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3 HR strategies for aligning sustainability as a talent tool

July 14, 2025
in Human Resources
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3 HR strategies for aligning sustainability as a talent tool
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The national discourse on environmental issues is both changing and conflicting: The political landscape ushered in by the new Trump administration deemphasized investment in and attention to environmental issues; yet, the effects of climate change continue to pick up pace. This ongoing uncertainty is thrusting some employers into the spotlight as potential drivers of sustainability success.

It’s an investment most employees want to see: In 2023, Deloitte found that nearly 70% of U.S. employees want their organizations to back sustainability efforts, a figure that’s even higher among younger workers. Nearly half said an organization’s investment—or lack of—in sustainability would factor into their decision to accept a job at that organization.

For companies looking to deepen their sustainability work—and potentially capture talent wins from it—what does HR need to focus on?

HR executives at three leading organizations—jewelry maker Pandora, furniture retailer IKEA and Bloom Energy, a manufacturer of on-site power generators—about how their work to advance sustainability is contributing to long-term talent success.

Ensure it’s authentic

Sustainability is a core tenet of Pandora’s business strategy, says Chief HR Officer Byron Clayton. The company’s tangible goals—and accomplishments—bear that out: Last year, the organization beat its goal of using 100% recycled silver and gold materials by 2025, a strategy that saves more than 58,000 tons in carbon emissions annually.

Pandora aims to hit net-zero emissions by 2040 and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030, compared to when it set that goal in 2019.

The organization evaluates—and reports on—its carbon footprint and climate-related risks annually. Pandora also has a number of sustainability-backed loans through which financing is tied to the organization meeting its sustainability goals.

“[Investment in sustainability is] really ingrained and permeates through the whole organization,” Clayton says.

Byron Clayton, Pandora

That includes the talent strategy, with Clayton also overseeing the sustainability and communications divisions. Customers and employees alike, he says—and not only from younger generations—are “super-interested” in Pandora’s sustainability story.

“How do we think about the environment, the world, the community and how we contribute?” he says. “It’s something we’re weaving more and more into our employee value proposition.”

For sustainability work to have the most impact on talent strategy, he says, the commitment must be both broad and authentic. HR has partnered with leaders across the enterprise—marketing, commercial, production, logistics—to align their respective work to advance sustainability.

“It’s the whole organization, and it starts from the top and the fact that we have a CEO who believes in this and a board who supports it,” Clayton says. “This isn’t about greenwashing. These are really hard facts in terms of what Pandora says and what Pandora does.”

Center your values

At this spring’s HR Tech Europe, Therése Götsten, global people & culture digital manager at INGKA Group, the parent of IKEA, shared how the global retailer, long known for its approach to eco-friendliness, approaches the interplay of talent and sustainability strategies.

“IKEA is a very purposeful business,” she said. By that, she means IKEA’s business strategy is structured to answer some very intentional questions, which are motivated by the company’s embrace of “humanistic values.”

Therese Götsten, IKEA, on sustainability as a talent strategy
Therése Götsten, IKEA

IKEA encourages leaders to think outside the box, to pursue innovation by questioning how every decision will impact people and the planet, wondering about things like: “What if we could make furniture out of waste? What if we could plant more trees than we use? What if we turn the tables on food and make meatballs without meat?” Götsten said.

Too often, companies view success through a “customer-centric” lens—but that aperture needs to expand, especially in the “current political landscape,” she said.

“We need companies to create value for people and the planet at large,” she said. “I’m not saying that it’s easy. I think those important things are seldom easy to do; no one can do everything, but everyone can do something, especially together.”

Prioritize purpose

Sonja Wilkerson, Bloom Energy on sustainability as a talent strategy
Sonja Wilkerson, Bloom Energy

Sustainability is a natural part of how Bloom Energy operates, says Sonja Wilkerson, chief people officer. Bloom’s oxide fuel cells are carbon-free, powered entirely by hydrogen and are being utilized to power AI data centers.

“We are in the space of providing reliable, cost-effective and cleaner energy, so sustainability is who we are, what our employees come to us for,” she says.

Because of that, as the people function evaluates the impact of the organization’s sustainability work on talent strategy, it doesn’t focus on that language. Instead, it leans into Bloom’s mission—and candidates’ and employees’ drive to “make a difference.”

“We don’t call it out and say, ‘We’re sustainable,’ ” she says. “Who we are as a company reinforces that need for sustainability. Our employees are very mission-driven.”

*

HR Tech Editor Jill Barth contributed to this report.


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