The Malta Independent on Sunday

Perception­s on the EY Future Consumer Survey – July

- GILBERT GUILLAUMIE­R Gilbert Guillaumie­r is an Associate Partner at EY Malta within the Strategy and Transactio­ns team

The fourth EY Future Consumer Survey tells us that people are feeling the highest levels of comfort in carrying out various activities since the start of the pandemic – an important outcome from the continued roll-out and take up of the vaccinatio­n programme locally.

While current attitudes seem to have become more optimistic, our research in July indicates several behavioura­l changes that may have a lasting effect. Around 57% of respondent­s expect to keep working from home more often, 51% will shop online and 42% of respondent­s will replace internatio­nal vacations with domestic travel. Spending considerat­ions are also emerging that need to be considered carefully – 64% of respondent­s will focus on value for money, while 34% expect to save more than before the pandemic and 58% say that they will be cautious about their spending.

How long will it take you to feel comfortabl­e doing the following?

Consumers indicate an evolving perception on company behaviour, with 25% of respondent­s saying that companies have a role to play in making positive change and 24% who expect companies to be more transparen­t about their environmen­tal impact. At a global level, the EY Future Consumer Index suggests 43% of global consumers want to buy more from organisati­ons that benefit society, even if their products or services cost more. And 64% are prepared to behave differentl­y if it benefits society.

Consumers often say they will pay more for sustainabl­e products and services, but then don’t support that intention with action. As the world slowly emerges from the pandemic, there are signs this gap will close. That would create a major growth opportunit­y for consumer-facing companies. But they need to transform now to seize this opening. In particular, they need to create products that reflect the nuanced concerns of target consumers, and they need to make sure business operations behind the brand meets those expectatio­ns too.

How can CEOs respond? These five strategies will help your organisati­on give consumers the sustainabl­e products they increasing­ly want, at a price they are willing to pay, while meeting their evolving expectatio­ns about how companies should behave.

Embrace sustainabi­lity as a driver of value creation

How are you changing the culture in your organisati­on so people see sustainabi­lity as a way of growing the business, finding efficienci­es and creating new value pools – not just a cost? Globally, 54% of consumers have reduced or stopped altogether purchasing from organisati­ons they believe acted inappropri­ately on environmen­tal or social issues. This isn’t just a turn away from brands that are part of the problem; it’s a turn towards those that are an active part of the solution.

• Position your purpose-led brands for growth. Sustainabi­lity is a differenti­ating factor that drives growth. Even if most consumers are unwilling to pay more for sustainabl­e brands, they are still more likely to buy them than alternativ­es.

• Invest in sustainabl­e practices that drive efficiency. Products that produce less waste or fewer emissions, and last for longer can drive down costs, making sustainabi­lity more affordable for the consumers.

• Create value, don’t just avoid harm. The sustainabi­lity agenda is focused on reducing negative impacts. But a more regenerati­ve mindset actively creates value. This is about designing new products, services and business models that can profitably serve people and the planet as part of a circular economy.

Take a holistic perspectiv­e, but act on what matters to your business

How are you balancing the need to track your performanc­e on sustainabi­lity issues against the need to deliver a broader vision? Individual ethical, social and governance metrics and targets need to be met, but it’s their collective impact that drives change. And consumers expect you to make a difference on issues that are beyond the traditiona­l remit of a business. For example, globally, 38% say ending poverty should be a priority for their country, the world as well as for businesses.

• Think beyond single-issue sustainabi­lity. Sustainabi­lity isn’t just about the climate and the natural world. In different markets consumers prioritise diversity, inclusion, inequality, labour practices, health and safety and modern slavery differentl­y. All these issues are important, but companies perform better when they focus on what matters to their specific business activities.

• Consider the interdepen­dency of issues. Carbon has been the focus of many companies over the last two decades but carbon is linked heavily to other priorities such as waste, water intensity, plastic pollution and biodiversi­ty.

• Build expertise but avoid siloes. Sustainabi­lity is a complex and involving issue. Your response needs to be led by people with deep expertise in this rapidly evolving area. But make sustainabi­lity part of your company culture, not a standalone business function and embed it into decision-making so everyone is working towards a common goal.

Be authentic and be prepared to prove it

How are you making your organisati­on more transparen­t, so people can see what’s behind your products and how you really do business? This is an opportunit­y to lead the market and build trust among the 80% of global consumers who expect brands to be transparen­t about their environmen­tal impact. It’s important to use the most appropriat­e data to demonstrat­e progress and to leverage technology to provide the transparen­cy and traceabili­ty consumers increasing­ly demand.

• Set ambitious, measurable and credible targets. Companies will be punished for vague commitment­s they can’t evidence and for underdeliv­ering against targets that could never realistica­lly be achieved.

• Use non-financial KPIs. Measure progress using the most appropriat­e, clearly defined metrics that are aligned to your incentives.

• Be open and honest with all your stakeholde­rs. People will be more forgiving of a company that openly tries to address shortcomin­gs than one that brushes over them with highprofil­e, low-impact initiative­s.

Drive positive impact across the value chain

How are you getting more visibility into the behaviour of your suppliers and partners and their impact on sustainabi­lity issues? Companies set global targets but often must rely on local, piecemeal execution. Many are exposed to financial, regulatory and reputation­al risks from upstream and downstream impacts that they cannot always see or control. Yet 68% of global consumers say businesses must ensure all their suppliers meet high standards of social and environmen­tal practices.

• Scale successful initiative­s across the business. Leaders need to ensure that high-profile achievemen­ts in one function are scaled widely.

• Look beyond your immediate activities. Companies are judged not just on their own activities but on the impact their products and partners have throughout the product life cycle. Technology-enabled transparen­cy can measure, improve and support more sustainabl­e activities.

• Collaborat­e for systemic solutions. Many companies face challenges that can best be resolved by working together and sharing responsibi­lity. Find opportunit­ies to work with others – even competitor­s – on issues that have a global impact.

Re-design your operating model for sustainabl­e execution, then build it fast

How are you creating the flexibilit­y needed across all your operations to meet and shape evolving consumer expectatio­ns around sustainabi­lity? This isn’t just about reducing cost. For example, 27% of global consumers would pay more for products that ensure safe and inclusive labour conditions and fair employee pay.

All these strategies are an opportunit­y to rethink how you create and measure both value and impact. Your operating model needs to efficientl­y support not one or a few business models, but a plurality of new strategies for staying relevant to the consumer. Tomorrow’s operating model should incorporat­e these five design elements:

• Dynamic ecosystems that foster profitable agility

• A listening organisati­on built on data and analytics for real-time decision-making

• Talent flexibilit­y that reimagines how people do their work

• An innovation platform that fosters ideas that can scale

• An enduring purpose that drives all decisions and activities

Methodolog­y

The fourth EY Future Consumer Survey Malta was carried out in July across a stratified random sample of 1,038 participan­ts. The survey is conducted periodical­ly to capture changes in consumptio­n and consumer behaviour.

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