A HoT Job: Why Corporates Need a Head of Traceability
Planet Tracker
Planet Tracker is a non-profit financial think tank aligning financial markets with a sustainable future.
There is a new acronym in town and it’s HoT.
If you are looking for a job where compensation can be linked to your impact, consider becoming Head of Traceability (HoT), especially at a nature-dependent company. Here is why:
Planet Tracker did not find enough HoT jobs
We have searched for all companies which have appointed a Head of Traceability (or equivalent title) on LinkedIn and performed a simple search on 谷歌 too. Our results are incomplete since “only” 25-30% of the global workforce is on LinkedIn, the search was made in English only, and we might have omitted synonyms/equivalent titles. Still, we believe the results are noteworthy.
We found only 19 companies with a Head of Traceability (named at the end of the article) – excluding companies whose business is to sell traceability solutions and government agencies. By comparison, there are at least 10,000 Heads of Sustainability on LinkedIn.
One of the possible reasons why HoTs are a rare species could be that it exposes management to more searching questions from financial institutions. Access to a HoT, which has extensive reach and understanding of a company’s operations, could provide investors and lenders with significant insights. They should be very much in demand by the financial markets. Presently, the information asymmetry between management teams and their stakeholders is skewed in favour of the former. Please see ‘Implementing Traceability; Seeing Through Excuses’.
Companies with a HoT are engaged in a variety of sectors exposed to recognisable sustainability challenges – e.g. palm oil, textiles, tuna, leather, fertiliser, waste management. They are headquartered in 16 different countries on all continents, except South America. Three quarters of them operate in the food or textile industries. The absence of companies engaged in plastic production or meat production is noteworthy.
Whilst large textiles companies such as H&M Group and Inditex集团 have a Head of Traceability, many large food companies typically do not. This is concerning since a lack of oversight on traceability within a company is likely to elevate their risk profile and impede their success.
Achieving traceability in food systems is a key requirement that could increase overall food system profits by USD 356 billion or more and is key to transforming this global system. Please see the Financial Markets Roadmap for Transforming the Global Food System. Planet Tracker’s work on the seafood system alone suggested that companies that implemented fully traceable supply chains could see profits increase by 60%. Please see ‘How to Trace USD 600 billion’.
In many cases, the companies in our sample have a Head of Traceability with an IT background: traceability is viewed as a digitalisation issue
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Why HoTs will be hot
Presently, there are not many Heads of Traceability in place - if we have missed one at your company, please get in touch – but we believe this will change, for a number of reasons listed here, the most important being regulation.
Already the key expected outcome for traceability is compliance with regulation
For this reason, the urgent implementation of traceability systems
What are your thoughts? Would you apply for a Head of Traceability role?
List of companies with a Head of Traceability
See the full article with graphics and references on our website.
Note: this blog was inspired by this article in Vogue Business . Credit goes to Bella Webb for raising awareness on the need for Heads of Traceability.
Planet Tracker is a non-profit financial think tank producing analytics and reports to align capital markets with planetary boundaries. Our mission is to create significant and irreversible transformation of global financial activities by 2030.