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Amplifying simplicity in consumer goods sustainability: Your 10-step guide to success

Sphera Editorial Team

Today, retail executives face pressure from every direction. Investors are scrutinizing ESG performance. Regulators are tightening compliance requirements. Consumers increasingly demand sustainable products. Social media can turn a misstep into a brand crisis overnight. 

This risk isn’t new. In the 1990s, Nike faced near-catastrophic backlash over poor working conditions in contract factories. Though Nike didn’t directly manufacture those products, consumers didn’t care about the distinction. The reputational damage was severe and took years to mend. 

Today’s retailers face similar vulnerabilities, managing thousands of products across global supply chains where visibility often stops at the first tier. But you have more control than you think. Especially with your own-brand products, there’s a clear roadmap through the complexity.  

You’ve likely asked yourself: Should we drop a non-compliant supplier—or invest in their improvement? Should we delay time-to-shelf to validate ESG data—or keep moving to hit revenue goals? This 10-step guide isn’t theory—it’s designed for the reality of retail decision-making. 

By following the 10 steps below, you can turn sustainability into a competitive advantage. 

Your guide to sustainable success 

Step 1: Establish your vision 

Start with the “why” before you dive into “how.” Your sustainability vision should connect directly to business outcomes your leadership team cares about, whether that’s reducing supply chain disruptions, meeting customer expectations or accessing new markets. 

Get your leadership team aligned on specific goals that matter to your bottom line: lower supplier risk, reduced costs or a better brand reputation. With private label products, you have direct control over these outcomes through your sourcing decisions. 

Step 2: Map your categories and prioritize risk 

You can’t tackle everything at once, so start by identifying where you’re most exposed. Think about which product categories have the most complex supply chains, the highest environmental impact or the greatest potential for labor issues. Platforms that cover the full range of consumer goods categories can reveal patterns and guide prioritization.  

To jump-start your efforts, create a risk matrix that weighs the likelihood of issues against their potential business impact. A category with moderate sustainability challenges but high consumer visibility may demand more focus than a low-profile one with slightly higher risk. 

For example, apparel retailers may trace yarn to mills—but what happens upstream at the farm level is often invisible. This is where social compliance risks hide—and where consumer trust can unravel. 

Step 3: Engage suppliers with confidence 

Vague sustainability requests are no longer enough. Approach supplier conversations with data, clear frameworks and specific expectations. Your suppliers want to do business with you, but they need concrete guidance on what “sustainable” means to you. This is especially true for private label relationships, where you have significant influence over their practices. 

By using standardized criteria that align with industry frameworks, you gain the credibility to have meaningful conversations about opportunities for improvement. When you can point to specific metrics, suppliers are more likely to respond positively. 

Step 4: Collect high-quality, standardized data 

Collecting data across your supplier network is necessary for meaningful insights. Unified platforms simplify the process, allowing suppliers to submit information once and share it across multiple retail partners, reducing friction and boosting response rates. 

When you move to centralized platforms, you help eliminate version control issues and unlock benchmarking dashboards that allow leadership to course-correct in real time. 

Quality matters more than quantity here. Focus on core sustainability indicators that actually predict risk and drive business outcomes. 

Step 5: Benchmark performance against standards 

Context is key. Benchmarking against industry leaders and competitors helps you understand what’s possible and where your competitive edge lies. This allows you to set realistic but ambitious targets for your suppliers. 

Regular benchmarking also helps you identify emerging best practices and potential red flags before they become widespread issues. Stay ahead of trends rather than reacting to them. 

Step 6: Identify sustainability hotspots 

This is where you’ll see the real impact. Sustainability hotspots — where environmental or social risks align with business priorities — are your greatest opportunities for change. 

Look for patterns in your data that reveal recurring problems. Maybe certain geographies consistently show higher risk scores or specific supplier types struggle with particular metrics. With data-driven, targeted action, you can yield significant results. 

Step 7: Turn insights into action 

Insights alone aren’t enough; they must drive action. Work with suppliers to create improvement plans with clear timelines, support and progress tracking. 

The most effective improvement programs combine supplier support and clear incentives with consequences for non-compliance. Most suppliers want to improve but need clear guidance or technical support to get there. Private label suppliers are often especially willing to invest in improvements. 

Collaborative platforms that enable ongoing communication and progress tracking make it easier to maintain momentum and address issues head-on. Regular check-ins keep everyone aligned and accountable. 

Step 8: Demonstrate measurable progress 

Consistent metrics and regular reporting show that your sustainability program delivers real results, building credibility with stakeholders. The key is to tell a compelling story with your data. Explain what the numbers mean for your business, your customers and your partners.  

Measurable progress also helps you refine your approach. What’s working? Where are you seeing the biggest improvements? Where are you falling behind? This intelligence sharpens your program and supports scaling. 

Step 9: Scale successful practices 

Once you’ve proven what works, expand it across your entire product portfolio. Build sustainability criteria into procurement processes so every new supplier relationship starts with clear expectations. 

Scaling requires systematizing what you’ve learned into repeatable processes and tools. Document best practices, create templates and workflows, and train your teams to integrate sustainability into their decisions. 

Step 10: Leverage network effects 

The real power lies in collaboration. Joining established networks amplifies your influence with suppliers while reducing administrative burden. Instead of every retailer asking for slightly different sustainability information, suppliers can submit standardized data that meets multiple partners’ needs simultaneously. 

These networks accelerate learning, letting you adapt proven strategies from other retailers to your needs without forcing you to reinvent the wheel. 

Making the complex simple 

These 10 steps provide a clear roadmap, but executing them effectively requires the right technology and expertise. Instead of trying to build these capabilities from scratch, you can join proven platforms and established networks that streamline the entire process. 

When you’re part of a system that leading retailers already trust, you benefit from collective influence, shared learnings and reduced complexity. Science-based frameworks and scalable technology make the overwhelming much more manageable. 

THESIS delivers the system and network top retailers rely on — built on science, designed for scale.  

Ready to see how it works? Let’s start the conversation about transforming your approach to sustainable sourcing. 

The Next Disruption Is Already Underway

Supply chain complexity is growing. An electric vehicle relies on materials and components from more than 40 countries, and a single bottleneck in rare earth processing can stall final production. The question is no longer if disruption will strike, but whether you’ll see it coming in time to act.

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