According to KPMG, ‘Materiality assessment is the process of identifying, refining, and assessing numerous potential environmental, social and governance issues that could affect your business, and/or your stakeholders, and condensing them into a short-list of topics that inform company strategy, targets and reporting’. Simply put, materiality assessment helps an organization understand issues that matter most to its internal and external stakeholders. These issues have the potential to influence shareholders’ decisions.
Stakeholder engagement forms a crucial part of a materiality assessment. Your organization can gain valuable inputs from your stakeholders, which you can then incorporate while assessing your material topics.
Corporate organizations can use the process of materiality assessment to view their business from a sustainability lens and try to embed sustainability with their existing business processes. It helps in:
Although sustainability reporting is not mandatory as opposed to financial reporting, conducting a detailed materiality assessment can act as a guide to planning a company’s sustainability journey. There is no set time to conduct a materiality assessment, however, it is advisable to conduct one after significant changes to a business such as acquisitions, mergers, expansion to new geographies, new product line development, major regulatory changes or major black swan events, etc.
Increasing demand for transparency, investor demand and increasing emphasis on materiality reporting in frameworks and accounting standards such as Global Reporting Initiative’s (GRI) G4 guidelines, the International Integrated Reporting Framework, and the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) are enabling companies to move beyond profitability metrics and identify topics that may have material impacts in the future.
In financial reporting, the information is considered material if its omission or misstatement in financial statements impacts the decision of the users relying on those statements. However, in sustainability reporting, materiality refers to the ESG issues that matter most to the stakeholders and their impact on business operations.
For instance, managing water resources is a material issue for soft drink manufacturers. They are, therefore, likely to face pressure from stakeholder groups if the water used in soft drinks lowers the availability of water for consumption by the communities in the sourcing region. Failure to notice water scarcity as a material issue can:
There is no single way or universally-accepted approach to conducting the Materiality Assessment process and many companies onboard external consultants or leverage their sustainability teams to manage the process. Broadly, the materiality assessment can be divided into the following stages:
After listing materiality issues and gathering information on the issues that matter the most to stakeholder groups, companies can use a materiality matrix to present their findings. The matrix represents key sustainability issues in two dimensions with ‘Impact on the business on the X-axis and ‘Importance to stakeholders’ on the Y-axis. The issues can further be classified into ‘Moderate’, ‘High’, and ‘Very high’ based on their priority. An example of Unilever’s materiality matrix is presented here:
Companies can start their materiality assessment journey by taking smaller steps today to gather data and resources. Conducting a materiality assessment is often the starting point for fostering and maintaining conversations related to sustainability. By sharing this progress in corporate reports, companies can gain the trust and confidence of the stakeholders. If you would like to discuss your corporate reporting requirement, reach out to Report Yak, and we would be happy to draft a perfect report for maximum impact!
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