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Getting purpose right in business: What these Smart50 Sustainability Award judges want to see

How should fast-growing businesses write sustainability and purpose into their products, operations and values? Two experts weigh in.
Ben Ice
Ben Ice
Trees with blue sky in background
Source: Casey Horner, Unsplash

As CEO of Snuggle Hunny and Founder of Flora & Fauna and Green + Kind, Julie Mathers has a career’s experience launching and investing in sustainable products and brands. Michel Hogan, a brand counsel, consults with brands on purpose, values and risk.

The two bring years of firsthand experience of sustainability in business โ€“ getting it right and communicating it in the right way with your target audience.

This November, they both join The Smart50 Awards again as judges on the Sustainability Award category. How should fast-growing businesses write sustainability into their products, operations and voice? (Hint: it has a lot to do with being honest!)

What’s your advice for brands investing in sustainability?

Julie Mathers, CEO of Snuggle Hunny and founder of Flora & Fauna and Green + Kind

“Be really honest. Start the conversation with your customers and say โ€˜Look, we know weโ€™re not perfect, and thereโ€™s lots we need to do. However, this is the change we are makingโ€™. It could be โ€˜weโ€™ve shifted our packaging to be compostable as opposed to plasticโ€™. Or it could be โ€˜Weโ€™ve decided to carbon offset our deliveriesโ€™. It could be something as small as โ€˜Weโ€™ve got rid of the plastic coffee cups in the officeโ€™.

“I think the more honest and transparent you can be about your own journey, the more people follow you on it. If you try and wrap it up and almost claim that youโ€™re brilliant at everything? People are very wise to this, certainly now, and theyโ€™ll see right through it and call you out for greenwashing. So my experience is to be open, honest and transparent and just be really clear about where you are on your journey. And start communicating early with it, but donโ€™t try and be too marketingย about it.

“Just be transparent and honest. Iโ€™m not sure Iโ€™ve seen any brands that have failed with that approach. But Iโ€™ve seen many brands that have failed with the โ€˜Arenโ€™t we amazing, weโ€™re doing this amazing thingโ€™ but just not recognising actually what theyโ€™re not doing.”

What’s your advice for businesses writing sustainability into their messaging?

Michel Hogan, brand counsel

Michel Hogan

“Fundamentally, saying youโ€™re sustainable is a promise. Youโ€™re making a promise to people, to customers, to people who work for you, to people who are investing in you, that youโ€™re doing things in a certain way. And that you care about things like the environment. But not just the environment though, because sustainability is a bigger issue than that. The environmentโ€™s enough, but it can extend much more broadly.

“So, ‘What is the promise that youโ€™re making and how are you keeping it?’ Is really the question that I start with, and thatโ€™s particularly relevant in sustainability.”

“When Iโ€™m working with organisations and when Iโ€™m advising them, I always start with, โ€˜OK, if you say that being sustainable is important to you, what is the risk? If youโ€™re saying that this is what you care about, these are your values, this is your purpose, what is the risk to those people, to those things, if youโ€™re not making promises that you can keep, if youโ€™re making the wrong promises?

“I always start there by asking, what is your capacity to keep this promise that youโ€™re making?”

 

Julie Mathers and Michel Hogan join The Smart50 Awards 2023 as guest judges on The Sustainability Award category. Think your biz should be celebrated for its growth, innovation and sustainability efforts? Start your entry now.