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Sustainability­guide

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ESG guide and the learning journey on sustainability

It may be difficult to know where to start incorporating sustainability into the daily operations of the business.

In partnership with Digital Norway, DNB has developed a learning journey that provides fundamental competence in sustainability – and is the complete guide you need to work effectively on sustainability, digitalisation and business development in your business.

Sign up for your learning journey (in Norwegian only)

Rasmus explains why sustainability is important to your business

(01:19, in Norwegian only)

The sustainability guide – five steps to a sustainable business strategy

To make it easier to get started, we have produced a guide that takes you through five different steps you should think about. The steps are based on recognised methods used by businesses and consultancies around the world.

1. Identify ESG challenges and opportunities

The first step is to understand what challenges are relevant to you and your business: What environmental and social themes are relevant to your business?

  • Does your business have any negative impact on the local environment, biodiversity or access to scarce resources? Conduct research to discover the challenges in your industry.

2. Carry out a stakeholder and materiality analysis

The stakeholder analysis identifies the company’s key stakeholders, which sustainability issues they are concerned with and which expectations and reporting requirements they have for the company.

  • The stakeholder analysis

    Who are the company’s most important premise setters and what are their concerns? Owners, lenders, authorities, local communities, employees, trade unions, customers and suppliers are examples of parties that you influence and/or are affected by. Defining who has the greatest influence and/or is the company’s most important target group is what we call a «interest analysis».

  • Materiality analysis

    Materiality analysis is a method for identifying which measures and issues you should prioritise working on (e.g. documenting), based on the requirements and expectations of different stakeholders and what constitutes a significant opportunity or risk for you.

    It’s also a good idea to include an assessment of which regulations and legal requirements will apply to your industry in the years to come.

3. Make a plan and set goals

Well defined and specific goals are important to give direction to the daily work being performed.

  • Start by describing the vision of the company. A vision describes your purpose and what position you want to achieve. Time-bound goals describe how to get there, and KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) show if you’re on the right path.

  • Choose goals that are relevant to the business. Quality and consistency in the underlying data is important so you can measure improvements and compare results against other operators in the same industry.

  • Remember that there may also be factors that you are able to influence. This is important in order to secure commitment to and ownership of the goals.

4. Incorporate the sustainability goals into the company’s business strategy

  • When you have defined which sustainability goals are relevant and possible to impact, the next step is to incorporate goals and KPIs from stage three in the company’s business plan. Examples of goal setting may be better gender balance and diversity, a stronger safety culture with fewer serious incidents or reduced absences due to illness. If your company produces emissions into the air or water, or significant waste, recycling and reduced emissions may be the most important focus areas.

    We recommend that both social and environmental improvement measures are described in the business strategy. Sustainability is about looking after both people and nature.

5. Measure, evaluate and communicate the results

  • When the strategy has been put in place, it’s important to follow up regularly and assess values and ambitions. It’s possible to make adjustments along the way. It’s also important to clearly communicate goals and results to the outside world, so that what you’re doing also creates value outside of the business.

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Download the free help guide

Download a form which you can use to prepare and implement your new sustainability strategy.

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