Nestlé Professional Heads

Sourcing sustainable packing: A guide to improving business sustainability

Improving sustainability practices in your business doesn’t have to be complicated. Deborah Meaden and NESCAFÉ Community Regeneration Lead Robin Sundaram, share their key advice on finding more sustainable packaging, suppliers and deliveries.

Nestlé Professional Heads

Improving the sustainability of your product packaging

Good products deserve good packaging, but researching and sourcing the right materials can be difficult and time consuming. Here are Deborah Meaden and NESCAFÉ expert Robin Sundaram’s key insights on making product packaging more sustainable:

  • Use packaging made from one material
  • Use online resources
  • Tell consumers how to recycle your product and its packaging

Use packaging made from one material

Recycling: Products and packaging made of mixed materials (like a bamboo toothbrush with plastic bristles) are much harder to recycle than those made of all one thing. Try to use one recyclable material like cardboard, paper, glass, or plastic in your packaging to make it more sustainable.

Design packaging out of products: Where possible, try to produce products that don’t need packaging or only require minimal packaging. For example, instead of encasing a product like a toothbrush entirely in plastic, you could choose to cover just the bristles. This would minimise packaging while still keeping the bristles hygienic.

Use online resources

WRAP: is a UK registered charity committed to helping tackle climate change by changing the way things are produced, consumed and disposed of. They have a vast range of resources available on their website for a number of different focus areas, from transforming our current food systems to the production of textiles.1

Pledge to Recycle: Another source to check on your sustainability journey is the Pledge to Recycle website. Their aim is to promote consistent plastic recycling and remove confusion around recycling through education and communication.2 Their website has plenty of resources on current research and guidance regarding how and where to recycle plastics and other materials.

Tell consumers how to recycle your packaging

If your product and packaging can be commonly recycled, make it clear to your consumers how they can do this (e.g. by placing in their home recycling bin). You can explain this through copy on the packaging itself, or a leaflet that arrives with the product highlighting your company’s sustainability efforts. Some products and packaging require more specific ways of being recycled: for example, in the UK flexible plastics need to be returned to supermarket collection points and organisations like Podback offer collection and drop off services to recycle coffee pods.3

Nestle Culture
Ready to take your business to a new level? Subscribe for Exclusive Updates on Sustainability, Wellbeing & Business Growth

Improving your business sustainability

When starting out on your business sustainability journey, it can be easy to get overwhelmed by all the information out there, some of which contradicts itself. Deborah Meaden and NESCAFÉ expert, Robin Sundaram, share their expert advice on improving the sustainability practices of your business:

  • Decide on your sustainability priorities
  • Share your mission with consumers
  • Check suppliers and delivery companies’ sustainability credentials

Decide on your sustainability priorities

Make a list: Write down the sustainability concerns you would like to address within your business. You might want to switch to entirely renewable energy or use responsibly sourced materials to make your products. Whatever your primary sustainability concerns, writing them down will help you make decisions about where to focus your efforts.

Break it into smaller steps: Make your sustainability efforts easier for yourself by breaking them down into smaller goals. If you’re looking to make a product from recycled materials for example, you could begin by sourcing suppliers, or deciding whether to use recycled paper, plastic or even textiles.

Share your mission with consumers

With a purchase: You can use every purchase as an opportunity to let your consumers know you are aiming to become more sustainable in your business. Add your sustainability goals or achievements to the bottom of an email purchase confirmation or a flyer delivered with your products (on recycled paper of course). If your business provides services rather than products, your staff can inform clients or customers about your sustainability efforts or carry a flyer with them to their job sites. This can help customers understand more about your brand and why you feel sustainability is important.

Social media: Another good place to share your mission with consumers is on any social media channels you own for your business. This can also be helpful in attracting new customers or clients who are specifically looking for more sustainable companies to use or purchase from. Making your sustainability efforts part of your brand shows consumers you take it seriously and helps build their trust in you.

Check suppliers and delivery companies’ sustainability credentials

Suppliers: One simple step in your sustainability journey can be to ask your suppliers about their sustainability practices. This can start a chain reaction of companies you work with changing their own practices to become more sustainable too. You can also research suppliers closer to where you do business. If you find a supplier with strong sustainability credentials that’s closer to your business this can help reduce your carbon footprint even further.

Deliveries: If you deliver products to consumers, choosing a delivery company that is up front about its practices can also boost your sustainability credentials. Many delivery companies are beginning to switch to electric delivery vehicles, while others will only deliver within their local area to reduce the miles they need to travel.

1.  https://www.wrap.ngo/

2.  https://pledge2recycle.co.uk/

3. https://www.podback.org/

Deborah and Robin hero image

Running a sustainable business without compromising on quality

Running a sustainable business requires research and planning to ensure longevity. Watch our experts, Deborah Meaden and NESCAFÉ Community Regeneration Lead Robin Sundaram, recommend strategies for reducing vehicle emissions and incorporating sustainability into your services without sacrificing quality.

deborah-meaden-local-to-global-hero-image

From Local to Global: Our Guide to Expanding Your Business

Expanding your business within your local market, and globally, requires a strategic approach. WATCH our experts, Katya Simmons and Deborah Meaden, recommend essential strategies for successful expansion

Header Nestle Company

How to Embrace Wellbeing for You and Your Team

When you are running a business, wellbeing can seem unimportant but there are many benefits to embracing it for yourself as an SME owner and for your team. Deborah Meaden, and NESCAFÉ experts, Guy Hughes and June Clark share their advice for prioritising wellbeing in the workplace so you and your team can work more effectively.