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Sustainability in procurement: A seven-step roadmap
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Words by Saleem Rizvi and Chris Taylor
Historically, sustainability in procurement has often been overlooked or only included as a tick-box exercise without achieving real impact. But this is rapidly changing. What actions should senior business and procurement leaders be taking to make tangible sustainability impacts?
“Sustainable procurement” – baking sustainability into all procurement practices and activities – is often no longer an offshoot of procurement, but rather is becoming a new normal. Organizations are under mounting pressure from different directions to show a commitment to sustainability: regulatory changes are upping reporting requirements and stakeholders are looking for strong sustainability credentials. Procurement is uniquely positioned to revolutionize the supply chain, so shifting to a new modus operandi will be vital for organizations to meet their sustainability targets.
So, whether you are looking to introduce sustainable procurement into your organization or check that you are on the right path, this step-by-step guide sets out a roadmap for making sustainability in procurement a reality.
1) Know your objectives
The ESG landscape can feel dauntingly broad, and it can be tempting to try to address everything at once. But quality over quantity is the preferred approach: a focussed strategy to tackle your organizsation’s core issues will be more impactful than addressing a large number of issues only superficially. For instance, an organisation heavily involved in the agricultural industry may prioritise water concerns, while a professional services firm will likely deliver a bigger impact by reducing business travel-related emissions.
So, be sure you’re clear on your company’s commitments and prioritise your actions accordingly. Segment your objectives based on their importance to the business – with the highest priority given to external commitments – and the potential for procurement to drive change.
2) Connect with your organization’s sustainability leads
Too often, sustainability is treated as a vertical, with minimal horizontal integration across different business functions, including procurement. Procurement and sustainability teams have traditionally had different objectives, but breaking down siloed ways of working is a must for aligning the two functions.
Regular face time with sustainability teams allows procurement teams to align with their objectives and understand where they are best placed to provide support. This establishes a bidirectional feedback channel for subject matter expertise and also allows teams to align short-term objectives (like annual procurement pipelines) with longer-term sustainability planning (such as for 2030 and 2050 goals).
3) Empower your procurement team
Although intent is typically in the right place, procurement teams often lack the time, expertise, and incentives to rigorously pursue the sustainability agenda. Their organization’s policies and methodologies tend not to prioritize sustainability in procurement, sidelining this in favor of cost and service considerations.
Senior leaders should provide buy-in and clear objectives, such as a target number of suppliers with science-based targets (validated by the Science-Based Targets initiative, or SBTi), to give Procurement the mandate it needs to focus on sustainability improvements and prioritize their activities accordingly.
Training and upskilling must be at the core of a sustainability transformation; make sure to equip procurement professionals with the skills and knowledge to respond appropriately to a more sustainability-focussed business as usual. Procurement teams need the ability and freedom to think outside the box to pull on less commonly used levers, such as collaborating more closely with existing suppliers and making joint investments to encourage suppliers to push for sustainability improvements.
4) Embed sustainability in Procurement’s BAU activities
Once policies and methodologies are updated to reflect the organization’s sustainability goals, it is key to put these new ways of working into practice. This can take many forms, from incorporating sustainability-focused criteria into RFP evaluation methodologies to gathering supplier-specific data, and much more. It will take some time for procurement teams to shift from a two-dimensional approach of cost and quality to a three-dimensional one incorporating sustainability. That said, if done correctly, sustainable procurement builds on, rather than completely overhauling, existing processes, which means the transition may be smoother than you expect.
5) The key to sustainability in procurement lies in Supplier Relationship Management
Understanding your supply base can be challenging at the best of times; information and data are not always available, supplier fragmentation increases the workload, and supplier engagement often gets deprioritised in favour of more pressing matters.
To help you focus your resources on the right suppliers, segment your suppliers based on a simple two-by-two matrix measuring their strategic importance to your business and their sustainability readiness. Based on this matrix, create a tailored supplier engagement approach per cluster, with greater handholding for key strategic suppliers with low sustainability maturity. Including sustainability in SRM sessions helps your team to better understand your suppliers’ challenges and how your organisation can support them as well as demonstrating the importance of sustainability to your business.
6) Don’t let the data stop you
Procurement teams commonly ask: what if you have incomplete data? While it is important to understand current baselines and how changes will be tracked, don’t let imperfect data hold you back. Teams can run successful projects that are headed in the right direction without being derailed by an inability to measure sustainability improvements perfectly. Kicking off with projects like rolling out electric vehicle fleets (even if you can’t fully quantify the emissions reduction) can serve as compelling sustainability success stories for the business.
As the business matures, the data landscape will typically evolve in tandem. Less granular emissions calculation methodologies, such as spend-based approaches, can be gradually replaced by supplier-specific data or activity data. This enhanced data can then be used for tracking and reporting on KPIs – feeding back into the planning process – and teams will more quickly be able to identify their burning platforms