• Linkdin
Alchempro Webinar

HK's Elevate considers worker sentiment in responsible sourcing audits

22 Sep '21
3 min read
Pic: Frame China / Shutterstock.com
Pic: Frame China / Shutterstock.com

Elevate, the Hong Kong-headquartered industry leader in sustainability and supply chain services, has said that it believes in the value of Worker Voice and therefore it integrates Worker Sentiment Survey into all Elevate Responsible Sourcing Assessment (ERSA) audits.

“We understand that a standard social compliance audit only provides a partial picture and that listening to workers is a core component of improving working conditions in business operations and supply chains. By giving workers a voice and the confidence that their concerns are being addressed, factory management can improve staff retention, increase employee productivity, and enhance communications between workers and management,” Elevate said in a blog post on its website.

By integrating direct worker feedback through technology-enabled worker voice, companies can collect a higher volume and greater variety of actionable data for responsible sourcing and due diligence purposes, particularly when identifying risks related to working conditions. More direct data also helps employers strengthen management processes and remediation efforts to ensure more positive worker well-being outcomes as well as improved productivity and retention.

Asking workers directly about the issues that concern them most helps companies identify emerging risk issues and address them early on before they escalate into major problems. According to data collected by the Pew Research Center, over 5 billion people globally own a mobile device, with half of these mobile devices being smartphones. According to 2020 data from the GSMA, 3.8 billion people use mobile internet.

The growing access to mobile technology has empowered workers to log grievances and report on their working conditions in the public domain via social media. Social media has provided an outlet for amplified worker voice and a greater likelihood of workers choosing to publicly raise key issues within global supply chains. Social media campaigns also have increased, holding companies accountable for the treatment and management of workers in their supply chains. Left unaddressed, this can result in reputational damage to brand image, and potentially legal, financial and operational repercussions. The worker sentiment survey can be valuable to factory management as a means of heading off more serious problems, the company said.

By integrating worker voice into the social compliance auditing process, companies can identify key issues early on by listening to workers’ perspectives on the issues that affect them most. Further, as worker survey responses are kept anonymous, workers may feel more able to report sensitive issues.

Worker voice can signal the presence of non-compliances and violations – but taken on its own, it does not provide validated, verified evidence in the same way that audits do. Similarly, worker voice alone cannot identify the full range of social compliance issues, for example, management systems or business ethics.

Therefore, an integrated approach provides a fuller picture of the social compliance performance of a supplier – an audit alone may not be able to identify emerging risks or issues – such as discrimination, harassment, and abuse – that are difficult to identify while an auditor is on-site for a single day. But when both tools are combined, they present a more comprehensive picture – rather than a snapshot – of real working conditions in the supply chain and provide the actionable data to create a lasting, positive impact.

Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)

Leave your Comments

Esteemed Clients

TÜYAP IHTISAS FUARLARI A.S.
Tradewind International Servicing
Thermore (Far East) Ltd.
The LYCRA Company Singapore  Pte. Ltd
Thai Trade Center
Thai Acrylic Fibre Company Limited
TEXVALLEY MARKET LIMITED
TESTEX AG, Swiss Textile Testing Institute
Telangana State Industrial Infrastructure Corporation Limited (TSllC Ltd)
Taiwan Textile Federation (TTF)
SUZHOU TUE HI-TECH NONWOVEN MACHINERY CO.,LTD
Stahl Holdings B.V.,
X
Advanced Search