Sustainability in 2025 isn’t easy.
Business leaders are under immense pressure, to perform, navigate headwinds, and educate the public. In trying to juggle everything, many inevitably feel overwhelmed and begin to question their place in the sector.
With their backs against the wall, these leaders need practical advice to protect their organisations, sharpen their strategy, and drive growth, or risk losing stakeholder confidence, facing business decline, and fuelling broader instability across the sector and the planet.
That’s why we’ve created this article: to outline five essential sustainability strategies every business leader must adopt now to drive growth in 2025 and beyond.
Become a sustainability thought leader
The most sustainable companies today, not only incorporate sustainability into their branding but also actively contribute to trending discussions in the media, social media, and at events. This not only keeps these companies relevant but positions them as subject matter experts.
Usually, this is led by a senior executive who acts as a thought leader on behalf of the company. It could be a Founder who is passionate about a green economy, a Head of Sustainability who guides the business’s ESG strategy, or a Chief Technician who leads cleantech design.
In short, the key to success lies in these thought leaders having a unique, timely, and thought-provoking perspective that genuinely drives influence among key stakeholders across blogs, social accounts, earned media engagements, and industry events.
Of course, when starting from the ground up, becoming a credible and well-followed thought leader takes time. But with consistency, smaller wins in trade outlets lead to national coverage. Continued appearances on industry podcasts open doors to broadcast opportunities. And regular social media engagement builds lasting relationships with key stakeholders.
As their profile grows, so too does public understanding of why sustainability matters, gradually breaking down resistance to change.
Learn from others
Just as you should consider becoming a thought leader to educate others, you also need to be willing to learn from your peers. Because no matter how successful your business is there’s bound to be several things you’re yet to get right.
This might be your communication style and how you present yourself, your adaptability in the face of challenges, or the left-field opportunities that could make your company even more sustainable.
So, consider keeping a close eye on trending stories in the press, social media debates, and keynote speeches you hear at conferences to continually evolve with entire sustainability landscape.
Back-up messaging with action
Above all pieces of advice that can be given to companies and their business leaders when it comes to sustainability, there’s none greater than practicing what you preach.
According to the sustainability thought leadership specialists’ Profile, not enough leaders do. They set themselves up for unnecessary scrutiny from environmentally conscious investors, consumers, talent, partners, and regulators, leading to a drop in share price, sales, productivity, and even fines.
So, whenever launching fresh marketing campaigns, new branding materials, or thought leadership campaigns, remember to balance these activities with progress-led content, such as internal case studies, heavily cited facts and figures, or employee testimonials that ultimately enhance credibility and earn long-term trust.
Hire the right personalities
Continuing with action-oriented strategies: have you considered making sustainable thinking a core part of your hiring process?
If you’re building a company that genuinely wants to better the planet, it makes sense to hire people who share that ambition.
Too few companies do. That’s often why sustainability protocols are ignored, careless comments appear on social media, and promising hires eventually leave. It’s time more leaders, and their recruitment teams, learned from this.
Over the past decade, hiring for personality has become almost as important as hiring for skill. Given the urgency of Net Zero deadlines, there’s never been a more important time to do both.
Ignore headwinds
As a sustainability leader, it can be demotivating to face the kind of headwinds we’ve seen over the past year, from geopolitical tensions to high interest rates and tariffs.
Up-and-coming entrepreneurs may even question whether their businesses have any real chance of catalysing change.
But what matters in times like these isn’t just the pressure to restructure operations and protect balance sheets. It’s the relentless effort to overcome these challenges by doubling down on what you do best and leading from the front, so others are inspired to do the same.
That’s what will ultimately separate the best sustainability firms from the rest in the years to come.
So, stay strong. Stay bold. And keep up the fight.