Which type of sustainable business are you?

With employees and investors demanding greater sustainability, and governments legislating for it, organisations are now looking to develop a greener approach. But how are they going about it? And what behaviours make these businesses sustainable?

A new report commissioned by Moneypenny and WORKTECH Academy has identified four different types of sustainable organisation to help legal firms establish just how green they are, and what more they can do.

These different organisational typologies reflects a shift away from the office as the only place for work, the increasing employee consciousness around sustainability, and a growing consumer expectation for greener behaviours. For legal firms striving to improve their sustainable practices, we hope this report will help them categorise their own behaviours and provide food for thought about the wider sustainability improvements they can make.

Here are Moneypenny and WORKTECH Academy’s four green organisational typologies:

Which typology is Moneypenny?

The report also looks at how Monepenny measures up against the four types, and has found it has traits of all them.

We’re a place maker because we built our HQ with environmental goals in mind  –  including features such as ground source heat pumps and rainwater recycling, but we’re also a changemaker because of our ‘ecopennies’ – an employee-led sustainable living group which not only shaped the design of our HQ, but has established initiatives such as car sharing and lowering the heating to reduce our carbon footprint.

Our business is also a choice-giver as we’ve invested in technology to make hybrid working work. One such innovation is our world-first integration with Microsoft Teams, which enables us to route calls through to employees wherever they are based and across multiple devices. Finally, we’re also an arbitrator as we engage with the wider community readily and choose to offset our UK carbon emissions with leading tree planting and carbon offsetting company Ecologi.

Sustainability is an important consideration for legal firms, and this report reflects our desire to engage with the market and build dialogue around its many facets.

To find out more about the four green typologies of the post-Covid workplace as well as the changing parameters of ESG responsibility and how Moneypenny outsourcing services can help shape sustainable change, download the Moneypenny and WORKTECH Academy report ‘From Place to People’, here.

 

Louise Wilson is head of finance sector at Moneypenny

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