ESG reporting is aimed at catering to a diverse range of stakeholders and presents an emerging frontier for many businesses. This complex endeavor has paved the way for a variety of new roles and responsibilities within organizations since the adoption of ESG as table stakes has accelerated over the past several years. However, this shift isn‘t merely about adding new job titles; it also entails the development of fresh processes and standards, necessitating a new operational paradigm that integrates ESG considerations into many facets of a company and its business.
From supply chain management to communication, human resources, and beyond, ESG reporting and integration necessitates a systemic and holistic approach. As companies strive to keep pace with the evolving stakeholder preferences and regulatory landscapes — both at home and abroad — integrating ESG reporting has undoubtedly presented challenges and costs. However, these hurdles represent transformative opportunities, opening avenues for enhanced efficiency, stakeholder engagement, and long-term sustainable growth. In this light, the integration of ESG reporting is not just about overcoming challenges, but about harnessing them to drive positive change and corporate resilience. Tactical considerations include:
Of course, the costs associated with these measures varies across market caps and sectors, along with the issuer’s commitment to measure and manage risks and opportunities identified through the materiality assessment process. While these costs and challenges can seem overwhelming and/or unnecessary, they are investments that can enable the future sustainability and success of the business.
Corbin’s View: These measures are not merely a cost of doing business, but an integral part of driving business growth and resilience. Our latest research shows:
Below, we have outlined how issuers are optimizing their ESG processes and communications today to accelerate their sustainability function in lieu of dynamic investor expectations.
As a reminder, to evaluate the emerging perspectives from both institutional investors and corporate issuers, we surveyed 155 buy-side professionals and 103 IR and C-suite executives globally from March 14 – May 17, 2023, across more than 30 focus areas relating to ESG. In aggregate, buy-side participants represent equity assets under management of ~$10.3T.
Companies have come a long way since we first started reporting on the ESG megatrend over a decade ago. As stakeholder interests have shifted and flowed, so too have the ways corporate issuers are addressing ESG measures.
While most annual ESG budgets remain unspecified, three-quarters of corporate issuers expect ESG budgets to expand in the coming years, and none expect levels to decrease. Also, increases in internal ESG practices reflect growing investment and large buy-in at the executive and board levels, with issuers largely signaling an increase in the number of ESG groups and individuals at their companies versus the 2021 Study. Notably, issuers reporting to have an Internal ESG Committee rose from 64% in 2021 to 72%, and DEI Leaders grew an impressive 16 percentage points to reflect more than half of all surveyed issuers.
Not surprisingly, the largest companies have cultivated some level of representation across most ESG-related functions, but they share similar emphasis with smaller companies in the areas of establishing an Internal ESG Committee, ensuring there is appropriate Board Oversight within existing committee structures, and appointing a DEI Leader.
In our 2021 ESG Survey, issuers largely reported that the IR Leader maintained chief responsibility of ESG efforts. This makes sense from a historical perspective, as issuers have largely relied on IR to manage all matters stemming from the investor community, especially those that don’t clearly fit within current operations.
However, as the integration of ESG considerations has continued to materialize and formalize, introducing additional layers of complexity and dynamism at every turn, companies are more and treating ESG as its own focus, resulting in the proliferation of the Head of Sustainability role. Indeed, our research shows Sustainability leads have supplanted IR in overseeing ESG, while there has also been a notable decrease in Corporate Communication’s oversight.
When breaking respondents down by market cap, larger-cap companies with multifaceted, global ESG considerations tend to lean on a defined Head of Sustainability; small-caps typically resort to Legal; and mid-caps tend to straddle the use of both IR and Heads of Sustainability. However, in our experience, all three are usually involved in key decision-making, as ESG matters often require unique perspectives from each of these spheres of expertise.
Oversight and responsibilities aren’t the only areas of change. The majority of corporate issuers indicate that Board composition is also shifting, with roughly 70% of participants asserting the director slate has become more diverse across gender, ethnic, racial, and/or skills-based dimensions over the past 12 months, demonstrating broad-based increases from our 2021 Survey.
Meanwhile, investor expectations are changing, too. While a majority, 57%, would appreciate some level of engagement with the board, 72% of corporate issuers assert they rarely or never provide this. Those who do engage often interact during proxy season, in line with investor preferences for board members to be proactive when addressing governance concerns.
Human Capital Management (HCM) has emerged as an influential component in the ESG landscape. As we have reported in our prior pieces, nearly half, 49%, of corporate issuers point to retaining talent as an explicit motivation to incorporate ESG into the company strategy.
The key areas of focus in HCM typically include:
By way of simple illustration, the number of companies referencing “employees” in their public transcripts has skyrocketed coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since 2020, mentions have hovered well above the 10-year average, with 2023 on track to clock in another year of roughly 5,000 mentions.
The surge in HCM focus comes amidst labor tightness, as well as clear preferences among Gen Z and Millennial workers (who constitute roughly half of the U.S. workforce according to Gallup) to work for ethical and diverse organizations that prioritize employee wellbeing.
Echoing these dynamics, U.S. total non-farm quit levels shot to new highs in 2022 and remain elevated as a result of the well-publicized “Great Resignation”. This demonstrates the criticality of strong HCM practices in not only attracting but also retaining talent in today‘s competitive and dynamic labor market.
And it’s not just corporate issuers and employees. From an investor perspective, more than 80% assert talent disclosures are important to their investment decisions. Specifically, investors home in on Employee Turnover, Employee Satisfaction, and Training and Development as leading preferred issuer disclosures.
In sum, robust HCM practices are being increasingly considered as a critical component of corporate strategy. Moreover, the increased attention from investors toward talent disclosure underscores the growing recognition of the direct impact HCM has on long-term value creation.
As issuers strive to meet the rising tide of stakeholder expectations and stay abreast of regulation, corporates are utilizing their evolving ESG functions to help define and accelerate the sustainability opportunity. Indeed, more are communicating specific targets and goals across each measure versus our 2021 Survey.
How ESG is operationalized within an organization can greatly influence its trajectory and success. Furthermore, communicating it effectively not only reflects the organization‘s commitment, but also instills trust in the accuracy of the disclosed information.
Broadly speaking, we see three levels of organizational structure:
Whether it‘s achieving net zero carbon emissions, enhancing Board diversity, or improving worker safety, these structures and goals serve as clear markers of an organization‘s commitment to sustainable and responsible operation.
Below, we have consolidated the most commonly communicated corporate issuer targets throughout our 2023 Survey across environmental, social, and governance factors.
More than two-thirds of issuers in our 2023 Survey reported they have communicated environmental targets, nearly all of which relating to carbon emissions disclosure and goals. Of those goals, just over half, 51%, have communicated a Net Zero commitment, with most aiming to accomplish by 2050.
Nearly 60% have communicated public social targets, the majority of which relate to diversity. Continuing, more than half, 52%, have also committed to employee relations/HCM targets, most commonly including safety initiatives such as total recordable incident rate (TRIR) reductions.
Lastly, just over one-third of issuers have communicated governance targets, mostly surrounding Board composition and executive compensation. Regarding the latter, our Survey of investors identifies Total Shareholder Return (TSR) and Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) / Capital Employed (ROCE) as most aligned with shareholder interests.
As stakeholder interests converge, more companies are turning to their established ESG programs to enhance their sustainability opportunity. Our Survey shows corporates have made great strides in responding to the ESG megatrend, and responses point to an overall increase in maturation as more companies implement internal structures and processes aimed at formalizing goal setting, tracking, measurement, and communication.
We hope you’ve found our four-part 2023 Global ESG Survey series insightful, thought-provoking, and actionable. As researchers with an insatiable curiosity, we learned a lot ourselves about the dynamic and maturing ESG landscape and will continue to monitor and cover trends to keep you, our clients, up to date and at the cutting edge.
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Corbin Advisors is a strategic consultancy accelerating value realization globally. We engage deeply with our clients to assess, architect, activate, and accelerate value realization, delivering research-based insights and execution excellence through a cultivated and caring team of experts with deep sector and situational experience, a best practice approach, and an outperformance mindset.
Our growing repository of proprietary, research-based insights on the rapidly developing ESG landscape has fueled our thought leadership on this important topic. We began building our ESG knowledge base in 2010, surveying institutional investors globally on the topic, so we can provide our clients with expert experience today.