Since the dawn of corporate sustainability, communicators have grappled with how to talk about complex topics in a way that is simple and meaningful, while resonating with audiences as diverse as investors, consumers, regulators, and employees.
Until now, the default has been a 60-plus-page sustainability report, which jams all the stories and disclosures into one document and often falls short of being exactly what anyone is truly looking for — as we discussed in this article.
Now, in 2025, a rising tide of regulation — including CSRD in Europe and climate disclosure rules in California — is rightfully directing the shift toward more rigorous, financial-grade sustainability reporting. This evolution provides a powerful opportunity for companies to get serious about their disclosures. But it also raises a critical question: If our formal report is dedicated to technical disclosure, where do our highlights, case studies, and human-interest stories go?
This is the moment to rethink how we communicate. The era of a single, catch-all approach is over. An effective sustainability communications strategy today is actually three interconnected, essential parts:
This strategy will look different depending on your business, brand, stakeholders, and goals. And like all great strategies, the process begins with a clarification of your companies’ fundamental motivation.
The “why” we start with is: Why is your company focused on sustainability? The answer determines where you should focus your resources and how you should frame your story. We see companies falling along a spectrum of archetypes.
This spectrum is not a scale of worst to best. Rather, it’s a tool to clarify your primary motivation, which in turn dictates your communications focus and where to direct your sustainability communication resources. Companies toward the Risk Manager end of the spectrum should concentrate more resources on best-in-class reporting and investor communications, while companies toward the Game Changer end of the spectrum should devote more resources to brand campaigns and targeted stakeholder engagement.
Once you are clear on your "why," you need to get clear on "what" you will communicate about. We use a simple filter to prioritize topics:
Your "why" tells you where to devote resources, and your "what" tells you what topics to focus on where. Together, they shape your communications strategy, which should always consist of three parts:
The answer to “what do I talk about today?” is, frustratingly, “it depends.” But by understanding your unique "why" and "what," you can build a sophisticated, multi-part communications playbook that meets the moment with clarity, confidence, and impact.
To learn more about how to build your Stakeholder Engagement and Campaign & Amplification strategies, read Part II—From generic to genuine: Crafting authentic sustainability messages in turbulent times and Part III—How to make your engagement strategy land in our series. And download our free Mastering Your Sustainability Story in Turbulent Times ebook.