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How to create a dedicated sustainability function in your organization

In “Transform Product Sustainability into Performance Initiatives with Product Lifecycle Intelligence”, our collaborative white paper with Forrester, we took insights from 493 product design and sourcing decision-makers in manufacturing. Our aim in commissioning the study? To redefine how businesses approach sustainability, and to map a path forward for those who are beginning to take on the challenge. 

We’re diving into a series of key takeaways from the report across a number of blogs. You can already read parts 1, 2, 3 and 4, and below we’ll take a deep dive into our next takeaway: why it’s imperative that a business creates a dedicated sustainability function within the organization. 

The gains that stand to be made from a more sustainable approach to product design – whether financially, reputationally or from a regulatory perspective – are already clear to more ‘Advanced’ manufacturing businesses. Whether driven by changing customer expectations, an increased emphasis on supporting a circular economy, a need for greater transparency in supply chains or a variety of other factors, the reasons for implementing a more sustainable approach to product design are numerous. 

But there is a world of difference between ideas and action. Sustainability must move beyond being a mere concept or being seen as a reporting burden in order for its benefits to be fully realized. In order to do this, there is a strong need for advocates within a business. An organization with a fully functioning and proactive sustainability function is likely to reap many benefits, not least from a cost efficiency perspective. 

Managing bottom lines in a tightening business environment is critical when it comes to ensuring continued growth. A dedicated sustainability function, accordingly, encourages not only collaboration but a sharing of resources – both of which save money. Businesses hampered by a more siloed approach to sustainable practices are likely to incur more costs not only through lost time and productivity, but also through a continued reliance on outdated manual processes and expensive, unnecessary equipment and resources. 

Ultimately, cross-functional collaboration – combined with a single source of truth – is critical in enhancing product design, sourcing, and gaining a competitive edge. The adoption of product lifecycle intelligence drives sustainability improvements, faster time-to-market, higher profits, and operational enhancements for manufacturers. 

Data quality and accessibility forms the foundation of efficient product design and sourcing and product and operations improve with the adoption of a material, component, and supplier intelligence solution. 

What are organizations doing – and how can they do it better? 

Our study makes this point abundantly clear. The need for such a dedicated sustainability function is obvious and well understood. As the study shows, 27% of respondents placed ‘create a dedicated sustainability function within the organization’ as their top initiative to prioritize over the next 12 months.  

From design, production, to maintenance, and end of life, sustainability across the product lifecycle is becoming business-critical and time-critical for manufacturers seeking to maintain a competitive cadence of successful new product launches. Stakeholders across functions must have access to granular, product-level data to rapidly and accurately make trade-offs as they design products and source materials and components from suppliers 

With a dedicated sustainability function within an organization, procurement and supply chain leaders can utilize environmental sustainability procurement technology to address the challenge of measuring the environmental impact of the supply chain. Organizations deploying procurement technology are making significant organizational changes to enable them to understand their supply chains to measure, reduce, and report their Scope 3 emissions and to honor their sustainability commitments. 

However, obstacles remain. 18% of respondents to the study saw breaking down data siloes to enable cross-functional collaboration as among their biggest headaches. There is work still be done. These data siloes are the hallmark of organizations not yet ‘mature’ enough to fully realize the benefits of embracing such an approach. 

The study indicates that immature enterprise manufacturers have a steep hill to climb. A typical Novice manufacturer (those with the lowest maturity on the PLM maturity model that Forrester created) find themselves hamstrung by manual processes, data and decision-making silos, a lack of collaboration, and they struggle to track and verify the sustainability credentials of their suppliers. 

Regulatory compliance and sustainability are secondary considerations for Novices, with cost reductions and product improvements being of primary importance for them. Whilst understandable in the short term, this lack of forward-thinking could come back to sting them – and prevent them from growing as a business. 

In contrast, Mature companies are collaborative, take sustainability seriously, and understand the importance of systematic and automated processes. Novices remain inhibited by silos and manual processes and are yet to fully grasp the strategic and competitive importance of integrating sustainability across the product lifecycle. 

Stakeholders across product development, procurement, compliance, and sustainability need to collaborate closely to shorten product development cycles, reduce cost and risks in production, and lower environmental impact throughout the supply chain. 

Ultimately, maturity drives agility. 

How can Makersite help? 

The benefits of giving sustainability a platform within an organization are particularly clear when it comes to two of our customers – Barco and Microsoft. By embracing a collaborative, ecodesign-led approach to manufacturing, both have reaped significant rewards. 

At Microsoft, the team were able to efficiently scale up their LCAs so their engineers could focus on designing the best and most sustainable products instead of only focusing on disclosures. While their LCA experts are still involved in the process, they can now focus on completing the model with suppliers’ primary data, performing the quality analysis, and ensuring the model is representative. 

With Makersite’s help, the benefits of their new methodology were huge. They included improved quality and representativeness of the modeling of the product’s composition, better identification of environmental impact hotspots in the supply chain, and increased accuracy by reducing the inconsistencies associated with the LCA practitioners’ decisions. 

Empowered by Makersite’s AI-powered Product Lifecyle Intelligence software, lca software Microsoft were able improve the efficiency of collecting and modelling both product and supplier data, ultimately saving time and money and eliminating data siloes in a more collaborative, sustainability-led environment. 

Similarly, Barco faced challenges in efficiently reporting SKU-level environmental data due to data being siloed and scattered across the supply chain, resulting in slow and costly manual efforts. 

Makersite provided Barco with automated Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) and Product Environmental Footprints (PEFs) at the SKU level, allowing them to accurately offset their emissions, comply with EU taxonomy reporting requirements, and implement more targeted eco-design principles across their product portfolio. 

They were able to consolidate and enrich their data, perform comprehensive environmental reporting, and make data-driven decisions to minimize their environmental impact. Automating their LCAs allows Barco to accurately offset their emissions and further promote their climate-neutral ambitions, as well as strengthen communication on sustainability with external stakeholders – all based on data. 

By leveraging Makersite’s automated Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs), Barco gained insights into the environmental impact of different design choices, enabling them to perform scenario analysis and evaluate the impact of various design changes on their products. The implementation of Makersite’s software allowed Barco to bring together the various elements of their product data in one place, enabling them to identify opportunities for sustainable design changes across their product line and make data-driven decisions to minimize their environmental impact. 

Makersite’s one model, multi-output approach enables users to integrate multiple data sources and easily deliver reporting and analytics to multiple teams including compliance reports, EPDs, PCFs, Scope 1,2 & 3, forecasts and should costs. 

With our digital twin technology, we’re able to put the burden of data siloes to rest. We connect best-in-class data for costs, markets, risks, materials, regulations, environment, health, suppliers and more to create a “digital twin” of a product design or formulation. Tools are built-in to create reports, apps, and maps to clearly visualize the data that matter, making it easier – and significantly quicker – for all involved. 

Similarly, with Makersite’s ecodesign dashboard, customers can use product data models to make smarter design, material and sourcing decisions throughout their product development process, allowing them to make better decisions based on multiple criteria whilst supporting decision-making with clear and actionable insights considering multiple criteria like carbon and cost simultaneously. 

Less than 1% of new products consider sustainability in their design, but there’s no longer any need for it to be an afterthought. That’s why we make it easy for you to make better decision choices with the data you need, fostering collarboration and enabling the building of a dedicated sustainability function in your organization with ease. 

How increasing your carbon footprint reporting can drive sales – and profits 

Makersite and Forrester’s collaborative thought leadership paper has, at its heart, a simple objective: to redefine how businesses approach sustainability. 

Makersite commissioned Forrester to evaluate the state and impact of sustainability in product lifecycle management in the manufacturing industry. In order to do so, they surveyed 493 organizations, liaising directly with product design and sourcing decision-makers in manufacturing to build the fullest possible picture of the opportunities – and challenges – that lie ahead. 

In a series of blog posts designed to compartmentalize the report, we’re taking a deeper look at 5 of the key takeaways for manufacturing businesses based on the research. 

You can read part one in the series here. For this instalment, we’ll outline why increasing the carbon footprint reporting of your products will be a key driver for sales and profits in your organization. 

Sustainability, without doubt, remains a critical business issue. Whether from a regulatory, reputational or financial perspective, an organization with its house in order is better primed for success. For some, sustainability and the regulations surrounding its proper implementation have been seen as little more than a fad. A box to tick in order to satisfy stakeholders and regulators. But now we have irrefutable evidence that better and more complete carbon footprint reporting serves as an essential catalyst for supporting – and driving – sales.  

Within the manufacturing industry, key decision makers in product design and sourcing are taking action to balance sustainability, resilience, and top and bottom-line improvements. There is a growing realization that manufacturers must become quicker, smarter, and more sustainable to survive. They can leverage material, component, and supplier intelligence to improve data visibility, to guide better design and sourcing decisions. With a stronger foundation and a more granular approach, carbon footprint reporting is no longer such a burden. 

Why do organizations need to do this? 

When it comes to carbon footprint reporting, now is not the time to stand still. Good intentions will get you nowhere. In a competitive marketplace, meeting reporting obligations is an absolute minimum. Moreover, companies who neglect to accelerate their carbon footprint reporting will find themselves rapidly losing their share of the market to those who have been more agile and innovative in their approach. Efficiency and data granularity are key. Without a solution that ticks both boxes, you will very quickly find yourself losing position to a competitor who is able to move faster than you. And once you’ve fallen behind, it becomes twice as hard to get back. 

Similarly, a more proactive approach to carbon footprint reporting will leave you poised for greater success going forward. Better product reporting can open your organization up to new markets and new audiences, which in turn will increase sales and profitability. It will also likely open up new territories where, previously, different reporting obligations may have meant that prior attempts at entry into that marketplace were stymied. The potential is enormous. You don’t have to make new products to access new markets and new customer segments – you simply have to report better, and report faster. 

As the Forrester paper notes, manufacturers with a more mature approach to their carbon footprint reporting – those who sought out and actively implemented a solution designed to enhance previous practices – are likely to see greater success. Those who integrate a material, component, and supplier intelligence solution into their PLM practices expect to see high gains across a number of important KPIs. Most prominently, manufacturers equipped with the right solution saw a 25% improvement in win rate, with 26% also identifying the opportunity to command a greater price premium. 

The hypothesis speaks for itself: manufacturers that integrate PLM processes with material, component, and supplier intelligence will enjoy time to market advantage over less mature competitors and have the opportunity to scale their scarce design and supply chain expertise over a wider range of product variants. 

How can Makersite help? 

Transparency is central to accurate, detailed carbon footprint reporting. With Makersite, organizations are able to rely on deep-tier, up-to-date and consistent data that allows them to demonstrate their decarbonization strategy in absolute detail. 

Depending on the nature of the product being manufactured, reporting across numerous product groups can be a painstaking task – particularly if it’s being done manually. However, with Makersite’s AI-driven solution, organizations can use product and supply chain data – sourced from the largest product and supply chain database with 36,000+ industrial processes, 600,000+ environmental impacts, and 100,000+ materials – to automate reporting across all products groups. 

Additionally, Makersite’s dedicated eco-design dashboard allows users to make data-driven product optimization decisions across sustainability, costing, risk and compliance. With some 80% of ecological impacts occurring in the design stage of a product, full oversight is critical when it comes to achieving sustainable design goals and hitting reporting parameters.  

Users simply have to upload their BOM and, once uploaded, they will receive automated, AI-driven recommendations for switching out key product components, in turn optimizing carbon footprint while lowering costs, giving them the depth of knowledge they need to make crucial design decisions at the click of a button. 

At Makersite, several of our key clients have experienced this revolutionary approach to optimizing carbon footprint reporting first-hand. 

Belgian technology giant Barco faced challenges in efficiently reporting SKU-level environmental data due to data being siloed and scattered across the supply chain, resulting in slow and costly manual efforts.  

To solve the problem, Makersite provided Barco with automated Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) and Product Environmental Footprints (PEFs) at the SKU level, allowing them to accurately offset their emissions, comply with EU taxonomy reporting requirements, and implement more targeted eco-design principles across their product portfolio 

By doing so, Barco were able to consolidate and enrich their data, perform comprehensive environmental reporting, and make data-driven decisions to minimize their environmental impact while lowering costs. 

Automating their LCAs allows Barco to accurately offset their emissions and further promote their climate-neutral ambitions, as well as strengthen communication on sustainability with external stakeholders – all based on data. 

In a similar vein, the cosmetics pioneer Lush wanted to double down on their already impressive sustainability and carbon footprint reporting credentials. As a company, Lush are closely aligned with and well-known for their commitment to sustainable processes. Customers and stakeholders alike expect them to lead from the front. Falling behind would not only have an impact reputationally, but financially too. 

The team at Lush felt they were not doing enough to measure supply chain impacts from an environmental point of view. They lacked visibility around carbon emissions produced as a result of their supply chain activity, and needed more detailed insight into where the problems lay. They lacked harmonized, integrated data, which hampered their ability to plan and hit their target of being “carbon neutral, climate positive” by 2030. 

Makersite’s integrated data software provided the solution Lush were looking for. With relevant data on supply chains typically siloed away in different databases, Makersite’s ability to bring together the 3,000 ingredients the company purchased worldwide in one platform made a big difference, giving them “all of the emission factors and LCA databases at our fingertips.” Lush were able to analyze various impacts at a much deeper, more granular level, and had all of their choices laid out directly and simply in front of them, allowing them to make sense of complex data and measure it more easily. 

Makersite’s modelling capabilities gave Lush significantly deeper insight into their supply chain data. From energy sources to waste management, a better understanding of how their supply chain operated gave Lush the ability to go back to suppliers and suggest changes in order to help them achieve their goals. The company now has an automated and scalable way to manage and understand their supply chain in greater detail, giving them the speed, scale and granularity that they were seeking and a much better chance of hitting their ambitious 2030 targets. 

Lush are preparing to release their first TCFD report based on modelling powered by Makersite. Their supply chain makes up 42% of their total emissions – by far the biggest impact in their business. With Makersite they’ve been able to assess the impact of more than 3,000 materials this year, including remodelling FY21 materials based on better data that more closely reflects the practices in the suppliers they buy from. Doing so has shown that Lush have reduced their carbon impact by 25% against emissions in 2021 – and all because of increased data accuracy and improved granularity provided by Makersite’s software. 

Being smarter with data – and being able to accurately measure it – not only allowed Lush to see where they needed to do work, but also gave them the platform to increase their transparency efforts and advance their goals. 

Ultimately, as a result of using Makersite’s solution, both companies were able to use more detailed, more granular product and supply chain data to not only automate their carbon footprint reporting, but to position their organizations as pioneers in their industry, giving them a distinct advantage in markets both old and new.