In the past few hundred years, we’ve seen incredible advances in how we live with the introduction of electricity, transportation, computers and consumerism. But these rising living standards have come at a cost. Unprecedented economic growth has driven progress, yet it’s also accelerated environmental degradation.
Climate Change has shown us that infinite economic growth is not possible on a planet with finite resources. The future of business lies in ethical and sustainable brands, circular business models, and consumer transparency.
Sustainability has evolved from a corporate talking point to a genuine benchmark of performance and resilience.
Across Australia and around the world, businesses are being asked to show, not just say, how they’re managing their impact. From climate action to community connection, sustainability has become a strategic advantage.
A sustainability strategy provides the framework to turn intent into impact, guiding decisions that balance people, planet and profit in a way that’s measurable, transparent and aligned with your brand purpose.
Why a Sustainability Strategy Matters
A sustainability strategy is no longer optional. It’s the framework for how your business stays relevant and resilient in a changing world.
According to KPMG’s Australian Sustainability Reporting Trends (2024), 97% of ASX 100 companies now report on sustainability performance, and 90% identify climate change as a material business risk. In other words, the majority of Australia’s largest organisations have embedded sustainability into core strategy, not because it looks good but because it reduces risk, builds trust and drives innovation.
Mid-size and small businesses are catching up fast. Consumer expectations, employee values and investor scrutiny are pushing every organisation, from local brands to global enterprises, to consider their environmental and social footprint.
A well-defined sustainability strategy helps you:
- Mitigate risk: By identifying environmental and social issues before they escalate.
 - Improve brand perception: Today’s audiences favour brands that demonstrate responsibility and authenticity.
 - Attract and retain talent: People want to work for companies whose values align with their own.
 - Enhance performance: Research from ESG Book found that companies with strong environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance achieved a return on equity of 10.1%, compared with 7.4% for weaker performers. According to a 2024 report by HSF Kramer, 54% of Australian businesses say the country is still behind on ESG performance.
 
What a Sustainability Strategy Is
A sustainability strategy is a long-term plan that defines how your business will manage its ESG responsibilities. It connects purpose to measurable outcomes.
It’s not just a corporate social responsibility (CSR) statement or a collection of good intentions. It’s a structured framework that guides decisions, policies and investments from supply chain choices to workplace culture.
A sustainability strategy:
- Aligns your business values with global frameworks such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and ESG standards
 - Identifies where your operations have the most significant impact, positive or negative
 - Sets targets and metrics to measure progress
 - Embeds accountability across leadership and culture
 
Put simply, it’s the roadmap that helps your business act responsibly, communicate transparently and grow sustainably.
The Three Pillars of Sustainability
Strong sustainability strategies rest on three interconnected pillars, environmental, social, and governance, often referred to collectively as ESG. According to a 2024 report by HSF Kramer, 54% of Australian businesses say the country is still behind on environmental, social and governance sustainability performance.
Environmental
This focuses on your organisation’s interaction with the natural world including energy use, emissions, waste and resource management.
It includes:
- Setting carbon reduction goals and adopting renewable energy
 - Minimising waste through circular design and recycling programs
 - Choosing sustainable materials and ethical suppliers
 - Tracking environmental impact across operations and logistics
 
In Australia, more than 60% of small businesses say they’re actively looking for ways to reduce energy consumption or waste, according to Business.gov.au. Even small operational shifts, like switching to renewable power or reducing packaging, contribute to broader climate goals.
Social
The social pillar looks at how your business supports people, employees, customers and the community.
This includes:
- Building inclusive and diverse workplaces
 - Prioritising wellbeing, safety and fair pay
 - Partnering with local organisations or charities
 - Supporting suppliers who uphold the same standards
 
Social sustainability strengthens reputation, trust and retention. Employees increasingly expect to see their company contribute to something bigger, and businesses that deliver on that expectation see stronger engagement and loyalty.
Governance
Governance ensures your sustainability commitments are backed by accountability. It covers ethical decision-making, compliance, transparency and leadership oversight.
This might include:
- Integrating sustainability targets into executive KPIs
 - Disclosing progress in annual or ESG reports
 - Creating policies around procurement, ethics and anti-corruption
 - Ensuring diversity in leadership and decision-making
 
When governance is strong, sustainability becomes part of how you do business, not just how you talk about it.
How to Create a Sustainability Strategy
Every organisation’s journey will look different, but most follow a similar structure. Here’s a simple framework to help you get started.
1. Discover & Define
Start by understanding where you are:
- Assess your current impact: Identify the risks and opportunities most relevant to your industry across environmental, social and economic sustainability.
 - Gather insights: Deep dive into each area of your business including leadership, team members, suppliers and customers. This helps you prioritise what matters most and builds buy-in from the start.
 - Walk before you run: Start with a few clear focus areas before expanding your goals.
 
2. Set Clear Goals
Once you know your key priorities, define what success looks like. Your goals should align with your business values and, where possible, with broader frameworks like the UN SDGs or the ISSB sustainability disclosure standards (which will soon underpin Australian reporting).
Examples might include:
- Reducing carbon emissions by a set percentage by 2030
 - Achieving gender balance in leadership by 2028
 - Diverting 90% of operational waste from landfill within five years
 
These goals should be ambitious yet achievable, and measurable enough to track progress over time.
3. Build the Framework
Develop the structure that supports your strategy. This includes policies, programs and initiatives that bring your goals to life.
For example:
- Creating a sustainable procurement policy
 - Establishing employee volunteering programs
 - Tracking environmental data through ESG software or auditing tools
 
If you’re unsure where to begin, frameworks like B Corp, GRI (Global Reporting Initiative) or SASB (Sustainability Accounting Standards Board) provide useful guidance on metrics and reporting.
4. Embed & Educate
A sustainability strategy only works when it’s understood across the business. Training, communication and leadership visibility are essential.
Encourage sustainable decision-making at every level, from procurement and product design to daily operations. Involve your people in the process, invite feedback, celebrate milestones and make sustainability part of your brand culture.
Creating meaningful impact across people, planet and purpose. That sentiment applies to any business seeking to make responsibility real, not rhetorical.
5. Measure & Report
Transparency builds trust. Regularly measure progress against your goals and share results – the wins and the lessons.
Reporting can take many forms:
- Annual sustainability or ESG reports
 - Website updates and impact statements
 - Certification progress (e.g. B Corp, Climate Active)
 
Avoiding Greenwashing
Greenwashing is overstating or misrepresenting environmental claims. As sustainability becomes more visible, so does the risk of greenwashing.
Research from the ACCC’s 2023 greenwashing report found that 57% of reviewed businesses made potentially misleading environmental claims.
The solution isn’t silence but transparency. Be honest about what you’re doing and where you’re still improving. Small, credible steps build far more trust than broad, unsubstantiated claims. Clear reporting, third-party certifications and measurable goals help demonstrate authenticity.
At Oraco, we are advocates for social, environmental and economic responsibility and have built Oraco on the foundations of these values. They are ingrained in our culture and called upon in our hiring, operations, work and partnerships. In saying this, we recognise we have a long way to go. By being honest about where we are now, and where we want to be, we hold ourselves accountable to continual progress and positive impact through our sustainability strategy.
Embedding Sustainability Across the Business
Sustainability shouldn’t sit in a silo. It should be woven through every aspect of your organisation, from leadership decisions to supplier relationships.
Here are a few ways to make it stick:
- Align procurement: Choose suppliers that meet your ethical and environmental standards.
 - Review your governance: Include sustainability in board agendas and risk management.
 - Empower your team: Create champions across departments to lead initiatives.
 - Collaborate: Partner with like-minded organisations for greater impact.
 
In Australia, frameworks like the Australian Sustainable Finance Taxonomy and the Climate-related Financial Disclosure Standards (ISSB) are pushing more organisations to embed sustainability deeply into their models, much like Europe’s CSRD or the US SEC climate rules.
But you don’t have to be a global corporation to start. The key is consistency, not size. Progress over perfection. Every small step contributes to meaningful change.
Sustainability Strategy For Small Businesses
Sustainability isn’t reserved for large corporations. It’s something every business can take steps toward, no matter the size or industry. For small businesses especially, embedding sustainability is about aligning your values with your everyday operations and making incremental improvements that add up over time.
At Oraco, we’ve approached sustainability as a mindset. One that guides the decisions we make, the partnerships we form and the way we work. By embedding it into our culture and processes, we’ve been able to create genuine impact without compromising creativity, quality or growth.
Here are some of the ways we bring sustainability to life within our business:
- Sustainable procurement: We choose suppliers and collaborators who share our values, prioritising ethical production, environmental stewardship and social responsibility.
 - Carbon awareness: We monitor our emissions, make conscious decisions to reduce energy use and offset what we can’t eliminate through a certified program, Trace, with a long-term goal of being climate positive.
 - Inclusive culture: Diversity, equity and inclusion sit at the core of how we work. From our hiring practices to our workplace culture, we’re creating a space where every voice is valued.
 - Circular office practices: From plant-based catering to cruelty-free and palm-oil-free products, we’re intentional about minimising waste and supporting circular consumption models.
 - Purpose-driven partnerships: We collaborate with clients and organisations who align with our values. We have also donated over $15,000 to initiatives that support environmental and social progress. For example, in 2023, we donated a portion of our revenue to 1% for the Planet certified organisations.
 - Transparent reporting: We share our impact story honestly, celebrating achievements while acknowledging areas for improvement. Transparency helps us avoid greenwashing and stay accountable.
 - Community engagement: We support local causes, partner with like-minded organisations and continue to learn from and engage with First Nations communities. For example, we contribute each month to First Nations reciprocity through Pay The Rent.
 - Employee wellbeing: We empower our team through flexible work, ongoing learning opportunities and a culture that prioritises wellbeing and purpose.
 
Sustainability, for us, is an evolving journey. One that’s about progress, not perfection. By embedding these practices into the heart of our business, we aim to create meaningful impact across people, planet and purpose.
Measuring Success Beyond Profit
Sustainability success is often measured through the triple bottom line – people, planet and profit. This broader lens moves beyond short-term revenue to long-term resilience.
Examples of measurable outcomes include:
- Reduction in energy use or emissions intensity
 - Improved employee satisfaction or retention
 - Increased community engagement or supplier diversity
 
Businesses that integrate ESG priorities often outperform those that don’t. Data from ESG Book shows that strong ESG performers average a 36% higher valuation compared with weaker peers.
Ultimately, the aim isn’t to tick boxes but to future-proof your brand. Sustainability is a business strategy. Building a sustainability framework helps you operate responsibly today while preparing for the expectations of tomorrow.
It creates alignment between your brand purpose and the planet that sustains it. Between the work you do and the world you influence.
So whether you’re just starting out or ready to refine existing efforts, begin with clarity, stay transparent and commit to continuous improvement. Because responsibility is the future of business.