Integrating sustainability: Moving beyond compliance to genuine integration | kandu

Integrating sustainability

"Integrating sustainability" has become one of the most overused phrases in corporate sustainability. After conferences and reporting summits, it floods platforms like LinkedIn. So what does integration really mean? And more importantly, how do organisations move from compliance-driven sustainability to genuine integration?

Compliance is often the logical starting point for sustainability. It provides clear requirements, measurable outcomes, and helps organisations manage regulatory and stakeholder expectations. Many organisations are working through the complexities of getting their reporting right - navigating frameworks, gathering data, and building systems.

What happens while organisations are figuring out these reporting challenges? They start noticing "integration" everywhere. The concept feels important and relevant, but what integration looks like in practice - or how to explore it while still getting reporting sorted - isn't always clear.

The thing about buzzwords

The challenge with "integrating sustainability" is that it sounds impressive but means different things to different people. Some organisations think they're integrating because they've added sustainability metrics to their reporting. Others believe integration means changing their strategy. Both approaches might be contributing, but neither helps you understand what to do on Monday morning.

This confusion creates what we call "integration theatre" - organisations that appear to be integrating sustainability but are actually rearranging compliance activities under a new label.

The separation trap

Through our work in sustainability education, we've come to understand a revealing pattern: when sustainability work remains completely separate from regular business activities it becomes resource-intensive rather than resource-smart. There's a predictable pattern that emerges across industries - sustainability gets mentioned in strategy documents but rarely influences decisions about budget, priorities, or day-to-day operations.

This disconnect shows up in recognisable ways: sustainability goals feature prominently in annual reports while procurement decisions, operational changes, and resource allocation happen without sustainability considerations. The strategy exists in one part of the organisation, operations in another.

This separation often reinforces the perception that sustainability is something that happens to the business rather than something the business does - and it typically requires more resources to maintain than approaches that naturally connect with existing workflows.

The data collection challenge

Sustainability teams often become trapped in data collection cycles - sending the same spreadsheet requests, following up on missing information, reconciling inconsistent responses. Meanwhile, the teams providing this data see it as an interruption to their "real work" because they don't understand how the information connects to business outcomes.

This isn't anyone's fault - it's what happens when sustainability sits separately from regular business processes. The sustainability team needs information to meet reporting requirements, but the process doesn't create value for the people providing the data. Everyone's doing their best within a system that wasn't designed for collaboration.

Why the "add it to everything" approach struggles

Organisations often try to integrate sustainability by adding it to everything at once. They update job descriptions, revise procurement policies, and announce new sustainability requirements across all departments simultaneously. This approach often creates more resistance than progress, but it's understandable - when you're committed to sustainability, the urge to act quickly across all areas is natural (and to be honest, needed).

The challenge isn't lack of commitment - it's overwhelm. When sustainability becomes another layer of complexity on top of existing responsibilities, people naturally focus on their core work and treat sustainability as something extra. This becomes particularly challenging during busy periods or when budgets are tight, and sustainability initiatives that feel separate from business activities are the first to be deprioritised.

The real integration test: Budget pressure

The most telling test of whether sustainability is integrated comes during periods of budget pressure or competing priorities. Organisations with genuine integration find that sustainability considerations remain part of decision-making even when resources are constrained. Those with integration theatre find that sustainability is the first thing to be postponed or deprioritised.

This happens because truly integrated sustainability feels connected to how the business operates and supports financial and operational performance, while integration theatre feels like additions that require separate resources to maintain.

The learning gap that's often overlooked

Most discussions about integration focus on systems, processes, and policies. But integration can't happen without people who understand how to make sustainability-informed decisions within their specific roles. This learning gap often gets overlooked in favour of structural solutions.

Organisations can have comprehensive sustainability policies, but if people haven't learned how to apply them to their daily decisions, integration remains theoretical. This explains why many organisations find themselves stuck between compliance and meaningful change.

The confidence challenge

In our educational work, we hear people using phrases like "I'd like to suggest a more sustainable approach, but I'm not sure if that's my place" - revealing that they have ideas but lack confidence to act on them. This hesitation makes sense when sustainability hasn't been clearly positioned as part of everyone's responsibility, or when people are worried about making the wrong choice in unfamiliar territory.

Encouragingly, when people do gain confidence to integrate sustainability thinking into their roles, they often discover it makes their work more efficient rather than more complicated.

Moving beyond the buzzword

Moving beyond integration theatre requires a shift away from trying to solve sustainability through policy alone. The most promising approaches focus on how people think about and approach their work, recognising that integration happens through learning and capability building, not just communication.

Moving beyond compliance doesn't mean abandoning structure - it means building on the foundation that compliance provides, using existing systems and processes as starting points rather than obstacles, which typically requires fewer additional resources than building parallel sustainability systems.

What this means for your learning journey

If the word 'integration' feels familiar but its practical meaning remains unclear, that's completely understandable. The buzzword has created more confusion than clarity for many organisations trying to progress beyond compliance.

These patterns suggest that moving beyond compliance isn't about better policies or systems - it's about fundamentally different thinking. Organisations ready to make this shift are looking for approaches that build on what's already working rather than adding complexity.

The key is recognising that integration isn't a destination you reach by implementing the right policies or systems. It's an ongoing learning process of building people's capability to think and act sustainably within their existing roles and responsibilities - often making their work easier, not harder.

Moving beyond the buzzword often starts with building practical capability.

The organisations that successfully integrate sustainability into their operations don't rely on policies alone. They recognise that genuine integration happens when people are supported to apply sustainable thinking naturally within their day-to-day roles. Getting there often takes more than policy updates, it requires different conversations, development strategies, and practical ways to measure progress.

For teams ready to explore what this kind of capability building might look like in practice, we find these conversations both interesting and practically valuable. If that describes where your organisation is heading, we'd love the opportunity to explore it together.