Director/VP (16-20 years)

Director, Sustainability Transformation

This isn't just a job; it's a mission to embed sustainability right into the core of how we do business. You'll be the architect and driver of our most significant environmental, social, and governance (ESG) transformations across a major business unit. Think less about reporting, more about fundamental change—from how we source materials to how we sell products and manage our impact. It's about shaping strategy and seeing it through, often with multi-million-pound implications.

Job ID
JD-SUTR-DIRSUTR-006
Department
Sustainability Corporate Social
NOS Level
Level 8
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director, Sustainability Transformation, is here to drive our business unit's sustainability strategy, making sure it's not just a nice-to-have, but a core part of our P&L. You'll translate our overall corporate ESG vision into concrete, measurable actions for your specific business area, influencing everything from product development to supply chain decisions. This role sits right at the intersection of strategic planning and operational delivery, meaning you'll spend your days moving between high-level discussions with the C-suite and getting into the nitty-gritty with operational teams. When you do this well, we'll see tangible reductions in our environmental footprint, improved social impact, and a stronger financial performance because of it. Think new revenue streams from circular products or significant cost savings from energy efficiency. If it doesn't go well, we risk falling behind competitors, facing regulatory fines, and losing trust with customers and investors. Frankly, the challenge is immense—it's about driving long-term change in a short-term world, often with limited direct authority over the teams you need to influence. But the reward? You'll be building a more resilient, responsible, and profitable business, leaving a real legacy.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly shapes the strategic direction and operational execution of sustainability initiatives across a significant business unit, impacting its financial performance, reputation, and long-term resilience. Your decisions will influence capital allocation, product innovation, and market positioning, ultimately contributing to the company's overall ESG performance and investor confidence.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Business Unit Decarbonisation Target Achievement
  2. Desc: Reduction in Scope 1, 2, and relevant Scope 3 emissions for your assigned business unit, against Science-Based Targets (SBTi).
  3. Target: Achieve 75-80% of annual SBTi reduction targets for the business unit.
  4. Freq: Annually, with quarterly progress reviews.
  5. Example: If the business unit's annual SBTi target is a 5% reduction, you'd aim to deliver at least a 3.75-4% actual reduction, backed by verified data.
  6. Metric: Sustainability-Related Revenue/Cost Savings
  7. Desc: New revenue generated from sustainable products/services or cost savings from resource efficiency (e.g., energy, water, waste) within the business unit.
  8. Target: Identify and deliver £2M-£5M in new revenue or cost savings annually.
  9. Freq: Quarterly financial reporting and annual verification.
  10. Example: Launching a new circular product line that generates £3M in sales or reducing energy consumption by 15% across key facilities, saving £2M in utility bills.
  11. Metric: ESG Risk Exposure Reduction
  12. Desc: Improvement in external ESG ratings (e.g., MSCI, Sustainalytics) and reduction in identified material ESG risks for the business unit.
  13. Target: Improve overall business unit ESG risk score by 10-15% year-on-year.
  14. Freq: Annually, based on external ratings and internal risk assessments.
  15. Example: Moving from an 'Average' to 'Low' risk rating with MSCI, or reducing the number of high-severity environmental incidents by 20%.
  16. Metric: Integration of Circular Economy Principles
  17. Desc: Number of new products, services, or operational processes designed or redesigned to incorporate circular economy principles (e.g., design for disassembly, product-as-a-service).
  18. Target: Implement 2-3 significant circular economy initiatives within the business unit annually.
  19. Freq: Bi-annually, tracking project completion and impact.
  20. Example: Launching a take-back programme for a key product line or redesigning packaging to be 100% recyclable and made from 50% recycled content.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Influence & Board Engagement
  2. Desc: Your ability to shape the business unit's strategic agenda by effectively articulating sustainability risks and opportunities to VPs, the C-suite, and the Board.
  3. Evidence: Regular invitations to strategic planning sessions; your recommendations consistently making it into board packs; VPs proactively seeking your input on major decisions; positive feedback from C-suite on board presentations.
  4. Metric: Cross-Functional Collaboration & Buy-in
  5. Desc: The effectiveness of your approach in getting different departments (e.g., Operations, Product, Finance) to actively participate in and own sustainability initiatives.
  6. Evidence: Voluntary participation from other departments in sustainability working groups; successful adoption of new sustainable practices without constant oversight; positive feedback from peer VPs on collaborative projects; your team's initiatives being prioritised on other teams' roadmaps.
  7. Metric: Team Leadership & Development
  8. Desc: How well you build, mentor, and empower your team of sustainability professionals, ensuring they have the skills and support to deliver complex transformation projects.
  9. Evidence: High team retention rates; successful promotion of team members; positive feedback in 360-degree reviews regarding your leadership style; your team consistently meeting project deadlines and delivering high-quality work.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Making a Tangible, Large-Scale Impact
  2. Daily: You'll be leading multi-million-pound projects that genuinely reduce our carbon footprint, improve working conditions in our supply chain, or create new, sustainable revenue streams. You'll see your strategies translate into real-world change, not just reports.
  3. Motivator: Solving Complex, Multi-Dimensional Problems
  4. Daily: Every day brings a new challenge that requires you to connect dots across finance, operations, product, and external regulations. You're constantly wrestling with ambiguity, finding innovative solutions, and making strategic trade-offs.
  5. Motivator: Influencing and Shaping Organisational Strategy
  6. Daily: You'll be in rooms with the C-suite and Board, presenting your vision and recommendations. Your input will directly shape the company's long-term direction, not just for sustainability, but for the business as a whole.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. If you crave immediate gratification, or if you need to see every single piece of your work come to fruition exactly as planned, you'll likely struggle. You'll spend a fair bit of time building compelling business cases that ultimately get deprioritised due to short-term financial pressures. You might champion a brilliant idea only for it to be shelved because of a sudden market shift or a change in leadership's focus. The reality is often messier and slower than the glossy sustainability reports suggest.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Garbage In, Garbage Out' Data Problem: Spending 60% of your time chasing, cleaning, and estimating data from suppliers and operational sites that don't track it properly, meaning your sophisticated strategy is built on a foundation of questionable spreadsheets.
  2. The 'Cost Centre' Stigma: Constantly having to justify your existence and budget to leaders who still view sustainability as a compliance exercise or a marketing expense, not a core driver of long-term value.
  3. Quarterly Results vs. Generational Change: Pitching a 10-year, capital-intensive decarbonisation plan to an executive team whose bonuses are tied to the next quarter's EPS.
  4. Influence Without Authority: Being held accountable for the company's carbon footprint while having zero direct control over the factories, vehicle fleets, or procurement decisions that create it.
  5. The 'Perfect is the Enemy of the Good' Paralysis: Debating the perfect methodology for a single data point for weeks while the organisation waits for strategic direction, sometimes leading to 'analysis paralysis'.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable work environment where priorities rarely shift.
  2. Direct control over large operational budgets or teams outside your direct reports.
  3. Guaranteed immediate implementation of every strategic recommendation you make.
  4. A role where you can avoid internal politics or challenging established ways of working.

ADHD Positives

  1. The constant need to pivot between strategic thinking, problem-solving, and influencing diverse stakeholders can be highly engaging and stimulating, preventing boredom.
  2. The ability to hyperfocus on complex, multi-dimensional challenges, especially when deeply motivated by the mission of sustainability, can lead to breakthrough solutions.
  3. A natural inclination towards 'systems thinking' and seeing interconnectedness can be a huge asset in understanding the broad impact of sustainability initiatives.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The sheer volume of information and constant context-switching required at a Director level can be overwhelming; we can support with dedicated focus time and clear priority setting.
  2. Maintaining focus on long-term, multi-year projects amidst urgent, reactive demands can be tricky; we'll work with you to structure your time and delegate effectively.
  3. Executive meetings often involve complex social dynamics; clear agendas, pre-reads, and opportunities for follow-up questions can help.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong spatial reasoning and 'big picture' thinking are often associated with dyslexia, which is invaluable for understanding complex supply chains and environmental systems.
  2. Excellent problem-solving skills, particularly for non-linear challenges, are highly beneficial when developing innovative sustainability solutions.
  3. Often possess strong verbal communication skills, which are critical for influencing and storytelling at the executive level.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Heavy reliance on written reports, board packs, and detailed regulatory documents can be demanding; we offer tools like text-to-speech software, proofreading support, and encourage visual communication where possible.
  2. Managing large amounts of detailed data for ESG reporting can be challenging; we provide access to data visualisation tools and support for data validation.
  3. We can offer flexible formatting for documents and presentations to aid readability, and ensure meeting notes are clear and concise.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep commitment to facts, logic, and ethical principles aligns perfectly with the integrity required in sustainability reporting and strategy.
  2. Exceptional ability to identify patterns and inconsistencies in complex data sets, crucial for GHG accounting and impact analysis.
  3. Strong focus on detail and accuracy, ensuring our sustainability data is robust and auditable.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The role involves significant, often nuanced, social interaction with diverse stakeholders; we can support with clear communication guidelines, pre-meeting agendas, and direct feedback.
  2. Unexpected changes in priorities or project scope are common; we aim for transparency in decision-making and provide as much advance notice as possible.
  3. Sensory environment considerations: we offer flexible working arrangements, quiet zones, and choice of office setup to minimise distractions.

Sensory Considerations

Our main office is a modern, open-plan space which can sometimes be bustling, especially during peak project times. That said, we offer quiet working zones, noise-cancelling headphones, and flexible work-from-home options. Expect regular video calls and occasional travel to operational sites or partner offices, which can vary in sensory input (e.g., factory noise, different office environments).

Flexibility Notes

We genuinely believe in flexibility. We offer hybrid working, allowing you to balance office presence for collaboration with focused work from home. We're also open to discussing adjusted hours or other accommodations to ensure you can thrive in this role. Just ask.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director, Sustainability Transformation (L6)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and champion the business unit's sustainability strategy, making sure it aligns with our broader corporate ESG goals and directly contributes to the P&L. This isn't just theory; it's about making it real and measurable.
  3. Drive large-scale decarbonisation programmes across the business unit, identifying key 'decarbonisation levers' (like energy efficiency, fuel switching, fleet electrification) and securing the capital investment needed to pull them. You'll be accountable for hitting our SBTi targets.
  4. Integrate circular economy principles into product development and supply chain operations. This means working hand-in-glove with Product and Procurement VPs to design for disassembly, explore product-as-a-service models, and build robust reverse logistics. It's about finding new revenue streams and reducing waste.
  5. Lead the business unit's ESG data assurance process, moving us from 'limited' to 'reasonable' assurance. You'll oversee the collection, validation, and reporting of critical ESG metrics, preparing for external audits and defending our data to investors. Frankly, this is where the rubber meets the road on credibility.
  6. Act as the primary interface with C-suite and Board members for your business unit's sustainability performance. You'll present progress, risks, and strategic recommendations, answering tough questions and securing buy-in for major initiatives. Expect to be challenged.
  7. Build, mentor, and lead a high-performing team of Sustainability Leads and Managers. This means setting clear objectives, fostering their development, and empowering them to deliver complex projects. You're responsible for their success.
  8. Navigate complex regulatory landscapes (like CSRD, TNFD) and translate them into actionable compliance strategies for the business unit. This involves working closely with Legal and Finance to ensure we're not just compliant, but ahead of the curve.
  9. Supervision: You'll operate with full strategic autonomy within your business unit, reporting directly to the CSO for strategic alignment and major decision points. Day-to-day, you're expected to lead and execute independently, only escalating truly novel or enterprise-level challenges.
  10. Decision: You'll have significant decision authority within your domain: full control over your team's budget (typically £2M-£10M+), hiring and firing decisions for your direct reports, and approval of major sustainability projects up to £5M. Decisions impacting broader corporate strategy or requiring capital expenditure above £5M will need CSO and/or C-suite alignment.
  11. Success: Your success will be measured by the tangible achievement of business unit specific decarbonisation targets, the financial impact of sustainability initiatives (new revenue/cost savings), the improvement of our external ESG ratings, and your ability to effectively influence and gain buy-in from senior leadership for your strategic vision. Building a high-performing, engaged team is also critical.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 hours weekly: Supercharge your Sustainability Transformation with AI

Let's be real, at the Director level, your time is precious. You're juggling strategic planning, stakeholder engagement, and team leadership. The last thing you need is to get bogged down in manual data crunching or drafting endless reports. Here's how AI isn't just a buzzword, but a genuine productivity booster for a Sustainability Transformation Director.

ID:

Tool: Automated Data Harvester & Validator

Benefit: Use AI-powered OCR and advanced data extraction tools to automatically pull consumption data from thousands of unstructured PDF utility bills, supplier invoices, and operational logs. It won't just collect; it'll flag inconsistencies and potential errors, giving you a cleaner, more reliable data foundation for your carbon accounting platform. This means less time chasing numbers and more time analysing them.

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Tool: Strategic Anomaly & Scenario Modeller

Benefit: Feed years of facility-level energy, water, and waste data into an AI model to instantly flag anomalies and identify the 20% of sites ('hotspots') responsible for 80% of your business unit's environmental impact. Beyond that, use AI to run complex decarbonisation scenarios, modelling the financial and environmental impact of different investment choices, helping you make data-backed strategic decisions faster.

ID:

Tool: Regulatory & Peer Intelligence Assistant

Benefit: Use an AI assistant to summarise dense new regulations (like the 1,000+ pages of CSRD or the latest TNFD guidance) into a concise, 2-page executive brief, highlighting key implications for your business unit. You can also quickly analyse and benchmark the sustainability reports of five key competitors, identifying gaps and opportunities in under an hour. This keeps you ahead of the curve without drowning in documents.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Board & Executive Comms First-Drafter

Benefit: Provide an AI writing tool with key data points, strategic themes, and your desired tone to generate the first draft of your annual sustainability report narrative, internal newsletters, or even town hall talking points for the C-suite. It turns a blank page into an editable, high-quality draft, letting you focus on refining the message and ensuring it truly resonates with senior leadership.

Roughly 15-25 hours weekly across your team, freeing up strategic capacity. Weekly time savings potential
Your team will typically use 3-5 core AI tools, costing around £50-£200/month. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Director, Sustainability Transformation →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At this Director level, your foundation skills aren't just about doing the work; they're about leading, influencing, and shaping the direction of complex transformation. We're looking for someone who can navigate ambiguity, build strong relationships at the highest levels, and drive significant change across the organisation.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

Beyond the foundational leadership skills, you'll need deep, practical expertise in the specifics of sustainability transformation. This means not just knowing the theory, but knowing how to apply it to real-world business challenges, backed by a solid understanding of the tech that helps us get there.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

To step into this Director role, you won't just have managed projects; you'll have managed programmes and led teams of managers. We're looking for someone who has already operated at a strategic level, influencing senior leaders and delivering measurable business outcomes through sustainability. This isn't a learning role; it's a leading role where you'll hit the ground running, shaping our future.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The future of sustainability transformation isn't just about good intentions; it's about smart strategy, robust data, and leveraging the best available technology. As a Director, your ability to understand, evaluate, and strategically deploy these emerging skills and tools will be paramount to our continued leadership in corporate social responsibility.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 16-20 years of progressive experience, with a significant portion (at least 8-10 years) in senior leadership roles focused on sustainability, ESG, or corporate responsibility within a large, complex organisation. We're looking for someone who has genuinely led and delivered large-scale transformation programmes, managed significant budgets (£2M+), and regularly presented to and influenced C-suite and Board-level stakeholders. Experience in a relevant industry sector (e.g., manufacturing, retail, finance) with demonstrable sustainability achievements is a must. This isn't your first rodeo; you've got the battle scars and the successes to prove it.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your skills in driving complex transformation, influencing senior leaders, and integrating sustainability into business strategy are highly transferable. You could move into other industries facing significant ESG challenges (e.g., heavy industry, finance, technology) or transition into roles focused on sustainable investment, policy advocacy, or even academia.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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