The Impact Files

S3 E4, Impact consulting: shaping sustainability’s next chapter, Adam Garfunkel, Junxion Strategy

47 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio S3 E4, Impact consulting: shaping sustainability’s next chapter, Adam Garfunkel, Junxion Strategy

Descripción

Our guest this episode is Adam Garfunkel, Partner and Chief Impact Officer at Junxion Strategy, whose career spans more than three decades of campaigning, communications and impact consulting.  Adam’s route into sustainability began unexpectedly. After moving to Canada in his early twenties, he took a job as a door‑to‑door canvasser for Greenpeace, expanding the canvassing operations over time. Returning to the UK, he joined Friends of the Earth as a campaigner, leading lobbying on what became the Environment Act 1995. That early focus on accountability and transparency became, as he puts it, a “red thread” running through his entire career. Adam moved into sustainability communications and then consulting, working with pioneering organisations long before sustainability became mainstream. His client roster includes the UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative, Brompton, The Guardian, Seasalt Cornwall, and notably Adidas, where he served as their lead outsourced sustainability consultant for 15 years. He joined Junxion Strategy in 2013, and was an early mover in the B Corp movement in the UK, with Junxion becoming one of the first consulting firms to offer B Corp certification support. A decade on, he and his team have deep experience helping companies navigate both the original and the newly updated B Lab standards. We explore how Junxion positions itself as an exemplar of purpose‑driven business — a company that sees profit as fuel for purpose, not the purpose itself. Two themes stand out: the importance of relationships over transactions, and the need for courage rather than box‑ticking in a sector that must “meet the moment” if businesses are to play their part in addressing global challenges. Connect with Adam at https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamgarfunkel/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamgarfunkel/] Visit Junxion Strategy at https://junxion.com/ [https://junxion.com/]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Impact Files!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

19 episodios

episode S3 E4, Impact consulting: shaping sustainability’s next chapter, Adam Garfunkel, Junxion Strategy artwork

S3 E4, Impact consulting: shaping sustainability’s next chapter, Adam Garfunkel, Junxion Strategy

Our guest this episode is Adam Garfunkel, Partner and Chief Impact Officer at Junxion Strategy, whose career spans more than three decades of campaigning, communications and impact consulting.  Adam’s route into sustainability began unexpectedly. After moving to Canada in his early twenties, he took a job as a door‑to‑door canvasser for Greenpeace, expanding the canvassing operations over time. Returning to the UK, he joined Friends of the Earth as a campaigner, leading lobbying on what became the Environment Act 1995. That early focus on accountability and transparency became, as he puts it, a “red thread” running through his entire career. Adam moved into sustainability communications and then consulting, working with pioneering organisations long before sustainability became mainstream. His client roster includes the UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative, Brompton, The Guardian, Seasalt Cornwall, and notably Adidas, where he served as their lead outsourced sustainability consultant for 15 years. He joined Junxion Strategy in 2013, and was an early mover in the B Corp movement in the UK, with Junxion becoming one of the first consulting firms to offer B Corp certification support. A decade on, he and his team have deep experience helping companies navigate both the original and the newly updated B Lab standards. We explore how Junxion positions itself as an exemplar of purpose‑driven business — a company that sees profit as fuel for purpose, not the purpose itself. Two themes stand out: the importance of relationships over transactions, and the need for courage rather than box‑ticking in a sector that must “meet the moment” if businesses are to play their part in addressing global challenges. Connect with Adam at https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamgarfunkel/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamgarfunkel/] Visit Junxion Strategy at https://junxion.com/ [https://junxion.com/]

26 de may de 202647 min
episode S3 E3, Sustainability that pays: building commercial advantage, with Will Silverwood artwork

S3 E3, Sustainability that pays: building commercial advantage, with Will Silverwood

Our guest this episode is Will Silverwood, whose career has taken him from commercial strategy through leading sustainability at Whitbread PLC, one of the UK’s most recognisable hospitality groups. Today he brings together decades of experience in transformation, operations and organisational change to help large businesses navigate the realities of decarbonisation. Will shares the story behind his shift into sustainability. After early roles with major brands including Trainline, Gala Coral and Siemens Communications, he spent a decade at consultancy Iris Concise, helping complex organisations build new commercial capabilities. A mid‑career pivot came through a role at QA, where a digital transformation project unexpectedly “almost completely decarbonized the business.” That experience gave him the credibility — and the conviction — to move fully into sustainability. We explore how Whitbread, owner of Premier Inn and several branded restaurants, with 850+ hotels in the UK and rapid expansion in Germany, positions itself within the wider sustainability landscape. Will talks us through work done at Whitbread to balance purpose with scale: electrifying kitchens, replacing gas boilers with air‑source heat pumps, reducing water and energy use, designing out food waste, and embedding renewable energy across the estate. He also explains how platforms like HRS and Booking.com [http://Booking.com] increasingly reward operators who provide emissions data — turning sustainability into a driver of revenue as well as resilience. A central theme is the practical reality of delivering sustainability inside a large, operationally intense business. Will reflects on the governance required to unlock long‑term capital investment, the psychology of customer nudges, and the importance of cross‑functional ownership — from procurement and property to finance and operations. His metaphor is memorable: the sustainability team as “fire starters,” convening the right people, lighting the flame, and then stepping back as the organisation takes ownership. Finally, Will shares where he sees the sector heading. With rising expectations around reporting, supply‑chain ethics and energy transition, he believes the next decade will reward organisations that prioritise the biggest levers, act transparently and focus on solutions that deliver both impact and commercial value. Connect with Will at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/will-silverwood/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/will-silverwood/]

19 de may de 202650 min
episode S3 E2, Creating better apparel: pursuing sustainability with scale, with Tom Cotter, OCEANR artwork

S3 E2, Creating better apparel: pursuing sustainability with scale, with Tom Cotter, OCEANR

Join us in getting to know Tom Cotter, founder and CEO of OCEANR – a fast‑growing sustainable apparel company expanding its product portfolio and working with some of the world’s most recognisable hospitality destinations, private islands and adventure brands. Tom shares the story behind OCEANR’s evolution. What began as three friends in West Cork spotting an overlooked product category – the humble rash vest – has grown into a 90‑person international business with design and production in Latvia and commercial teams in Ireland. After an early attempt at building a consumer brand, demand from organisations looking for credible sustainability partners reshaped the company’s direction. Today OCEANR delivers bespoke uniforms and merchandise for clients such as Necker Island, blending performance apparel with measurable environmental impact. We explore how OCEANR positions itself within the wider sustainability landscape. Tom breaks down their People, Product, Planet framework, from ethical manufacturing and innovative materials to lifecycle analysis, take‑back schemes and partnerships that remove river‑bound plastic and plant mangroves. OCEANR’s B Corp certification reinforces this approach, offering clients external validation in a space where transparency matters. A central theme is the practical reality of building a purpose‑led business while scaling. Tom talks candidly about the challenges of growing through COVID, the long road to profitability, and the constant balancing act between commercial pressures and sustainability commitments. He also reflects on how organisations are increasingly seeking real solutions rather than surface‑level “green” claims — and how OCEANR aims to meet that need. Finally, Tom tells us where he sees the sector heading. With rising expectations around reporting, supply‑chain ethics and environmental accountability, he believes the next decade will reward brands that combine transparency, innovation and genuine impact. Connect with Tom on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-cotter/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-cotter/] Visit OCEANR at https://oceanr.co/ [https://oceanr.co/]

13 de may de 202657 min
episode S3 E1, Rebuilding lives, rethinking work: fair global hiring with Geoff Hucker, CEO Work for Impact artwork

S3 E1, Rebuilding lives, rethinking work: fair global hiring with Geoff Hucker, CEO Work for Impact

Our guest in this episode is Geoff Hucker, a former Emirates pilot whose life underwent a dramatic change after a visit to a small Franciscan orphanage in Addis Ababa, at the height of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. The harsh reality of children dying because families couldn’t afford monthly fees for lifesaving medication, set Geoff on a new path and resulted in co-creation of Beyond the Orphanage, a model focused on reuniting street-connected children with family and supporting them through education into adulthood. Geoff’s story as a driver of positive change doesn’t stop there. In 2019 he launched Work for Impact — a for-profit platform connecting global employers with talent in low-income countries. We take a deep dive into how the business works today: a lean fee structure well below industry norms, 140,000 people on the platform, and contractors typically earning three times local wages. Clients range from Nasdaq-listed companies to small non-profits, and the company’s B Corp status underpins its commitment to transparency and ethical tech. Geoff also reflects on what he’s learned along the way — from balancing purpose with commercial reality to recognising that progress often comes from working with ‘amber’ organisations, not just the ‘perfect’ ones. A conversation about purpose-led entrepreneurship, practical impact, and the small operational decisions that make big social outcomes possible. Contact Geoff on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/geoff-hucker/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/geoff-hucker/] Find out more about Work for Impact: https://www.workforimpact.com/ [https://www.workforimpact.com/]

5 de may de 202647 min
episode S2 E7, Dogs, sustainability & the power of professional standards, with Jay Light, PACT Dogs artwork

S2 E7, Dogs, sustainability & the power of professional standards, with Jay Light, PACT Dogs

Meet Jay Light, Director of PACT Dogs – a fast-growing membership and education organisation shaping professional standards for dog trainers and behaviourists. Jay shares the story behind PACT’s growth. Four and a half years ago it had just a few dozen members and one course. Today it has more than 400 members across the UK and internationally, delivering accredited training and influencing the future of the profession. We explore how PACT sits within the wider animal welfare ecosystem, working alongside the Animal Behaviour and Training Council and helping shape standards across charities, trainers, behaviourists, and regulators. A big theme is the unexpected reach of dog trainers. Jay argues they’re not just working with animals – they’re teaching people. Because dog ownership spans all of society, trainers often work with everyone from families to senior executives. That creates an opportunity: using everyday conversations with dog owners to raise awareness of sustainability and environmental impact. Jay also shares how sustainability runs through PACT’s model. The organisation publishes impact reports, measures its carbon footprint, and has donated more than £80,000 through scholarships, charity support, and sector initiatives. We hear about their unusual training venue – a three-acre former horse paddock turned into a nature-rich site with wildflowers, renewable energy, compost systems, and biodiversity projects. The conversation also explores PACT’s B Corp journey and what ethical business means in practice – from supplier choices and ethical banking to challenging poor industry norms. Finally, Jay reflects on where the sector is heading. With stronger standards and new certification frameworks emerging, he believes the next decade could see a major step forward in professionalism and animal welfare. A fascinating episode on dogs, sustainability, professional standards – and how a small organisation can influence a much larger system. Connect with Jay on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jason-light-89a71259/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jason-light-89a71259/] Visit PACT Dogs: https://www.pact-dogs.com/ [https://www.pact-dogs.com/]

27 de abr de 202651 min