Financial statements: the importance of knowing how to read your business’s figures - evol

Financial statements: the importance of knowing how to read your business’s figures

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Fannie Pelletier, a CPA with 20 years of experience at the helm of an SME, is now a business strategy consultant. She has a clear message for small and medium-sized businesses: adopting the ESG framework is not just a good idea; it’s a winning strategy.

ESG makes it possible to meet the growing needs of clients, employees and other stakeholders and opens the door to new opportunities, by transforming the challenges of sustainable development into competitive advantages.

ESG: a new vision of performance

The acronym ESG, which stands for environmental, social and governance, refers to a framework based on sustainable development, as defined by the UN: “Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” 

ESG pushes businesses to manage their environmental and social impact, while building ethical, transparent governance. For SMEs, this means evaluating and adapting their practices, with a specific objective: achieving performance beyond mere financial profitability.

This framework opens a new path and facilitates action. By taking into account ESG criteria, businesses adopt ways to better manage risks, seize opportunities and increase their resilience. SMEs that adopt ESG are sending a strong message: they want to grow while remaining faithful to human and sustainable values.

Why adopt an ESG initiative? The concrete benefits

Beyond principles, as commendable as they may be, are there advantages for SMEs that take action on ESG? For Fannie Pelletier, question asked, question answered. Here are a few examples:

Attracting and retaining talent. Younger generations place importance on their employers’ values. An engaged SME more easily attracts and retains talent, reducing the cost of employee turnover.

Enhancing reputation. Adopting ESG strengthens the brand image. This becomes a competitive advantage, particularly with clients who care about ethics and environmental impact.

Reducing costs. ESG encourages better resource management. Reducing energy consumption and using recycled materials limits long-term costs.

Complying with regulations. Laws are increasingly strict around practices that respect the environment and society. Engaging in ESG means anticipating these requirements and avoiding fines and sanctions.

Accessing new markets. An ESG SME can attract more clients, particularly businesses and consumers who want responsible partners.

Examples of ESG initiatives for SMEs

For SMEs, adopting ESG doesn’t mean suddenly overhauling their business model. Here are some concrete actions, appropriate to the often-limited financial resources of small businesses:

  • Environmental: measure and reduce your carbon footprint, foster the circular economy (for example, by recycling raw materials) and adopt energy efficient practices.
  • Social: promote diversity, guarantee equitable working conditions and support local initiatives. These accessible actions reinforce the corporate culture and community ties.
  • Governance: adopt measurable objectives to manage social and environmental impacts, implement governance that is accountable for these issues, along with policies and guidelines.

Each individual initiative may seem small but combining them transforms the business and its image. Together they enable SMEs to stand out in a market that is increasingly attuned to sustainable practices.

How to prioritize ESG initiatives

Since resources are limited (time, energy, personnel, money), SMEs have to be strategic in their choice of ESG initiatives: they can’t do it all and will steer off course if they don’t prioritize. 

The main thing is to focus efforts where the impact will be the greatest. Here are the key steps:

  1. Analyze the context: identify the business’s specific issues. Every SME has unique challenges; this step makes it possible to personalize ESG priorities.
  2. Identify challenges: create an initial list of objectives using tools such as the SASB materiality map and the BCorp questionnaire or by consulting reports of similar businesses.
  3. Get stakeholders commitment: understand the expectations of employees, clients and partners through surveys and discussions to align priorities on each one’s needs.
  4. Prioritize: rank challenges based on their importance and available resources. SMEs can pick their battles: focusing on high-impact initiatives maximizes return on investment.

Following these steps, SMEs optimize their ESG efforts by aligning their strategy with stakeholder expectations and prioritizing concrete efforts.

The future is ESG

ESG is more than an obligation or a trend – it’s a strategic opportunity for SMEs. By adopting these principles, small businesses reinforce their resilience, attract new clients, retain talent and open up to new markets. ESG enables SMEs to position themselves as responsible, competitive actors in a world that must change.

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