Exploring the Intersections of ESG and HR
Laura Cococcia
Managing Director, Communications at Council Advisors | Board Member | Fulbright Specialist | Former GE, Google, American Express
When stakeholders discuss the growing efforts by companies to integrate environmental, social and governance (ESG) commitments into their purpose and strategy, images of the planet typically come first to mind.?While that’s well deserved—and climate change deserves much of the credit for driving ESG-related trends—just as central to ESG is ensuring that impacts to people are assessed and improved as a company does business.?
ESG topics and HR strategies often intersect around employee engagement. According to the 2022 Edelman Trust Barometer, 60% of the 36,000+ global respondents said they choose a place to work based on their beliefs and values. Topics like culture, climate change, business ethics, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) matter to employees and prospective candidates alike.
In this way, the CHRO and the HR function have an increasingly important role to play. HR has always been at the core of the employee experience, corporate social responsibility (CSR), and governance, owning practices and process across a broad range of topics within the “S” of ESG and the broader ESG ecosystem. GE’s recently released 2021 Sustainability Report— “Building a World that Works for Tomorrow”—highlights the important role HR plays in the company’s ESG efforts through its coverage of a range of topics.?Thinking ahead, as the interest in ESG topics gain momentum among stakeholders, HR is positioned to help organizations take stronger steps to not only meet, but to strategically advance ESG goals.
More specifically, HR leaders have an opportunity to accelerate constructive impact across aspects of the ESG topic spectrum.?While certainly not an exhaustive list, a few examples include:
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The strategic and operational intersections between HR and ESG-related topics are strengthening and gaining more attention – from DE&I to pay policies to capability development, and more.?As people-related priorities become more prominent in the ESG space, HR leaders will continue to play a key role not just managing the activities to drive change, but in building sustainable cultures and teams to achieve stronger performance.??
Founder at Incandescent
2 年To add one further element to the mix of the great piece you've shared here Laura Cococcia advancing a company's ESG agenda generally requires building new networks to work laterally inside an enterprise, as well as new networks externally. HR plays an important role in using vehicles like leadership development, talent pool identification, deployment of tools like organizational network analysis, etc. that are important to establishing the internal and external connective tissue without which an ESG strategy will likely never take lift.
Group Vice President; Chief Sustainability Officer; Global Head of Engagement, Government Affairs, and Policy at GE Vernova | Servant Leader
2 年Laura, thanks for your thought leadership on the important growing nexus between ESG and Human Resources. Employees are GE's top stakeholders, and you've synthesized so well how ESG works to promote employees as a critical part of our mission to improve our impacts to people, communities, and the planet.