Why Accountability Must Start Long Before the Boardroom

Episode 110 | 3.7.2025

Why Accountability Must Start Long Before the Boardroom

In this episode of The Responsible Edge, we sit down with Andy Norris, an experienced leader in global corporate governance and organisational development. With a career shaped by both frontline experiences and board-level decision-making, Andy shares why accountability — real, uncomfortable, human accountability — begins long before anyone takes a seat at the table.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

There’s an uncomfortable truth lurking in the conversation around ethics, governance, and corporate responsibility: most leaders only think about accountability when they’re forced to. By then, it’s usually too late.

For Andy Norris, that’s the crux of the issue. Accountability, he argues, doesn’t start with frameworks, board charters, or glossy ESG reports. It starts with people. And more often than not, it starts with childhood.

“The lessons we absorb about fairness, right and wrong, and responsibility — they shape every decision we make, whether we’re conscious of it or not,” says Andy.

It’s an insight born not from textbooks, but from a career that’s spanned the operational trenches to the boardroom. Andy has worked with multinationals, advised on governance across sectors, and seen firsthand how flimsy accountability mechanisms can be if the foundations aren’t there.

 

🚧 The Flaw in Modern Governance

In today’s corporate landscape, governance often feels like a checklist. Diversity targets? Ticked. ESG policy? Published. Whistleblower hotline? Installed.

But as Andy points out, “You can have all the policies in place, but if people don’t truly feel responsible for their actions — if accountability isn’t part of the culture — those mechanisms collapse under pressure.”

It’s not about removing structures, but understanding their limits. Real change starts earlier, deeper.

 

🛠 Building a Culture of Pre-Boardroom Accountability

So how do organisations embed this ethos? Andy suggests three starting points:

Values before policies: Hire for integrity, not just technical skills.
Reward the uncomfortable: Celebrate those who raise concerns, even when it’s awkward.
Model it at every level: Leaders set the tone — not with slogans, but with actions.

It sounds simple. It isn’t. It requires what Andy calls “the courage to care,” a willingness to have the difficult conversations long before crisis hits.

 

⚡ The Business Case for Ethical Foundations

Beyond the moral imperative, Andy is clear: ethical leadership isn’t just about ‘doing the right thing’ — it’s commercial common sense. Organisations built on genuine accountability attract better talent, weather reputational storms, and create long-term value.

“The companies that succeed,” Andy explains, “are the ones where responsibility isn’t an add-on — it’s part of the DNA.”

 

FINAL THOUGHT

In a world obsessed with quick fixes and external validation, Andy Norris offers a refreshing — and necessary — reminder. Responsibility doesn’t start in the boardroom. It starts long before.

The real challenge? Having the humility, at every level, to accept that.

 

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The AI Catalyst: Why Humans Still Matter in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Episode 109 | 30.6.2025

The AI Catalyst: Why Humans Still Matter in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

In an era where AI writes poems, drives cars, and diagnoses diseases, it’s easy to feel like the machines are taking over. But as AI expert, United Nations advisor, and serial innovator Neil Sahota reminds us on The Responsible Edge, technology is only part of the story. The real question is: how do humans lead in a world where machines increasingly make decisions?

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

In a thought-provoking conversation with host Charlie Martin, Neil pulls back the curtain on the AI revolution—not with doom and gloom, but with pragmatic optimism.

“People always ask, will AI take our jobs? The real concern is whether we evolve fast enough to create the new ones.”

 

AI: Not Just for Coders

Neil’s background spans IBM’s Watson project to UN policy advising, but what sets him apart is his ability to cut through the tech jargon. AI isn’t just for Silicon Valley or data scientists—it’s rapidly becoming embedded in how businesses, governments, and individuals operate.

“AI is already shaping everything from healthcare to legal contracts. But without responsible leadership, it can easily exacerbate inequality or misinformation,” Neil warns.

For businesses, that means AI literacy is no longer optional. It’s a boardroom imperative.

 

🚀 The Leadership Test of Our Time

AI isn’t just about efficiency—it raises profound governance and ethical questions. Neil highlights three areas where business leaders must step up:

AI Ethics by Design: From bias in algorithms to accountability for machine-led decisions.
Reskilling at Scale: Preparing people for jobs that don’t yet exist.
Policy & Collaboration: Ensuring AI development aligns with human values globally.

“AI will challenge the very definition of what it means to be human in the workforce. That’s why leadership, not just engineering, matters most.”

 

🌍 The Global Perspective

Drawing on his work with the UN, Neil points to AI’s potential to tackle global challenges—from climate modelling to food security. But without collaboration across sectors and borders, these opportunities could be lost to short-termism or technological monopolies.

And while AI hype dominates headlines, Neil is refreshingly candid:

“The most dangerous myth is that AI is inevitable. Its impact depends entirely on human choices—what we prioritise, how we govern, and whether we include everyone.”

 

🎧 Listen to the Full Conversation

This episode of The Responsible Edge goes beyond the AI headlines. It’s a call to action for leaders, policymakers, and anyone curious about how we build a future where AI empowers rather than replaces us.

 

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The Case for Secret Sustainability Spies

Episode 108 | 25.6.2025

The Case for Secret Sustainability Spies

After years shaping sector-leading ESG strategy at Holcim, Magali Anderson is done waiting for change from the top. Now, she’s building change from the inside.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

Her new venture—S4: the Secret Society of Sustainability Spies—isn’t a stunt. It’s a philosophy: train people at all levels to embed sustainability into their everyday decisions, no job title required.

“If companies won’t go to sustainability, sustainability must go to the company—whether they want it or not.” — Magali

 

🕵️‍♀️ Changing the System Quietly

As Holcim’s first Chief Sustainability and Innovation Officer, Magali helped shape the cement industry’s first net-zero commitment and aligned executive pay to ESG metrics. But the CSO role, she says, is being hollowed out—stuck in reporting loops, isolated from the business’s core.

That’s why she’s turning toward “systemic subversion.” The new goal? Empower procurement officers, engineers, and marketers to push change from within—what she calls changing your job without telling anyone.

“Sustainability isn’t a job title. It’s a way of working.”

 

🧠 Why the CSO Role Isn’t Working

Magali is blunt about the burnout plaguing sustainability leaders. When asked why, she doesn’t hesitate:

“Too many CSOs are doing reporting instead of reshaping business models. That’s like asking a CEO to focus only on financial disclosures.”

Her solution: embed ESG where the power is—finance, operations, product. The job of a CSO should be to make themselves obsolete.

“The goal is for the CSO role to disappear because everyone is doing the job.”

 

🧱 Building Holcim’s ESG Edge

During her time at Holcim, Magali led some of the boldest moves in the building materials sector:

  • The first net-zero pledge validated by SBTi

  • Integration of nature targets into business strategy

  • Launch of the Roof Over Our Heads campaign to house 1 billion people

But for all the public wins, her focus was always internal: realigning incentives, simplifying systems, and rooting sustainability in business logic.

“We treated sustainability like a business transformation—not a comms campaign.”

 

🔮 From Oil Rigs to Boardrooms

Magali’s career began in oil and gas. She doesn’t hide it; she embraces it.

“I don’t feel guilty. Guilt locks the past. I use it to unlock the future.”

That honesty fuels her mission now: to help professionals everywhere reframe their roles, histories, and power to act.

 

✨ If She Had a Magic Wand…

No jargon. No tech. Just this:
Tie executive bonuses to long-term ESG metrics.

“You can’t ask factory workers to care about sustainability if their bosses aren’t paid to care.”

 

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Why Sustainability in Media Starts Off-Screen

Episode 107 | 22.6.2025

Why Sustainability in Media Starts Off-Screen

On this episode of The Responsible Edge, three voices from inside global content giant Banijay pull back the curtain on how sustainability is really shaped in the creative industries—not just in what we show on screen, but in how we show up to make it.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

The guests—Kate Humphreys (Chief Communications Officer), Edouard Minc (ESG Director), and Alma Santo (Format Manager and Banijay Green Co-Chair)—represent the rarely-aligned triangle of strategy, storytelling, and systems. Together, they reveal how one of the world’s most prolific entertainment firms is tackling ESG not as a comms challenge or compliance box, but as a cultural operating system.

“We produce 17,000 hours of content a year. That comes with serious responsibility.” — Kate Humphreys

 

🎬 The Real Battleground for ESG? Behind the Camera

Banijay’s influence spans over 70 countries and household names like Big Brother, Survivor, and MasterChef. But the ESG frontier, as Edouard Minc points out, doesn’t lie in splashy climate specials. It’s embedded in format bibles, carbon audits, and the design of studio kitchens.

From measuring emissions across hundreds of decentralized productions to embedding welfare guides in every format package, the company is building what Minc calls a “dual ESG strategy”: one for behind the scenes (decarbonisation, compliance, HR policies), and one for what appears on screen (storylines, casting, subtle norm-setting).

“Calculating emissions was step one. But our biggest challenge now is decarbonising how we create.” — Edouard Minc

 

🧠 Beyond Greenwashing: Authenticity as a System, Not a Slogan

The team’s approach to greenwashing is refreshingly clear-eyed. Rather than dodging the term, they interrogate its causes: stakeholder pressure, disconnected comms, and a temptation to lead with ambition instead of truth.

For Humphreys, the key is radical internal transparency—communicating internally before externally, and ensuring every campaign is “earned through action.” For Santo, that means making sustainability desirable and routine. Not every message needs a megaphone. Some should feel as normal as putting leftovers in the fridge.

“My utopia? That sustainability no longer needs to be said. It’s just how we do things.” — Alma Santo

 

🌍 Local Markets, Global Impact

With 23 countries and wildly diverse regulatory and cultural contexts, Banijay’s ESG strategy isn’t a top-down playbook. It’s a patchwork of locally tuned initiatives: from e-waste drives in Spain, to mandatory bibles that ensure green practices in unaffiliated production houses.

This decentralized model isn’t just practical—it’s philosophical. It reflects the media itself: local in flavor, global in influence.

“We’re not just a production company. We’re part of the media ecosystem that shapes norms. That comes with power—and pressure.” — Kate Humphreys

 

🪄 If They Had a Magic Wand…

  • Minc would make cross-industry ESG collaboration mandatory: “You can’t decarbonise in isolation.”

  • Humphreys wants companies to honour their values under pressure: “Authenticity is when you stick to your position even when it’s hard.”

  • Santo dreams of sustainability so embedded it no longer needs a name.

 

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The Creative Who Gave Up Magic Markers for Planetary Boundaries

Episode 106 | 19.6.2025

The Creative Who Gave Up Magic Markers for Planetary Boundaries

“We’re not reacting to windmills and green fields anymore,” says Martin Kann. “It’s just visual spam now.”

Martin Kann, one of Sweden’s most decorated creative directors, didn’t start his career wanting to save the planet. He wanted a desk full of coloured markers, like the ponytailed ad men he idolised at 17. But a lifetime orbiting two parental influences—his father, a Mad Men-era advertiser; his mother, a nature-loving artist—set the stage for a late, yet seismic pivot. Ten years ago, he walked away from a traditional agency partnership, abruptly exiting a system he realised was complicit in ecological harm.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

That decision wasn’t born of sudden enlightenment. It was, as Kann describes, “an unpleasant epiphany.” Despite decades spent immersed in natural environments during his free time—diving, birdwatching, identifying flora—he had never connected his day job to the crises he deeply cared about. “It was embarrassing,” he says. “I was a cog in a system built on eternal growth at the cost of everything.”

Kann’s journey is a case study in the power of alignment. After leaving his agency, he joined sustainability communication firm Futerra. “It felt like walking into heaven,” he recalls, describing the excitement of collaborating with climate strategists and communication activists. For someone who once viewed advertising as “the highest level of cleverness,” this new chapter was about redirecting that cleverness towards survival.

 

From Fear to Worry: A New Emotional Lexicon

Central to Kann’s current mission is emotional literacy. Referencing Anna Townley’s earth.org article on emotional engagement in climate messaging, Kann zeroes in on a paradox: while fear can paralyse, “worry” motivates. “Worry creates support,” he says.

“Fear, when overused, leads to fatigue.”

He’s seen the arc first-hand. The early days of climate comms relied heavily on doom: melting glaciers, starving polar bears, flooded cities. While impactful, these fear appeals often backfired, overwhelming audiences. The lesson? Humans aren’t persuaded by science alone—we act when we feel. And the sweet spot is not terror, but tension. Worry, Kann argues, is just enough emotion to drive action without tipping into paralysis.

This insight aligns with behavioural psychology’s “Goldilocks principle”: too little emotion, and people shrug. Too much, and they shut down. But just the right amount—a simmering concern? That’s where change brews.

 

Killing the Cliché: Why Visual Language Matters

One of Kann’s most powerful critiques is aimed at sustainability’s visual status quo. “We’ve exhausted the tropes,” he says.

“Smiling families in green fields, hands cradling Earth—it’s all wallpaper now.”

He believes the biggest communications challenge isn’t inventing new facts—it’s disrupting stale aesthetics.

“The visuals need to change before minds do,” Kann argues. And he’s right: humans process images far faster than words, and emotional cues often come more from tone and imagery than rational argument. In this sense, sustainability comms isn’t just a content issue—it’s a design problem.

 

What Does Success Look Like Now?

For Kann, success is no longer measured in Cannes Lions or market share. “Success is making a real difference,” he says.

“It’s using creativity not for persuasion, but for transformation.”

His “magic wand” wish? A commercial world unshackled from short-termism. In such a world, brands would optimise for ecological continuity, not quarterly returns. “Nature restores quickly if you let it,” Kann notes. “But we need long-term thinking to let that happen.”

 

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Decoding Nature’s Balance Sheet: The Race to Quantify Biodiversity in Finance

Episode 105 | 16.6.2025

Decoding Nature’s Balance Sheet: The Race to Quantify Biodiversity in Finance

On this episode of The Responsible Edge, Cédric Olivares-Jirsell, Director of Sustainability Data at Matter, joins the show to unpack one of the most complex and urgent frontiers in ESG: making biodiversity legible—and investable.

Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.

Cédric’s path from traditional finance to biodiversity metrics is both a personal and professional evolution. With experience at institutions like Schroders, Russell Investments, and Matter, he brings deep quantitative expertise to an area many in finance still struggle to define, let alone measure.

But what if nature wasn’t just priceless—but priced?

 

🌿 The Biodiversity Blindspot in Finance

“Historically, the financial sector has treated biodiversity as too complex to touch,” says Cédric. “But the reality is that biodiversity underpins our economy in ways we haven’t even begun to quantify.”

While climate has clearer proxies (like carbon), biodiversity lacks a single, unifying metric. This has made it easy to ignore—and difficult to regulate. That’s changing fast.

Cédric’s team at Matter is responding to frameworks like the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) and evolving EU regulation by building datasets and scoring systems to bring biodiversity into the fold of investment decision-making. They’re quantifying exposure, impact, and alignment with global nature goals—all while navigating significant scientific and methodological uncertainty.

 

📉 From Gut Feel to Data-Driven Risk

Biodiversity loss isn’t just an ecological tragedy—it’s a material financial risk. Supply chains fail when pollinators disappear. Insurance claims rise when wetlands that prevent flooding are paved over. But these systemic risks are rarely captured in quarterly reports.

“We need to move from qualitative guesswork to decision-useful, quantitative data,” Cédric explains. “That means mapping corporate activity to actual biodiversity outcomes.”

Matter’s approach doesn’t just look at direct biodiversity impacts (like deforestation), but also indirect dependencies—such as water use or habitat fragmentation. The result? A far more granular picture of nature risk exposure.

 

🧠 Complexity Is a Feature, Not a Bug

Cédric is quick to caution against oversimplification.

“You don’t solve biodiversity the same way you solve carbon. It’s not a single figure; it’s a web of interdependencies. But that’s not a reason to give up—it’s a reason to lean in.”

Indeed, Matter’s work reflects a new kind of ESG thinking: one that embraces nuance and uncertainty, rather than papering over it with vanity metrics or green gloss.

 

🧭 What’s Next? Rethinking Value Itself

When asked what he hopes the industry will look like in 5–10 years, Cédric is clear:

“I hope we’ve moved past the idea that nature is an externality. It’s foundational. And our financial systems need to reflect that.”

That means not just better data—but better decisions. Capital must flow away from extractive business models and toward regenerative ones. That shift is already underway—but tools like Matter’s Natural Capital & Biodiversity Framework will be essential to accelerating it.

 

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