London/New York - May 25, 2011 - A new
research study published by the United Nations Global Compact and
Accenture shows major differences in perceptions of sustainability
between CEOs in different industry sectors.
The study also shows significant gaps in the level of
integration of sustainability already achieved in their companies,
despite an overall trend towards seeing sustainability as an
opportunity for value creation and business success.
A New Era of Sustainability, the
original study by Accenture and the UN Global Compact, showed that
93 percent of 766 CEOs surveyed believe that sustainability will be
"important" or "very important" to the future success of their
company.
The study looked much more closely at industry-level data with
in-depth examinations of CEO responses in seven key industry
sectors:
- Automotive
- Banking
- Communications
- Consumer Goods
- Energy
- Infrastructure & Transportation
- Utilities
Upon closer examination, significant differences appear at the
industry level: 100 percent of automotive CEOs and 100 percent
of executives heading large consumer goods companies, see
sustainability as critical to their success.
The industry analysis of the UN Global
Compact-Accenture CEO Study is based on a survey of 766 CEOs
worldwide, initially conducted for the joint report, A New Era of Sustainability,
published in 2010.
CEOs in the banking sector, which has not traditionally focused
on sustainability, also see these issues as a strategic priority:
68 percent regard sustainability as "very important" to their
future success, and 63 percent report that their company is
integrating sustainability "much more" than five years
ago.
Conversely, only 22 percent of CEOs in the communications sector
perceive sustainability to be a "very important" factor in shaping
their future success, the lowest in any of the seven
industries.
However, research suggests that even in this sector,
sustainability may be growing in importance, with 70 percent of
CEOs seeing the potential for revenue growth and cost reduction as
a primary motivation for taking action on sustainability - the
highest figure across the seven sectors.
"Whilst it's clear that business is now embedding sustainability at
the core of their strategy and operations," said Sander van't
Noordende, Group Chief Executive, Accenture Management Consulting,
speaking during the launch of the reports at Accenture's
Sustainability 24, an online gathering of sustainability
decision makers across the world, "we've not had sufficient
evidence on how different sectors manage this integration.
"These industry specific insights make sustainability become
real at an industry level, helping us understand the specific
challenges and opportunities within each sector, as well as how
leaders are going about creating competitive advantage," he
added.
"Making it real" - integrating sustainability into core
business
The industry analysis shows that some sectors may be ahead of the
pack when it comes to integrating sustainability into core
business.
Eighty percent of utilities CEOs, for example, report their
company has embedded metrics to track sustainability performance,
ahead of the cross-industry average of 64 percent.
Similarly, 83 percent of CEOs in the energy sector and 81
percent of those in infrastructure say their company measures both
positive and negative impacts of their activities on sustainability
outcomes, a finding which suggests sustainability performance
management capabilities are beginning to take root in leading
industries.
"Insights from the study have helped us to understand the executive
business lens for sustainability across industries," said Peter
Lacy, Managing Director, Accenture Sustainability Services for
Europe, Middle East, Africa and Latin America and the overall study
lead.
"Most importantly, we heard from a growing number of CEOs that
sustainability is becoming part of their innovation and growth
agenda. That may not be new for certain well-known companies, but
it marks a significant departure to see this more widespread across
industries. There are many challenges ahead - and legitimate
questions about scale and real impact - but we're starting to see
signs of high performing businesses aligning sustainability with
the top line."
Nevertheless, performance gaps remain between CEOs' ambition and
execution. Ninety-five percent of automotive executives, for
example, believe that companies should invest in enhanced training
of managers to integrate sustainability into strategy and
operations, but just 52 percent report that their company already
does so.
"Much more remains to be done to help companies turn sustainability
goals into action," said Georg Kell, Executive Director of the UN
Global Compact.
"CEOs clearly see the need to instill sustainability at all
levels and roles within organizations, and this unprecedented level
of data and analysis will enable us to help them on their journey
to truly embedded long-term sustainability."
[Note: industry reports available to download from www.accenture.com/ungcreports]