For business leaders, this presents a dizzying landscape. With so many issues to contend with, where should attention be focused? There is no one correct answer. However, it is important that leaders prioritize the issues that matter most to their organization—including those that they have a chance of positively influencing—as well as those that their employees want to see action on. Our research shows that there is work to be done here. When asked to consider and prioritize a range of 16 environmental and social issues, C-suite executives, next-generation leaders and employees largely agree on the macro issues affecting the future of our society: climate change, pollution, and global pandemics. However, opinions diverge when it comes to the most important issues affecting individual companies and workplaces. C-suite leaders remain focused on the big, macro picture. Meanwhile, employees zero in on challenges closer to home (what we refer to as “micro” priorities), such as economic inequalities and the shortage of workers with in-demand skills.
PepsiCo Applies Sustainability Filter to Evaluate Expenditures PepsiCo incorporates environmental sustainability criteria into its Capital Expenditure Filter, which is applied to all requests over $5 million. It reviews each request against business financial metrics and its ability to advance the business strategy, as well as for its impact (positive or negative) on environmental performance and its contribution to efforts to achieve the company’s climate goal.
Source: PepsiCo, Inc., Climate Change 2019
When asked about the specific issues that senior leaders should solve, all respondents prioritized health and wellbeing concerns. That is not surprising in a pandemic environment. Employees, however, are also focused on other immediate issues that impact their day-to-day lives at work such as fair remuneration, equal opportunities for advancement and greater flexibility. It’s about my health, my pay, and my work-life-home flexibility. These are not small things to employees. Interestingly, employees are much less likely than C-suite leaders to prioritize Diversity and Inclusion (D&I) as an issue to solve. D&I does, however, overlap with other specific issues they have emphasized, such as equal pay for equal work and equal opportunities for advancement. The key implication here for leaders is that the more D&I initiatives connect into practical issues, like pay and advancement, the better.
Leaders who recognize these nuances and make an effort to truly understand employee concerns in a pandemic and post-pandemic environment will be better positioned to attract and retain talent. By effectively managing and addressing macro-level issues along with employees’ more present and immediate concerns about economic and job security, flexibility, and greater equity, leaders have a significant opportunity to increase trust, engagement, loyalty and productivity—and reap financial and non-financial dividends.
Employees around the world are aligned on the top three issues affecting their respective societies, almost unanimously citing climate change, pollution and global pandemics. C-suite respondents are less in sync. For example, climate change is not a top three issue for leaders in the US and Canada, nor is pollution. These leaders are much more focused on nearer term priorities, including high-level corruption, abuses of power and gender inequity.
Action Items
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In a major global survey of C-suite executives, next-gen leaders, and employees, we reveal how leaders can grasp this opportunity:
The study was conducted with 9,500 employees and next-generation leaders in 11 growth and mature markets from April 16 to May 12, 2021.