It’s not an easy time to be responsible for a company’s Environmental, Social, and
Governance (ESG) initiatives. The world is changing around us quickly,, driven by ever-
present climate change, ethical consumerism, and expectations of corporate transparency.
The ESG benchmark for businesses is only getting higher.
Some organizations assume they are meeting it, but this is based on internal perceptions of
voluntary standards. Before long, there will be nowhere to hide. The introduction of
mandatory reporting requirements — such as the CSRD (Corporate Sustainability Reporting
Directive) — increase pressure to comply with regulations, deliver on commitments made, and
report tangible impact. ESG compliance has never been more complex.
Now let’s be clear — ESG officers are in their roles because they want to make a difference.
But there is increasing scrutiny from regulators and wider society around how organizations
report this impact. As we hear from our customers, this means they are spending more time
focusing on data and compliance, both inside their own businesses or across the supply
chain.
This shift has prompted a fundamental rethink of how ESG data is managed. At the same
time, we are seeing businesses change their perception of regulatory compliance from a
tick-box exercise to an issue of commercial strategy — a company-wide imperative that can
impact the bottom line. It’s time to streamline the reporting process, so ESG teams can get
back to achieving the impact they set out to makein the first place.
In this context, organizations have a significant task on their hands: identify the right data
from disparate sources, structured or unstructured, and ensure it is as accurate and
accessible as possible for internal and external stakeholders. This process can seem
daunting, particularly for those creating an ESG reporting framework from scratch. But it
doesn’t have to be. Manually collecting vast volumes of data is yesterday’s problem — with AI
at the center of this evolution. Rather than isolating ESG from other business initiatives,
considering as a pillar of digital transformation allows those responsible to benefit from some
of the advanced tools used for other types of reporting and reduces the compliance burden.
Looking beyond regulatory compliance, though, the opportunity is much greater. If
traditional ESG reporting has been a backwards-looking process, the power of AI and
predictive data techniques allows progressive organizations to evaluate information in real time. This enables proactive decisions to save money, time, and the planet. Reporting is
getting an image makeover, from unavoidable admin to something at the heart of company
strategy.
We find ourselves at a tipping point where organizations have a choice: treat ESG as a
burden to be alleviated as quickly as possible, or take steps to embed it in the fabric of the
business to drive meaningful change.