✅ Model answer outline
A strong answer discusses FIVE practical, procurement-led steps to achieve ESG goals and, for each, weighs how effective and realistic it is — discussion, not just a list. The steps should change how the retailer buys, not restate the policy.
📌 Key concepts
- Embed ESG criteria in specification and supplier selection — score bids on environmental and social performance.
- Use a supplier code of conduct and contract clauses — make ESG obligations contractual and enforceable.
- Audit and monitor suppliers with KPIs — verify labour standards and emissions rather than trusting self-declaration.
- Develop suppliers and build capability — help suppliers improve rather than only exiting poor performers.
- Improve traceability and reporting — map the chain and report progress to give customers and regulators evidence.
📊 Worked example
Basic answers list five steps. Good answers explain how each works for the retailer ("a code of conduct backed by audit rights lets Marcus suspend a factory found using unsafe labour"). Excellent answers discuss trade-offs — cost, supplier pushback, audit reliability — and conclude on which steps give the most credible progress, showing balanced judgement.
❌ Common weaknesses
Weak answers restate the ESG policy, give vague aspirations ("be more sustainable") rather than practical procurement steps, or list steps with no discussion of how effective or achievable they are.
📋 LO: 4.1.4 — Apply practical steps to achieve ESG goals
📑 Indicative content: Practical steps procurement can take to achieve environmental, social and governance goals