At the same time, leading regulatory bodies are underscoring privacy and data security as material ESG topics. From the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) to ESG ratings agencies like Morgan Stanley Capital International’s Emerging Markets Index and beyond, many are redefining privacy and data security in the ESG context. From here on out, they’ll be evaluating companies against a range of evolving metrics. This includes everything from the amount of personal data a business collects to the likelihood of potential data breaches.
That shift is happening in tandem with a growing consumer emphasis on transparency, accountability and trust — which increasingly overlap with privacy. Generation Z — the largest generational cohort in history — is positioned to shape the next normal. These 18- to 23-year-olds expect organizations to treat sustainability meaningfully, address social and economic inequalities deliberately and accomplish both at the speed of societal change.
Because ESG frameworks are geared to demonstrate organizational action against those kinds of priorities, embedding privacy here can help businesses quantify efforts clearly and consistently. Showing stakeholders you understand these dynamics well enough to prioritize privacy as part of your ESG framework sends a clear signal: we reinforce privacy with the focus, rigour and reporting it deserves. That can help you stand out.
How can you act now to position privacy as an ESG priority?
1. Champion privacy as a human right and address it accordingly.
In this year’s survey results, security maintained its title as the attribute personal banking customers care most about when they consider sharing data. Regardless of how we analyzed our survey results, personal banking clients overwhelmingly indicated that security is top of mind for them, and that FIs must deliver on this promise. We expect consumers to continue placing a high degree of importance on security, as value propositions based on enhanced data sharing continue to emerge.
Privacy is non-negotiable. By 1950, the United Nations had already enshrined privacy as a fundamental human right. Even so, as technology evolves, new privacy concerns continue to emerge.