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Straight Talking Sustainability

Emma Burlow
Straight Talking Sustainability
Latest episode

73 episodes

  • Straight Talking Sustainability

    Want to make your sustainability idea go viral? Lessons From Evolution, Memes & the Romans

    09/03/2026 | 22 mins.
    In this intellectually stimulating solo episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow draws unexpected connections between Richard Dawkins' 1976 concept of memes from "The Selfish Gene," Professor Alice Roberts' book "Dominance" exploring Christianity's spread across the Roman Empire, and the historic Green Party by-election win in Manchester to explain why some workplace sustainability ideas thrive whilst others die despite passionate advocacy, brilliant facts, and months of effort.
    The answer is not about working harder or having better data; it is about understanding that survival of the fittest means fit for the conditions, not strongest or most factually correct.
    Emma opens with her girl crush on Professor Alice Roberts (anatomist, trained doctor, Birmingham University professor) whose Dominance book tour revealed a crucial insight: Christianity succeeded across the Roman Empire because conditions made the idea fit, not because the idea was objectively superior.
    This led Emma to discover that Richard Dawkins coined the term "meme" in 1976 (not the internet), derived from Greek mimeme meaning "something imitated," shortened to sound like gene. Memes spread through culture exactly as genes spread through populations: they replicate, mutate, and compete for attention and survival.
    Crucially, memes thrive when conditions are right (timing, wit, playing on fears or humour), just as sustainability ideas compete in seas of news, business priorities, and workplace distractions.
    Dawkins' "survival of the fittest" does not mean strongest or only heroes survive; fit means suited for the environment, perfect to thrive in those conditions. This is workplace sustainability: why some initiatives take off whilst loads flop, leaving professionals wondering how hard they must work when the real issue is environmental mismatch, not effort deficiency.
    Three Requirements For Ideas To Thrive:
    First, conditions must be right. Workplaces function as ecologies: some are lush biodiverse innovation hubs, others resemble disused car parks with rubbish and single bramble bushes. Identical approaches fail or succeed based on existing conditions (net zero targets, nervous leadership wanting to look useful, pain points creating opportunities).
    Reading the room, sensing emotions, identifying challenges, and finding crevices to sneak into matters more than perfect pitch decks. Do not flog dead horses; find where micro-environments already exist.
    Second, ideas must be relatable. People adopt things that feel like them (why memes go viral, why abstract Scope 3 dashboards get blank stares whilst team-specific quarterly projects gain traction).
    Holding meetings at 9am about sustainability versus lunch-and-learn meet-and-greets with snacks, games, competitions, and Teams promotion creates vastly different engagement. Being spontaneous and relevant beats bland diary placeholders every time.
    Third, ideas must travel well. Post-it note test: can you explain your sustainability meme in one breath? If it needs 30-second elevator pitches, it is too complex. People must pass it on without fully understanding it (Christianity spread across empires with minimal written records for hundreds of years) and without looking stupid if they get it wrong. Zero friction, no demanding actions from busy people.
    The Green Party Manchester By-Election Case Study:
    Hannah Spencer's 41% vote share becoming first Northern Green MP demonstrates perfect timing and conditions. Analysts noted her relatability (plumber with lived experience) resonating during cost-of-living pressure and dissatisfaction with other parties.
    Critics complained Greens were not talking about environment enough, missing the strategic point: winning votes when nobody wants environmental talk requires leaning into cost-of-living and immigration whilst maintaining Green identity.
    Someone on Facebook claimed voters did not know it was an environmental party; Emma responds "they're called the Greens," noting you would really have to miss that obvious signal.
    Practical Workplace Applications:
    Stop pushing ideas that do not fly. Read rooms, be relatable, find pain points, talk about sustainability without mentioning it (Hannah Spencer is a Green MP who persuaded thousands on different tickets).
    Gain trust first, then slide ideas in. Struggling green teams often use wrong vehicles; make ideas fit conditions rather than forcing compliance. Create micro-environments (moss in rock crevices, seeds in tree gaps) where tiny cultural shifts enable growth. Be happy people are talking about something they were not discussing last week; perfection is not required. Make ideas sticky like memes (if needing explanations or straplines, probably will not work).
    Time pitches carefully: financial problems mean talk about cutting food waste not solar panel investment; office restructures mean internal reuse processes not abstract strategy.
    Emma concludes: if Christianity can spread across empires purely by hearsay, if plumbers can become MPs during political division, sustainability projects can survive quarters and years by morphing to fit conditions. Someone must plant acorns for trees to bloom decades later.
    In this evolutionary biology and workplace change episode, you'll discover:
    Why Richard Dawkins coined "meme" in 1976 from Greek mimeme (something imitated)
    How ideas spread through culture like genes through populations (replicate, mutate, compete)
    Why "survival of the fittest" means suited for environment, not strongest
    The three requirements for ideas to thrive (right conditions, relatability, travels well)
    How Hannah Spencer's 41% Green Party vote demonstrates strategic messaging over purity
    Why struggling green teams often use wrong vehicles for their workplace ecology
    The micro-environment strategy (moss in crevices) for cultural shifts
    How Christianity spread across Roman Empire with minimal written records proves simplicity works
    Why timing matters more than data quality (financial problems require different pitches than restructures)
    The post-it note test for sticky ideas (one breath explanation, zero friction)

    Key Insights:
    (02:37) Conditions make ideas fit: "Christianity spread across the Roman Empire... it was successful because the conditions made the idea fit."
    (04:32) Dawkins coined meme: "The word meme actually came from Richard Dawkins. 1976, evolutionary biologist. He coined the term meme... as a way that ideas spread through a culture the same way as genes spread through populations."
    (06:48) Why ideas fail: "An idea doesn't spread just because it's a great idea. And it certainly doesn't just spread because you've spent weeks or months or years nurturing it."
    (08:53) Survival of the fittest redefined: "Survival doesn't mean strongest, it means fit for its conditions. That's why if you come out with the best figures, the best facts, the slickest pitch deck and you get tumbleweed, now you know why."
    (17:51) Micro-environments matter: "Trying to create micro environments... What is the smallest thing you can do to shift a culture, a behaviour, a team and then move forward. We often pitch too high."
    (20:18) Timing is everything: "The best idea will not take root if you pitch it in the wrong season, the wrong place, or at the wrong time to the wrong people. It won't work."
    Useful Links
    Alice Roberts — Books — On Tour May 2025
    The Selfish Gene | Richard Dawkins
    Meme | Definition, Meaning, History, & Facts | Britannica
    Connect With Emma
    Website
    Email
    Emma Burlow - LinkedIn
    Book an enquiry call with Emma
    https://calendly.com/emma-lighthouse/20min
  • Straight Talking Sustainability

    How To Reuse Corporate Surplus: Connecting Business Waste With Charities That Need It

    02/03/2026 | 40 mins.
    In this practical and inspiring episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow sits down with Cathy Benwell, co-founder of A Good Thing, a Community Interest Company (CIC) that has created a matchmaking platform connecting 1,000 UK businesses donating surplus items with 3,500 charities and non-profits desperate for exactly those materials, from construction supplies and hotel bedding to branded merchandise and the occasional life-size inflatable elephant.
    Starting in February 2020 with just 10 businesses and 15 charities, this volunteer-powered organisation (45 volunteers supporting one part-time paid operations manager) has grown explosively by solving a problem everyone recognises but few have systematically addressed: businesses drowning in perfectly good stuff they no longer need, charities surrounded by wealthy organisations yet struggling to access basic supplies, and the frustrating reality that what people do naturally at home through Freecycle or Facebook Marketplace somehow becomes impossible once they walk into their workplace.
    Cathy's background spans publishing (graduate training scheme with a book company), government communications as a civil servant, then a transformative maternity leave involvement with HomeStart (UK-wide charity supporting families with young children) that ignited passion for charities whilst revealing the massive opportunity to connect them with businesses possessing surplus resources.
    Cathy's HomeStart colleagues worked on laptops taking 10 minutes just to boot up (literally making tea whilst waiting), yet at Squared Up, software developers routinely received new laptops every three years with old ones accumulating in cupboards because nobody had time, knowledge, or job responsibility to handle disposal.
    Cathy delivered Squared Up laptops to HomeStart within a week, creating transformative impact on colleagues' working days, but this only happened because she and Richard had that personal connection. They identified this as fundamentally wrong: opportunities should not depend on who you know or circumstantial connections, echoing wider societal movements towards evening playing fields and widening access.
    This represented a revelation for Cathy, who initially expected branding to be a barrier, but typically it is bland (banks, insurance companies) and actually provides excellent publicity when food bank parcels get distributed in branded bags.
    Regular items include massive furniture volumes, tech (laptops, tablets, printers, landline phones surprisingly popular), and stationery that took Cathy by surprise. Envelopes, boxes of biros, post-it notes, pads all get snapped up in seconds despite seeming relatively low value, because they accumulate in office cupboards (especially post-pandemic when people are not in offices as much) and charities genuinely need them.
    Emma recalls encouraging "stationery amnesties" during waste audits where everyone empties drawers and pockets, revealing half a ton of squirrelled supplies that make new ordering unnecessary, but placing orders is faster than spending half an hour searching cupboards when budget exists.
    Charities and non-profits (including CICs and community benefit societies, carefully vetted before joining) currently exclude schools, universities, NHS organisations, and local councils, though this remains under review based on business feedback.
    Businesses appreciate knowing charities are carefully checked and verified, providing peace of mind that recipients are definitely good causes. Cathy acknowledges other platforms like WarpIt (Dan's work with universities and NHS) serve different pathways, preferring to create structures that work well rather than accommodating everyone in everything.
    The Measurement Debate and Qualitative Magic:
    Emma asks about volume and impact measurement, revealing Cathy's controversial but pragmatic position that generates daily inbox floods of gratitude. A Good Thing deliberately does not count or certify matches because as online-only matchmakers (no premises, warehouse, distribution, or storage), they cannot verify how many chairs actually got donated, what they weighed, or what they were worth (calculations being very complicated).
    They know matches made (over 1,000 last year, each containing multitudes of items) and platform user numbers, but Cathy expresses frustration with business fixation on measurement: "I just want to say to them, honestly, you won't believe how powerful this is. Just do it and you'll see."
    Daily qualitative feedback floods inboxes with businesses and charities reporting transformative experiences, creating nonstop positivity that Cathy's husband jokes about. However, translating this to businesses without sounding cheesy whilst conveying genuine impact proves challenging.
    The fastest match happened in four minutes end-to-end: signup, account creation, listing, charity interest, match completion for items sitting in warehouses 18 months. Emma validates Cathy's frustration, arguing we are obsessed with measuring when solving problems requires action beyond metrics.
    What businesses lack are goodwill, community sense, and positivity: "Do we need another number in a box, or do we need staff to come to work with spring in their step, really proud of their organisation?"
    Emma shares her joyful Great Oaks Hospice training experience in the Forest of Dean, where carers, volunteers, trustees, CEO, and fundraisers demonstrated such strong community connection that it tested her assumptions about carbon auditing and waste documentation.
    The magic cannot be counted, yet proves easier to access in SMEs better connected to local communities who genuinely need and rely on that goodwill. Emma notes she has not used the word sustainability and barely mentioned carbon throughout this conversation, demonstrating how relatable reuse framing becomes.
    Barriers, Liability, and The "What Will Go Wrong?" Default:
    When asked why more businesses do not participate if it is so obvious, Cathy identifies awareness (many people do not yet know about A Good Thing), time pressures (stuff must be gone by tomorrow when skips arrive, nobody thought about it until that moment because it was not anyone's job), and perceived barriers around complexity, expense, or liability.
    Emma recognises liability concerns constantly arising with reusables and circularity, noting the default business position is "what's going to go wrong, what trouble am I going to get in?" whether regarding infection control in healthcare or PAT testing for electricals.
    Cathy emphasises donations happen on a goodwill basis with clear user notes: donors believe items are safe and working order, recipients understand third-party checking has not occurred, but everyone seems happy with this because it is a self-selecting community of people wanting it to work.
    Zero abuse has occurred, zero problems have arisen, though Cathy acknowledges this might change at tens of thousands of users. Emma challenges whether problems would actually emerge, arguing that whilst the "what will go wrong" mindset is understandable, it does not serve us well socially, financially (storing unused items improperly), or humanely, noting that much business operation fundamentally does not serve humans well.
    Emma observes that people routinely use vintage marketplaces, Olio, Too Good To Go, and similar platforms, suggesting the leap to business usage is not far, though perhaps requiring evolution to increase business comfort and reduce concerns.
    Branded merchandise companies emerge as the most frequent repeat users because they maintain steady surplus streams from slightly incorrect printing, complete client rebrands (2,000 high-quality stainless steel water bottles suddenly unwanted), with clients saying "just get rid of those" and considering it not their problem.
    Twenty years ago these went to landfill; now branded merchandise manufacturers desperately search for alternatives, making them core platform users alongside bags (surprisingly popular despite everyone drowning in them) for charities supporting homelessness and numerous other applications.
    In this corporate reuse and charity partnership episode, you'll discover:
    How A Good Thing grew from 10 businesses and 15 charities to 1,000 businesses and 3,500 charities in five years
    Why laptops taking 10 minutes to boot up at HomeStart sat in cupboards at Squared Up creating the genesis story
    The surprising popularity of construction materials, hotel lost property, and branded merchandise nobody cares is branded
    How stationery (envelopes, biros, post-it notes) flies off the platform despite seeming low-value
    Why Cathy deliberately avoids counting and certification despite business demands for impact data
    The four-minute match record from warehouse item listing to charity collection arrangement
    How "what will go wrong?" default thinking prevents circular economy adoption across sectors
    Why measurement fixation distracts from goodwill, community connection, and staff pride that cannot be quantified
  • Straight Talking Sustainability

    Why Won't It Stop Raining? The Case for Global Wetting AND Global Warming

    23/02/2026 | 19 mins.
    In this timely and practical solo episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow challenges decades of climate communication focused on warming, heat, and melting ice caps by asking a provocative question: should we be talking more about global wetting, given that people find it incredibly easy to talk about weather (especially rain) but remarkably difficult to discuss sustainability or climate change?
    Inspired by Professor Ed Hawkins' legendary climate visuals from the University of Reading (creator of the warming stripes), Emma demonstrates how shifting conversations from abstract global temperature averages to tangible rainfall increases, flooding disruption, and extreme weather costs creates immediate relevance for businesses, cuts through resistance, and opens doors for people who would never engage with traditional warming narratives.
    Emma opens with a delightful icebreaker from Dr Matt Sawyer's Lighthouse carpentry project session: "what colour is the sky where you are?"
    This simple weather question highlights how naturally we discuss meteorological conditions in the UK (will it ever stop raining becoming a constant refrain), yet struggle to connect these everyday observations to sustainability conversations.
    The gap between acceptable, easy weather talk that trips off the tongue and awkward, sometimes political climate discussions represents a massive missed opportunity for engagement.
    The episode introduces Ed Hawkins' climate visuals website (ed-hawkings.github.io) featuring not just the famous warming stripes but remarkable visualisations including 400 years of cherry blossom dates in Japan (showing progressively earlier blooming as temperatures rise), demonstrating that climate impacts extend far beyond heat to encompass timing, seasons, and precipitation patterns.
    Emma argues that whilst warming, greenhouse effects, hot house earth terminology, net zero, and carbon reduction all link fundamentally to heat (alongside melting ice caps and sea level rise), these concepts remain hard to grasp on a day-to-day basis because they are incremental and abstract.
    Global average temperature increases may mean colder conditions locally, or changes so gradual people genuinely have not noticed much warming, creating the persistent "so much for global warming" reaction when it is pouring rain.
    This confusion reveals that common knowledge about why it is getting wetter simply does not exist, representing a critical communication gap that sustainability professionals can address.
    The Science of Global Wetting Explained Simply:
    Emma returns to basic chemistry and physics (acknowledging it has been a long time since most people engaged with these subjects) to explain the warming-to-wetting mechanism. Emissions rising from fossil fuel burning, deforestation, and other human activities cause carbon dioxide buildup trapping heat, slowly turning up Earth's thermostat.
    Temperature rises create hundreds of impacts beyond the commonly-discussed melting ice, sea level rise, heatwaves, and wildfires. Climate responds to temperature increases through multiple mechanisms: warmer oceans store heat causing water expansion (raising sea levels, which blew Emma's mind), Arctic sea ice melt makes oceans darker so they absorb more heat (the albedo effect, another mind-blowing revelation), and crucially, for every degree the atmosphere warms it can hold approximately 7% more water, becoming more humid.
    This represents the golden takeaway statistic: at roughly 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels, the atmosphere holds significantly more water. For regions in rain shadows like the UK (where Atlantic weather systems deliver precipitation), this means substantially more rain because the atmosphere carries more moisture.
    The impacts become immediately tangible: heavier rain, stronger storms, more dangerous extreme weather, landslides, mudslides, loss of roads and railways from coastal erosion, and flooding that people can genuinely feel rather than abstractly understand.
    UK and US Rainfall Statistics Demonstrating the Pattern:
    Emma provides striking UK data showing the trend is undeniable. January 2026 saw 117% of normal rainfall nationally, whilst Northern Ireland experienced an incredible 170% of January rainfall (one of the wettest Januarys ever recorded).
    September 2025 brought England nearly 150% of normal rainfall, with some regions experiencing extreme outliers over 200% of average precipitation. Most remarkably, 2023 was the wettest year ever recorded in UK history.
    These are not small shifts; they represent significant structural changes in climate patterns that accumulate year after year, creating the trends and patterns that define climate change.
    The US shows regional variation (some areas getting drier, others wetter, particularly the Midwest and Northeast), but critically, rainfall is shifting towards short intense bursts causing flash floods rather than steady precipitation, exemplifying what Emma calls frequency (more of it) and intensity (the really destructive characteristic).
    Intensity matters most because annoying drizzly rain causes minimal problems, but concentrated downpours create catastrophic disruption.
    Why This Reframing Works for Business Engagement:
    Emma describes asking workplace teams an open question: "What should we be more worried about as a business - the heat or extreme weather and flooding?" This question brings people to the table who would never engage with traditional warming discussions, because everyone has flooding and extreme weather experiences (drains collapsing, flash floods, houses undermined, motorway delays, factories at risk, staff unable to reach work).
    A hospice client identified flooding as a massive operational issue affecting medicine delivery, supply chains, and ambulance access. These stories punch through far more easily than abstract warming concepts.
    Conversely, when Emma asks about heat, only about one-third of people have relevant experience (working from home with fans, minor annoyance unless they are severely stressed, involved with outdoor workers, or supporting vulnerable populations).
    Heat can be chronic and relentless (Emma trained teams from Cyprus and Greece in September 2025 who were drained and cynical after weeks of high 30s to low 40s temperatures, asking "why is no one coming to help us?"), and heatwaves are now five to ten times more common than 50 years ago, creating deadly conditions for vulnerable people and outdoor workers.
    However, extreme rainfall and storms represent acute shocks: sudden, really destructive, hugely expensive events involving people movement, resource deployment, rescue operations, building closures, and transport shutdowns.
    This disruption carries massive costs, and whilst it hits the most vulnerable hardest, in business contexts cost always matters. Starting conversations about risk using frequency and intensity frameworks (how much does a one-off event cost, how do we model for it becoming more frequent and intense) opens eyes rapidly: 100,000 pounds every 10 years may not be problematic, but 100,000 pounds every two years or 200,000 pounds annually becomes untenable when temperatures will continue rising through the century with no turnaround.
    The Double Whammy and Agricultural Impacts:
    When heat and wet interact, agricultural businesses face double whammies: summer heatwaves causing business disruption, winter flooding and extreme weather compounding problems.
    Putting costs to these combined impacts promises that "eyes and ears will open," and Emma notes she has deliberately avoided using the word sustainability and barely mentioned carbon throughout this conversation, demonstrating how relatable this framing becomes.
    Four Cut-Through Messages for Workplace Conversations:
    Emma provides practical messaging that avoids sustainability jargon whilst creating engagement:
    Climate change is changing the risk landscape (insurers and finance industry already know this; look at insurance documents for proof)
    It's not just about getting warmer; it's about getting wetter in lots of parts of the world (making it relatable when people see pouring rain daily)
    Planning now requires addressing both chronic and acute shocks (heat is often chronic, extreme weather is acute shock, really messing with resilience; this alone generates hour-long conversations)
    Use Ed Hawkins' visual diagrams showing clear causal relationships between carbon dioxide, temperature change, humidity, and rainfall (couldn't be easier to understand)

    Emma challenges listeners to craft their own cut-through messages, keeping them simple and open, avoiding expectations beyond establishing that warming is happening alongside wetting, questioning what this costs businesses, what risks it creates, and how it affects operations looking forward five to ten years.
    The richness of this conversation topic creates natural engagement without forcing sustainability frameworks onto reluctant audiences.
    In this climate communication and business risk episode, you'll discover:
    Why the atmosphere holds 7% more water for every degree of warming (the golden statistic)
  • Straight Talking Sustainability

    How To Navigate Your Sustainability Career When Something Needs To Change

    16/02/2026 | 43 mins.
    In this deeply practical and liberating episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow sits down with Claire Osborne, accredited climate career coach with 15 years of sustainability experience.
    Claire also has over 2,000 hours working with individual clients from organisations including the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, Amnesty International, Octopus Energy, and Unilever.
    In this episode, Emma and Claire explore why experienced sustainability professionals are increasingly questioning whether to stay in their roles, leave the sector entirely, or find completely new paths that balance mission with life beyond work.
    Claire reveals how the tangled ball of wool representing career confusion can be untangled not through endless qualification-chasing or hypothesizing futures, but through inner foundation work, creating tight briefs that make decisions obvious, and crucially, testing your way forwards with two-week pilots that provide felt experience rather than theoretical speculation.
    Emma opens with Claire's delightful claim to fame: performing as a Union Jack knickers-flashing nun on roller skates in the 2012 Olympics closing ceremony Monty Python skit watched by 27 million people, demonstrating that Claire brings both professional coaching credentials (International Coaching Federation member, accredited climate change coach) and wonderfully human experiences to her work.
    This sets the tone for a conversation acknowledging that sustainability professionals are whole humans navigating complex lives, not just technical experts optimising carbon footprints.
    Claire describes a profound shift in how sustainability roles are being perceived by employers, creating significant tension for experienced professionals who entered this work to deliver tangible outcomes (cutting emissions, protecting nature, winning hearts and minds) but increasingly find employers viewing sustainability narrowly as reporting, compliance, and risk protection.
    This misalignment between purpose-driven professionals and operationally-focused employers, combined with geopolitical changes impossible to ignore, is fundamentally changing people's stamina and making it harder to show up with optimism, energy, patience, and clarity of direction.
    The conversation introduces two critical concepts: burnout (working too hard without alignment to what you believe in, not just overwork) and bore-out (feeling under-challenged, disengaged, procrastinating, equally stressful as burnout especially when you possess strong purpose).
    Both conditions leave people questioning whether to do something differently within current work or whether it is time for something completely different, balancing mission with enjoying life whilst delivering that mission. Claire works almost exclusively with experienced professionals (multiple roles under their belt) navigating these questions.
    Claire describes how people typically arrive with a "tangled ball of wool" where everything feels knotted together: climate change complexity, personal values, location preferences, cultural fit, work-from-home balance, financial needs, family support requirements.
    The biggest mistake people make is trying to solve this in one leap, jumping straight to job boards asking "which job am I going to do?" when meaningful work (especially with independent businesses or self-employment) rarely appears on traditional job platforms. More fundamentally, this represents an incredibly complex question that cannot be answered through single-step thinking.
    Emma recognises the Christmas-to-New-Year anxiety spiral (am I doing the right thing, could I be doing more, what are my goals) that Claire validates as common for purpose-led professionals, though she identifies that self-criticism, fear, and judgement often show up in internal debates about "where do we go, what is enough, am I enough?"
    This reveals why Claire's coaching always starts with looking internally, working on a simple principle: growth flourishes in fertile ground. Depleted, self-critical people operating from limiting beliefs (the very coachy phrase Claire apologises for) simply do not have minds open to possibility.
    The work begins with practices helping people stay healthy in body and mind, examining stories they tell themselves ("I'm not the kind of person who does this," "I could never do that"), and building internal foundations before attempting external navigation.
    Once foundations are established, the next objective is twofold: creating a decision filter (a brief for where you want to take your career) using what Claire calls "the freedom of a tight brief" (a marketing phrase describing how sufficient clarity makes answers obvious, like receiving an empty picture frame suddenly revealing what artwork would fit).
    Claire shares her personal example: decorating a first flat felt impossible until receiving empty frames from a friend, which immediately clarified what would go on walls, what colours would work. Creating the brief involves clarifying signature strengths, topics that make you curious and excited, building a decision filter for what to say yes to and critically what to say no to (stopping time-wasting).
    However, the output (the brief itself) matters less than the journey taken to get there, because clarifying strengths and interests is where confidence comes from, where conviction emerges, where people discover their USP and can communicate it to themselves and others with power.
    The conversation tackles the dangerous trap of information asymmetry: we possess complete information about current jobs (creating false security, keeping us clinging to life rafts when beautiful islands sit just offshore) whilst having very little information about desired options.
    Claire emphasises not hypothesizing your way forwards (assuming what directions might look like, either over-romanticising or catastrophising) but instead testing your way forwards through little pilots providing felt experience that answers questions with real information rather than theoretical speculation.
    This testing phase represents Claire's favourite part because people suddenly get hooked in their hearts with bungee ropes and fly forwards, with practical questions getting knocked down left, right, and centre because they have felt excitement rather than imagined possibility.
    Emma shares Andy Middleton's pivotal moment sitting on her doorstep saying "Emma, you can do this, I've got your back," recognising that sometimes one human's belief unlocks confidence that 18 months of internal dialogue could not achieve.
    Claire introduces a brilliant practical tool: the energy tracker, spending five minutes daily for seven days noting what gave energy and what took it away. Her own energy tracker revealed loving big philosophical conversations about ideas, where the world is going, how to show up in it.
    Her initial reaction: "that's not a job," dismissing it as interesting but not useful. When she finally discovered coaching, it hit her "like getting hit in the face with a brick," making obvious that this work would be energising despite difficult days discussing harder sustainability realities and shared fears.
    The episode explores the dangerous over-emphasis on technical qualifications, with Claire observing people asking the wrong question: "what knowledge do I need to finally feel enough?" rather than more fundamental questions about environments they like working in or specific purposes they are driving towards.
    Whilst corporate sustainability roles increasingly demand technical qualifications, people must first answer whether they want to stay in sustainability roles, and if so, what those roles look like, before deciding which technical skill to acquire.
    Emma passionately reinforces this from her trainer-training experience, where people fixate on knowledge as their barrier ("what if people ask questions I can't answer?") when actually knowledge is the least of their worries.
    The sustainability facts can be learned in the first hour of training; the remaining time demands soft skills (listening, meeting people where they are, applying business or sector knowledge with sustainability wrapping).
    Emma emphasises it took her 20 years in consultancy to understand and believe that being the most knowledgeable person was not the goal, a realisation that contradicts how consultancy traditionally works (selling expertise and advisory time).
    Claire notes that 95% of skills used in sustainability are soft skills, identical to skills used in other consulting fields, yet people easily get sucked into knowledge-acquisition vortexes that take them away from human experience.
    If we want to engage people in change, we must show up as humans, empathising and listening, which becomes impossible when entire brains are occupied trying to recall the right fact.
    She observes that clients frequently arrive having completed prestigious courses (CISL Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership often mentioned) without getting the answer they sought, because missing ingredients include: processes breaking complexity into answerable chunks rather than one giant leap, exposure to case studies showing what is possible beyond corporate sustainability (if you cannot see it you cannot be it), and crucially, social accountability systems.
    The social accountability concept represents what Andy Middleton provided Emma: teams of people supporting each other for who they are in their work, meeting regularly, having intimate honest conversations in safe spaces, holding each other accountable to compassion, reflection, and action, pushing past icky moments to gain real insight.
    Claire is sceptical about LinkedIn's role here despite finding great...
  • Straight Talking Sustainability

    What Are The 5 Pillars of Net Zero? A Simple Maturity Framework To Show Where You Are and What Comes Next

    09/02/2026 | 17 mins.
    In this practical and clarifying solo episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow cuts through net zero jargon by introducing the Five Pillars framework from the Race to Zero campaign's Exponential Business Playbook, giving listeners a step-by-step maturity model that reduces overwhelm, helps organisations identify where they actually sit on the journey (often further ahead than they realise, or sometimes not as advanced as assumed), and provides clear guidance on what comes next without getting lost in complexity.
    This framework moves beyond operational emissions housekeeping to explore how net zero becomes genuine business opportunity through model transformation, strategic investment, and influential storytelling that shapes industry direction.
    Emma opens by acknowledging the multifaceted nature of sustainability work, noting how last week's mind-blowing episode with Steffi Bednarek on climate psychology contrasts with this week's operational focus, demonstrating that the podcast could run for five years without covering half the relevant territory.
    She introduces maturity indexes as powerful tools for reducing overwhelm and establishing current position, having recently worked with food and drink clients in Scotland using maturity frameworks, and previously with the NHS Evergreen Assessment which provides stepped progression models.
    The value of maturity frameworks lies in helping organisations understand where to start (a constant question Emma receives), recognising that some clients are far more advanced than they realise (like a hospice industry client working with Emma who has accomplished huge amounts but is not talking about it, missing critical leverage opportunities), whilst others assume more progress than actual implementation warrants.
    The Five Pillars framework specifically targets net zero rather than broad sustainability, offering universal applicability regardless of sector or size.
    Pillar One: Cut Your Operational Emissions represents the foundation, focusing on Scope 1 and 2 emissions from direct operations (things organisations have control over, including buildings, factories, company fleet, business travel).
    Emma emphasises starting with what you know, what you have data on, rather than flying off to complex areas. The steps are simple: set a target (commit to halving emissions by 2030), start cutting emissions, track progress, and begin disclosing. Nothing else initially.
    Quick wins include switching to clean electricity, upgrading heating and cooling systems, electrifying vehicles, and reducing unnecessary business flights.
    Most organisations can slash significant emission chunks just by tightening up these areas, with the excellent news that this pillar usually saves money through efficiency improvements. This is fundamentally about operational efficiency rather than strategic transformation, making it accessible and financially positive for most organisations.
    Pillar Two: Decarbonise Your Value Chain addresses where real emissions sit: Scope 3, everything outside direct control including suppliers, customers, and how products are used.
    With 15 Scope 3 categories (not all applicable to every organisation), purchased goods and services represents the major category affecting everyone, alongside transport of goods, professional services spending, and numerous other upstream and downstream activities.
    This pillar demands procurement stepping up, requiring sustainability strategies to genuinely reach top suppliers rather than superficial engagement.
    Value chain thinking examines both sides: upstream (supply chain) and downstream (customer use, product disposal, entire lifecycle).
    Emma stresses that without addressing this pillar, organisations are merely doing housekeeping rather than substantive climate action.
    Whilst potentially intimidating (this is only Pillar Two), enormous opportunities exist, particularly through the shared pathways concept Emma discussed in previous episodes: who are you sharing these challenges with, and how can collaborative approaches accelerate progress?
    Pillar Three: Build and Scale Climate Solutions represents Emma's favourite pillar because climate action transforms into genuine business opportunity beyond efficiency savings.
    This examines business model itself: how organisations can pivot towards climate-friendly solutions, whether through digitisation, product-as-service models, transport reduction, transitioning to low carbon and circular models, or educating customers about low carbon lifestyles. The focus shifts from operational tweaks to strategic transformation with outward influence.
    Organisations set measurable goals for this work, potentially including revenue targets from climate-positive activities, whilst thinking about nature integration, R&D investment, and circularity principles. Disclosure, KPI setting, measurement, and learning-sharing continue, but the work fundamentally differs from Pillars One and Two efficiency focus.
    This represents where net zero strategy genuinely reshapes what organisations do and how they create value, moving beyond compliance towards innovation.
    Pillar Four: Mobilise Finance and Investment sounds intimidating but essentially means putting money where commitments sit, or where organisations want to be.
    Achieving low carbon futures requires funding things that facilitate that transition, shifting money from carbon-intensive to low carbon investments without necessarily finding new capital.
    This demands policy and mindset shifts in senior teams and investment strategies, recognising that money drives transition (carbon follows money fundamentally).
    This pillar includes investment location decisions, technology and infrastructure choices prioritising low carbon fuels and materials, R&D allocation, and consideration of high-quality carbon removals alongside nature protection and restoration.
    Banking and pensions definitely feature, but also publishing percentages of investment aligned with low carbon futures, which signals intention publicly and indicates position and direction to stakeholders.
    This fits with exponential growth curves Emma discussed previously: organisations need to make investment decisions considering carbon rather than defaulting to business-as-usual, integrating closely with Pillar Three business model work as strategy rather than just efficiency.
    Pillar Five: Shape Policy and Narrative addresses the often-forgotten influence dimension that Emma emphasises people dramatically underestimate.
    Signals from organisations impact entire sectors and thousands of employees, communicating "we're doing this now" messages that permission innovation, resource allocation for transition thinking, and cultural shifts towards operating in new paradigms.
    This pillar examines how organisations show up and leverage their influence in competitive, individualistic environments whilst recognising shared problems requiring collaborative solutions.
    The easiest applications people understand involve communications, lobbying, and advocacy, but deeper questions matter: what are you lobbying for, which tables are you at, what do you spend time on (signalling direction of travel), who are you talking to, what messages are you sharing on panels? Emma particularly loves working with MDs and senior teams on this because they command significant platforms depending on organisation type.
    Providing them with confidence-building nuggets and sound bites (through carbon literacy training, sustainability training, or one-to-one coaching at senior levels) that they can deploy in public forums creates gold dust impact that moves mountains.
    Emma notes the transcript appears cut off mid-sentence whilst discussing what the sector currently hears, but the core Five Pillars framework has been comprehensively explained, providing listeners with a maturity model they can immediately apply to assess current position and identify next steps.
    The framework's power lies in systematic progression from operational efficiency through value chain engagement and business model innovation to strategic investment and influential advocacy, ensuring organisations do not remain stuck in housekeeping whilst genuine transformation opportunities pass them by.
    In this net zero maturity framework and implementation strategy episode, you'll discover:
    Why maturity indexes reduce overwhelm by showing clear step-by-step progression towards net zero
    How Pillar One operational emissions (Scope 1 and 2) usually saves money through efficiency
    Why focusing only on operational emissions without Scope 3 represents mere housekeeping
    How Pillar Two value chain decarbonisation demands procurement genuinely engaging top suppliers
    Why Pillar Three transforms climate action from cost centre into genuine business opportunity
    How business model pivots towards climate solutions create measurable revenue potential
    Why Pillar Four financial mobilisation means shifting...

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About Straight Talking Sustainability

Welcome to Straight Talking Sustainability! I'm your host, Emma Burlow. If you're feeling lost in all the sustainability talk or struggling to see real results in your business, this podcast is for you. We’ll clear up the confusion and focus on practical, straightforward actions that actually work. Join me as I talk with experts, share real-world stories, and tackle the common roadblocks that stop businesses from making progress. This is all about making sustainability easier and sharing what truly makes a difference. Let’s keep it simple, effective, and make sustainability stick!
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