Sustainability & ESG

The missing piece – when your business strategy neglects sustainability

Sustainability is often forgotten when it comes to deciding business strategy. Here is how you can stop being left in the cold.
The Missing Piece
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By Karen Buttigieg

November 20, 2025

What if your company’s next fiscal strategy planning session took place without sustainability in the room?

It might sound unlikely, but it happens more often than many of us would like to admit. Strategies are crafted in boardrooms, budgets get locked in, and long-term objectives are defined — only for the sustainability team to be invited in after the fact, tasked with “fitting in” or reporting on a strategy that never accounted for environmental and social impact in the first place.

For sustainability leaders, this is more than a frustrating oversight. It’s a risk to the business — and a missed opportunity to shape a stronger, more resilient future.

Table of contents

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Why does sustainability get left out? 

The root causes are familiar:

  • Siloed teams – Sustainability is still often treated as a separate function rather than a business driver.
  • Misconceptions – The sustainability team is viewed by other areas of the business as performing “reporting” or “compliance” work, rather than as contributing to strategy.
  • Late involvement – Many leaders are pulled into strategy discussions after the big decisions are already made.

The result? Sustainability becomes an afterthought, not a driver.


The business impact of neglecting sustainability

When sustainability isn’t embedded in business strategy from the start, companies pay the price:

Missed opportunities for innovation and market differentiation

Sustainability insights don’t just improve efficiency — they can reshape what kinds of products and services the company offers.

Entire product lines, services, or customer value propositions may evolve when sustainability perspectives are integrated. Without that input, businesses risk being left behind by competitors who are aligning their offerings to the low-carbon, circular economy.

Increased risk exposure

Regulations, investor scrutiny, and shifting customer expectations can blindside leadership if sustainability perspectives are ignored.

Weak alignment with commitments

When goals are not shared across the business, companies risk falling short on their ESG and targets.

Put simply: when sustainability is sidelined, business resilience is compromised — and so is the company’s ability to compete in a changing market.


How can you embed sustainability in strategy?

 So how do we flip the script? The most effective sustainability leaders don’t just ask for a seat at the table — they claim it by reframing their work as central to the business agenda.

  • Position sustainability as both risk management and opportunity creation. Show how your work reduces exposure while opening doors for growth. 
  • Embed sustainability into core business objectives. Link your goals directly to revenue, customer outcomes, and operational efficiency — and even how your company competes in the market.
  • Build cross-functional influence. Connect with finance, operations, and innovation teams to ensure sustainability shapes strategy, not just reporting.

When sustainability is woven into the fabric of business strategy, it shifts from being a cost center to becoming a driver of resilience, market relevance, and competitive advantage.

As you look ahead to your company’s next planning cycle, ask yourself:

  • Do I know when strategy planning begins — and am I in the room?
  • Are sustainability goals translated into business metrics?
  • Can I clearly articulate how sustainability supports growth, resilience, and market differentiation?

If the answer is “not yet,” now is the time to prepare.

Don’t let business strategy happen without you. Your perspective isn’t just about compliance — it’s about shaping a future where your organization thrives in a world that demands sustainable action.

About the author

Karen Buttigieg

Group Manager Product Marketing at EcoOnline