Showing posts with label gap inc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gap inc. Show all posts

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Five reasons you will be using GRI’s new G4 guidelines any time soon


Anyone who knows me knows that I just have to respond to a post entitled "Five reasons you won’t be using GRI’s new G4 guidelines any time soon" by Bob Beer of Nowack-Beer Consulting which appeared on Toby Webb's Smarter Business Blog. In fact, I was even nudged to respond by a client :-), so how can I not?
 
In his post, Bob Beer  makes the point: "While well-intentioned, GRI’s new G4 reporting requirements are a serious impediment to the widespread and rapid adoption of this protocol." The key examples of aforesaid impediments cited by Bob are: the need to revamp processes to assess materiality, more time, effort and cost, "thorny" content issues such as transparency, materiality and stakeholder engagement, lack of report quality assurance and "Lack of a Mandate: Use of the GRI protocol is voluntary and there are no formal requirements or pressure to use GRI. (CDP, by contrast, has 700+ signatory institutional investors who apply formal pressure for disclosure.)".

Well, Bob, got news for you. Not gonna happen. G4 reporting is a train that's bolted. Oops, shouldn't that be a horse? Well, whatever it is, it's still bolting. And it ain't gonna stop. I already have three G4 reports in the (very) final stages of preparation for global clients, and all my reporting clients who are starting their 2013 reporting cycle around now have confirmed their will move to G4. In the G4 Master Class I delivered in London last month, which was attended by representatives of some of the largest and most respected reporting companies from a range of sectors including fashion, retail, energy, media, chemicals and more, the interest in G4 was tangible. In the G4 training (Le Master Class) I presented at last week in Paris, organized by Institut RSE, the leading mover and shaker in French sustainability circles, an amazing selection of prominent French reporting companies were avidly attentive to the new G4 ins-and-outs, and were visibly computing their own transition as they developed their knowledge of how G4 can challenge them and help them move forward as sustainable and transparent companies. Our G4-Ready Expert Analysis, a 20+ page review of your current G3 report and assessment of the requirements for transition to G4 with recommendations, has become a popular service and has my analysts at Beyond Business going rather cross-eyed comparing disclosures and indicators. Wherever I engage, I am seeing interest in G4 and intent to use the new guidelines in the next reporting cycle.

And by the way, Bob Beer says: "Developing a G4 report will require more time and effort than a G3.1 report and, as a result, will cost more to prepare." I find there is absolutely no basis for this claim. We are not charging our clients any more for producing a G4 report, and I have not noticed a significant additional time factor in the G4 report preparation in the work we have been doing with clients to date. Yes, there needs to be some addition of effort around process and engagement, but this is offset by reduced attention to many irrelevant reporting requirements in G3.

Already, within six months of the G4 launch, I can count 12 G4 CORE or G4-referenced reports that have been published. 

The City of Warsaw
Thomas Properties Group 2012
Singapore Exchange Annual Report 2012 2013
Environment Park s.p.a 2012
Lavola Sustainability Report 2012
Grupo Sancor Seguros 2012-2013
GAP Inc. 2011-2012
Wesst 2012 Integrated Report
Ingecal Sustainability Report 2012
Architectural Services Department Hong Kong 2013
World Bank Sustainability Review 2013
Mireco Mine Reclamation Company Korea 2012 Report

There may be more that I am not yet aware of. I know there are several more on the way. Here's one: Matthew Swibel Director of Corporate Sustainability at Lockheed Martin noted in response to aforementioned post:  "At Lockheed Martin, we intend to apply the G4 framework in our next report. Our analysis anticipates doing so will make the process more efficient and the disclosure more relevant to our core issues."

Of course, G4 is not perfect, and those who have already started to use it, as I have, find that there are real challenges in using the framework as it is intended. I will talk more about these challenges in future posts, now that I am just catching my breath after a VERY intensive reporting season and have gained much first-hand experience in writing G4 reports. However, there is no doubt in my mind that G4 is a major improvement on G3, and it does require a different reporting mindset. But I find the points raised in the post by Bob Beer to be poorly considered, poorly presented and poorly concluded. 

The five reasons you WILL be considering reporting G4 for your next report are as follows:

You want to show leadership, responsiveness and agility in your reporting: Change is not easy for many and often impossible for some. It's easy to continue to do what you have always done. Early adoption of the G4 guidelines shows that your company is leading the way as a stakeholder-responsive, agile and forward-thinking player in sustainability. The G4 guidelines didn't spring up from thin air. They were the result of a multi-year, multi-stakeholder, multi-format engagement process and, despite the complexities of reaching consensus among such a wide range of diverse interests, GRI managed to deliver a product which is the result of what a representative selection of most stakeholders believe to be most important in sustainability reporting. Early adoption makes an important statement about your company's capacity to listen to stakeholders, navigate the winds of change and demonstrate adaptability and agility. 

You welcome the opportunity to focus your reporting on the most important things: The G3 framework actually forced companies who wanted to demonstrate transparency to report on a whole bunch of stuff which was irrelevant to their companies and fill their A level reports with a string of inconsequential statements, such as how biodiversity is not material to our organization. G4 cuts through the verbiage and goes right to what's most important in terms of the impacts your organization has on society and the environment. In my experience, this creates a different sort of dialogue within the company, and provides a new legitimacy for sustainability managers to demand greater process and reflection in the development of the Sustainability Report. Internal and external stakeholder engagement is now a necessity in G4 reporting while it was lip-service in G3 reporting. My experience is that companies actually welcome this as a refreshing and invigorating approach to reporting, and see opportunity in the materiality focus, both in terms of guiding and managing their own internal sustainability strategy and practice and also in terms of external communication. To say, as Bob Beer does, that "more detailed analysis and reporting on material issues could alarm investors and stakeholders, causing negative impacts on a business" is, in my view, a complete reversal of the truth. It's precisely that companies have NOT done this in the past that investors have been alarmed and stakeholders have been mistrustful.

Your competitors are doing it or are about to do it: You will soon realize that G3 is a thing of the past. My prediction is that over 50% of the GRI based reports published in 2014 will be G4 CORE or G4 referenced, well before the official expiry date of G3 at end 2015. As you look around at what your peers are doing, you really won't want to be left behind using an anachronistic reporting framework that everyone has forgotten. 

You appreciate the flexibility of the G4 guidelines: The G4 guidelines offer companies the opportunity to  mold the G4 framework around what you really want your stakeholders to know while meeting the information needs that they have requested on the issues which matter most to them. At CORE level, the degree of disclosure is manageable, given that companies can decide where to draw the line in terms of MOST material issues. You can decide that your report will cover in detail the top 5 issues, the top 10 or the top 25, and then you can align your disclosures with that. No-one says you have to report on every single sustainability topic or activity that you have ever done. Gone are the days of "we donated $5000 to a local NGO last week, let's put that in the report" and "we changed the light bulbs in the CEO's office to T5, let's put that in the report". Now it's about: "these are our most material impacts and let's talk about those in depth in the report - the rest is just chit-chat". A G4 report can tell a story just as well as any other type of report. You can use the G4 Content Index to disclose specific data which you may prefer not to disrupt your narrative. Aside from the General Disclosures which are required for all G4 in accordance reports, some of which are a little challenging (and not so relevant), even at CORE level, the G4 guidelines are all about do-it-yourself relevant transparency enabling flexibility and adaptability to each organization's needs. Why continue to be constrained by the old rules when you can break free with the new ones?

You want more people to use your report: A G4 report done well should be far more appealing and useful to your stakeholders than a G3 report, no matter how well the G3 report is written and constructed. The worst thing that can happen to a Sustainability Report is that none uses it. A G4 report is far more usable because it is more focused and more relevant to the most important sustainability issues.

Finally, I will round off with a quote from my colleague, the sustainability strategy expert, Joss Tantram, who also responded to the blog post by Bob Beer by saying, among other things: "A materiality centred approach is a step towards translating sustainability into the language and dimensions that have resonance for economics and capitalism."




elaine cohen, CSR consultant, winning (CRRA'12) Sustainability Reporter, HR Professional, Ice Cream Addict. Author of Understanding G4: the Concise guide to Next Generation Sustainability Reporting  AND  Sustainability Reporting for SMEs: Competitive Advantage Through Transparency AND CSR for HR: A necessary partnership for advancing responsible business practices . Contact me via www.twitter.com/elainecohen   or via my business website www.b-yond.biz   (Beyond Business Ltd, an inspired CSR consulting and Sustainability Reporting firm

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Gap Inc., G4 and the Pink Panther

And here it is. The new Sustainability Report 2011-2012 from Gap Inc.  This report has been written with reference to the spanking new G4 guidelines, and contains a G4 Index, although no "In Accordance" Level has been declared.  The In Accordance level is not so important in the final analysis. What is most important is the way the spirit of G4 is reflected in the structure of the report. As I have may have mentioned somewhere, material issues in a G4 report should jump out at you from the page or the touch-screen. In G4, material issues should be:

accessible
clear
conspicuous
discernible 
distinct
evident
glaring
indisputable
noticeable
  overt
palpable
pronounced
recognizable
self-evident
straightforward
undeniable
unmistakable
visible
barefaced
bright
clear as a bell
conclusive
distinguishable
explicit
exposed
in evidence
lucid
manifest
observable
open
patent
perceivable
perceptible
plain
precise
prominent
public
self-explanatory
standing out
transparent
unconcealed
undisguised
unsubtle

Yes, material issues in G4 should be all of the above.
Ok, so what if I had a little help from thesaurus.com.

The new Gap Inc. report merits our attention for two reasons:

First, it's Gap Inc. -  I have admired both Gap Inc.'s performance and its reporting over the years.

Second, it includes a G4 Content Index. To me, that means it's aspiring to get into the next generation sustainability reporting arena. I think this may also be the first report published by a company anywhere that includes a G4 Content Index.

One of the nice things about Gap's reporting is the sense of authenticity it conveys. The report tells you what's going on, no frills, no politically correct, no hiding behind the label. From the CEO letter which describes the report as "a candid, open assessment of our progress as a company and as a collaborative partner to address the complex issues of operating a global business in a responsible, ethical way" to the complexities of the human rights operating context of outsourced production to the difficulties of achieving environmental efficiencies in 3,000 stores around the world, Gap Inc. tells it like it is.
  
Gap's report takes us through 5 core sections:
  • Company
  • Human Rights
  • Environment
  • Employees
  • Community
In each section, Gap Inc. works systematically through the key issues, providing a good deal of context and background to help us understand the issues, how they affect Gap Inc.'s business, and what Gap is doing about them. Want to know about fire safety in Bangladesh? Gap covers it. Want to know how many kids around the world are forced to work against their free will? Go look at the Gap Inc. 2012 report. Need a data-point on what percent of garment workers are women, globally? Gap Inc. provides. Interested in strikes in the Cambodian garment industry? Get the low-down from the Gap Inc. report. Seek a definition of human trafficking? It's there. In short, a lot of Gap's report is context, which is good and useful. Sometimes it's even more context than report, which is less useful.

Gap Inc.'s performance in key areas has been strong: employee volunteering and corporate community contributions have increased each year since 2008. Total carbon emissions have decreased each year for the past three years. So has U.S. energy consumption. The percentage of red-rated factories, that is, those which must put in place corrective action after Gap Inc.'s audits, has reduced each year for the past four years. Gap completed 1,148 audits in 2012. Gap has been driving environmental efficiencies through the supply chain through provision of Green Manufacturing Workshops for key vendors. Overall, Gap Inc.'s report attests to ongoing commitment and good performance. The name of Gap Inc. has become synonymous with championing of human rights in the supply chain and this report continues to testify to Gap Inc.'s leadership in this area.

As a report, and as a report which was apparently written in the spirit, if not the letter, of the G4 framework, however, Gap Inc.'s delivery is disappointing this time around. This is a two year report and while one might expect that much has changed, there is inconsistency between reports. For example, two years ago, there was an ECO focus on three core issue areas:


In the 2012 report, water conservation gets a page of narrative, but no data and water conservation is not listed as a material issue. In 2010, seven environmental goals were reported with targets for 2012-2015. In 2012, two of these are reported as completed, one has changed and four have slipped off the map. Instead, one updated and three new goals for 2015-2020 have been developed. Tracking Gap's performance against stated goals in the environmental area needs Rubik-cube like skills.

Similarly, I find a disconnect between goals and narrative and data. In the community goals, for example, Gap Inc. reported on progress of a previously stated goal: "Strive to increase the annual value of employee-driven contributions of time, money and talent to the community", noting this has been achieved. However, a chart shows that total contributions and volunteerism have decreased in the past two years. So, the striving was done and the target was ticked? Who cares about striving?

This apparent disconnect in Gap's presentation of its strategy and performance over time erodes credibility. It would be more interesting to see the overall strategy, with clear multi-year goals, all in one place, for tracking and reporting in a consistent way each year. Even if the Sustainability Report is biennial, this should not be an excuse for  things dropping off the edge in the interim year.

This dissonance continues through to the way in which Gap Inc. describes its materiality process. Transparently, Gap Inc describes the way it selected material issues and the criteria for doing so. Generously, Gap Inc. shows us an empty materiality matrix. For our general education and edification.


This would be fantastic if the issues that Gap Inc. had identified as material were shown in this three-band matrix. The issues are not separately listed, so the reader needs to do some detective work in order to understand what's material and what's not. Frankly, G4 or otherwise, I do wonder about the sense of including all the detail about materiality process and then not actually stating the issues and where they fit. I agree that prioritizing issues within the high, medium and low materiality bands is redundant, but if the work has been done to place issues in one of the three boxes, and deliberately not disclosed, we the readers become more interested in why not, than in what the issues actually are. It diverts our attention from the substantive to the technical aspects of reporting.

However, as I usually take a detective-type approach when reviewing reports (just call me Pink Panther) I understand that the Gap Inc. report content list serves as the material issues list, and the issues for which material Aspects are included in the G4 Content Index are the ones that fall into the high and/or medium materiality box. Well, that's how I understand it anyway. Crystal clear, right? Working on this premise, I see that Gap Inc. has identified 15 material Aspects (out of a possible 46) and reported on 21 indicators out of a possible 91 indicators.



 The Material Aspects are:
 

 
Water conservation, as mentioned above, earns a place in the report content list and some narrative, but not identification as a highly material Aspect. Given the amount of water used in cotton-production, and what Gap Inc. refers to as freshwater risk in the report narrative, I find it surprising that water did not merit inclusion as one of the top material issues.

The G4 Content Index itself is online, and is nicely hyperlinked to different parts of the online report. However, the Index is not quite what it is supposed to be.  For example, several disclosures refer to Gap Inc.'s annual reports for 2011 and 2012, or other documents, providing a general link to the webpages of these documents. This is not the GRI way.

G4 guidelines state quite specifically (Principles Manual, page 13) (my highlights):

"Information related to Standard Disclosures required by the ‘in accordance’ options may already be included in other reports prepared by the organization, such as its annual report to shareholders or other regulatory or voluntary reports. In these circumstances, the organization may elect to not repeat those disclosures in its sustainability report and instead add a reference to where the relevant information can be found. This presentation is acceptable as long as the reference is specific (for example, a general reference to the annual report to shareholders would not be acceptable, unless it includes the name of the section, table, etc.) and the information is publicly available and readily accessible. This is likely the case when the sustainability report is presented in electronic or web based format and links are provided to other electronic or web based reports."

There are some other examples of where the Content Index doesn't quite provide a route to an actual relevant disclosure as required by the corresponding reporting indicator.

Any report that proclaims any level of G4 adherence is bound to come under the microscope in the coming year. The G4 promise is focus, clarity, and materiality. It's next generation. It's leadership and reporting best practice. Clearly, the early adopters are going to be scrutinized. For better or for worse, Gap Inc. has put itself in that space and while this report does not claim to be "G4 In Accordance", it does include a G4 Content Index. It's the Index that hooked me.
 
I believe that this report doesn't do full justice to the fabulous work Gap Inc. has done and continues to do in the garment industry. If you asked me who are the best apparel players for sustainability in this sector, Gap Inc. would certainly be one of the top companies I would cite. I think this representative of the reporting challenges we all face. How do we present our sustainability risks and opportunities, and more importantly, impacts, in a clear, complete and balanced way, telling our story so that it reflects our organization's achievements, and remains within the constraints presented by the GRI Reporting framework?

Clearly, it's not that simple. Daniel Fibiger is Senior Manager of Strategy and Performance in Gap Inc.’s Social and Environmental Responsibility Department, and he expresses the challenge well in a post he wrote to introduce Gap Inc.'s 2011-2012 report: "... as the author of the report, the task of trying to summarize or highlight certain aspects of it is an unenviable one. Part of this might have to do with my background. I’ve been with the company for just over two years, and previously worked for several human rights NGOs, where I partnered with major apparel companies to address human rights issues in their supply chains. So when I try to think about what’s important, my answer is: all of it.....I also believe this is a work in progress. My hope is that our next report has more focused goals, provides more comprehensive data-driven insights, and more effectively conveys the impact we are having. If we do those things well, we’ll also be able to make it shorter, which will hopefully lead more people to read it. The work starts now on delivering that."

Gap Inc.'s report may not fit the G4 structure perfectly just yet, but the great progress and authenticity, right up to admission of the challenges of reporting, is evident in Gap's culture, and maybe that  counts for even more than an impeccable G4 Content Index.
 
 
 
elaine cohen, CSR consultant, winning (CRRA'12) Sustainability Reporter, HR Professional, Ice Cream Addict. Author of Understanding G4: The Concise Guide to Next Generation Sustainability Reporting AND Sustainability Reporting for SMEs: Competitive Advantage Through Transparency AND CSR for HR: A necessary partnership for advancing responsible business practices Contact me via www.twitter.com/elainecohen   or via my business website www.b-yond.biz   (Beyond Business Ltd, an inspired CSR consulting and Sustainability Reporting firm)  
 
 

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Santa's 1746th CSR Report

Ho! Ho! Ho! Its the time to rejoice and be merry. Santa has a long tradition of reporting and is about to publish his 1746th CSR Report. (See his 1745th report here). Santa sent me his report for a pre-publication review (a service I offer to all corporate reporters - haha - PLUG!). I couldnt resist sharing with you  Santa's introduction to his 2010 report (with permission, of course!) .

Santa Claus
The CRAP Report 2010
(Corporate Responsibility And Presents Report)

Dear Stakeholders,

It is that time of the year again when the bells jingle, the carols carol, the elves work overtime and the reindeer suffer from torn ligaments. Also, at this time, I aim to publish my assessment of my sustainability impacts during the past year and communicate them transparently to all my billions of stakeholders all over the globe. I have been doing this now for the past 1745 years, and each time I sit down to write a sustainability report, I get that familiar warmth that comes from the knowledge that I am simply a wonderful corporate citizen (and even if I weren't, I wouldnt say).

This year has been a particularly difficult year for Santa.. The effects of the Global Financial Crisis have reduced the disposable income of many who bought lavish gifts for distribution at Xmas, the failure of major global economies such as Iceland have led to decommercialisation of  Santa merchandise and the BP Oil Spill Aftermath promises to make for a slippery arrival in the Gulf of Mexico. Instead of snow-hooves, I have had to purchase oil-proof wellingtons for the entire reindeer fleet. You will be pleased to note, however, that these are indeed made from 100% recycled post consumer organic waste. I just hope the reindeer don't eat them. 

Despite the difficulties, I have remained committed to Santa Values of giving, giving and giving and to my favourite colours - red and green. Red is of course the traditional symbol of the Santa cult, and cheap impersonations of Santa in purpleorange or hot pink have not gained much ground, I am pleased to note. Green of course is the colour of the environment, without which we wouldn't have, well, an environment.  I have also remained committed to my stakeholders: my workforce of 501,380 elves (down by 14% in 2010 after a difficult downsizing program - we tried to downsize by putting all the elves on a lettuce diet, but four died, so we reverted to standard redundancy letters), my  fleet of 103,000 reindeer (and no, despite the persistent approaches by Better Place, I will not consider moving to an electric reindeer fleet until Shai Agassi can guarantee battery exchange stations in every chimney and department store), the billions of children who receive my gifts (and some are very BIG children), and environmental activists (who recommend downloadable Xmas gifts powered by Google's sustainable servers). I was particularly pleased to note the recognition given by Gap Inc to my reindeers, even though they didn't include me in their reindeer movie

This year, I decided to establish a Santa Sustainability Steering Committee to ensure we progress on all fronts. The Committee is chaired by myself and includes the CSE (Chief Sustainability Elf), the CTE (Chief Technical Elf), the CRRE (the Chief Reindeer Relations Elf), and the CERE (The Chief Elf Resources Elf). I thought about including the Chief  Corporate Communications and Compliance Codes Elf (CCCCCE) but the number of C's in this elf's title was a problem for my secretary, who maintains that the C key on her keyboard has now ceased to function. The Steering Committee has established targets for 2011:
  • Reduce carbon emissions by 43%  through reindeer methane emission avoidance  (by modifying reindeer feed or purchasing cork anal-wind blockers)
  • Increase distribution of recycled toys to 97% (by offering incentives to kids who donate toys to the Santa Toy Recycling Center in Lapland - each will receive a Green Santa Certificate of Distinction)
  • Improve working conditions for elves (new ergonomic inspections of chimneys to reduce orthopedic stress during delivery operations)
  • Increase gender balance in the elf workforce (by demanding that female elves put on weight so that their average weight is in balance with the average weight of the male elves).
Feedback from external stakeholders on lat year's report through my Santa.net website was double that of previous years. Two people gave input. The first congratulated Santa Inc. on an outstanding report. The second was from one of the Big Four, asking if we intend to assure the 2010 report. My position on assurance remains as in previous years. If you don't believe ME, then why should you believe anyone else?

Finally, it remains only for me to wish all the Citizens of the Universe  a wonderful joyous and happy Christmas. Remember to spread a little goodwill this Christmas - donate (a lot) to Santa.net.

*******


Happy Christmas and Happy Holidays to all!


elaine cohen, CSR consultant, Sustainabilty Reporter, HR Professional, Ice Cream Addict. Author of CSR for HR: A necessary partnership for advancing responsible business practices Contact me via www.twitter.com/elainecohen  on Twitter or via my business website www.b-yond.biz/en  (BeyondBusiness, an inspired CSR consulting and Sustainability Reporting firm)
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