment, social, and governance factors. This framework can be used to assess a company’s ESG performance, the factors contributing to negative ESG consequences, and mitigating actions that can improve a company’s ESG performance.
- Taking each aspect of social sustainability in turn, this report provides examples of companies that are leading by example, and companies that have room to improve in human rights, diversity and inclusion, health and safety, and community impact.
Reasons to Buy
- Sustainability used to be just about saving the planet. Today, it has morphed into an umbrella term for environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues.
- Adopting a holistic approach that encompasses all environmental, social, and governance issues can help company leaders ensure all aspects of sustainability are covered in their ESG strategy. In 2024, companies are under pressure to be more transparent about their ESG credentials. The analyst designed its ESG framework to help companies build trust with society and set them on a path toward a sustainable future.
- This report will help you understand what social sustainability is, why it is important, and what your business can do to become more socially sustainable.
Table of Contents
- Executive Summary
- The analyst's ESG Framework
- Why Companies Must Invest in Social Sustainability
- The Four Main Factors Within Social Sustainability
- Timeline
- Glossary
- Further Reading
- Thematic Research Methodology
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- 15% Pledge
- Accenture
- ACCO Brands
- Amazon
- Apple
- BAE Systems (Maritime Services)
- Balenciaga
- BBC
- Ben & Jerry's
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Boohoo
- Channel 4
- ClientEarth
- Collab Capital
- Crisis
- Dollar General
- Dow Jones
- eBay
- FedEx
- FIFA
- Game of Our Lives
- GSK
- Harlem Capital
- HPE
- Maggie's
- Masbosques
- Mastercard
- Microsoft
- Newmont
- Nordstrom
- NTUC LearningHub
- Patagonia
- Progressive
- Puma
- Repsol
- Ruby Canyon Environmental
- Saudi Aramco
- Sephora
- Shein
- Shell
- SkillsFuture
- Tesla
- The Body Shop
- Unilever
- UPS
- VamosVentures
- Zara