UK companies are leading Europe in integrating sustainability into their HR strategies (68% vs. 55% European average), even outpacing countries facing strict EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) rules.
However, new research from SD Worx reveals an urgent problem for British organizations: a significant 18% credibility gap exists between what employers claim about their sustainability efforts and what their employees actually believe.
This deficit in trust is a critical challenge for Employee Experience (EX) leaders, as the research clearly links credible sustainability communication to higher retention and motivation.
The Great Disconnect: Narrative vs. Reality
The SD Worx report, based on 5,625 HR managers and 16,000 employees across Europe, shows a stark divergence in perception:
| Perception | UK Employers’ View | UK Employees’ View | Credibility Gap |
| Sustainability Image is Credible | 79% | 61% | 18 percentage points |
| Publicly Promoting Sustainability | 77% | 62% | 15 percentage points |
This 18% credibility gap in the UK is one of the widest in Europe, second only to France (22%).
“Employers often strongly believe in their sustainability narrative, but employees do need to be taken on a journey if they are to be convinced,” says Laura De Boom, doctoral researcher at the University of Antwerp. “This creates tension between what organizations mean and how employees experience it.”
The Reason for the Mistrust
The primary cause of the credibility gap is a lack of consistency—when “fine words or powerful campaigns” fail to match “everyday practice.” Employees lose confidence when they see a disconnect between the company’s public promise and its tangible actions within the organizational culture or their own work experience.
Why the Credibility Gap Matters to EX
For HR leaders focused on the war for talent and internal engagement, the cost of an inauthentic sustainability message is clear:
- Attractiveness & Retention: Employees who view their organization’s sustainability messages as authentic are 12% more likely to view the employer as attractive. Their willingness to leave the organization decreases by 2 to 2.5%.
- Motivation & Satisfaction: Credibility increases job satisfaction and motivation by 8 to 10%. Notably, the effect on satisfaction and motivation is strongest among older employees.
Laura Miller, UK People Country Lead at SD Worx, emphasizes that UK companies are commendably “taking their own responsibilities very seriously.” However, the effort must now shift from strategy to authenticity.
HR’s Playbook for Closing the Gap
To move past a perception of “greenwashing,” HR and communications must focus on three core elements to build a genuinely credible story:
- Accuracy: Share facts and figures on impact, not just vague commitments.
- Authenticity: Showcase real stories from leaders and employees about their involvement and sacrifice.
- Consistency: Ensure that words and actions reinforce each other, making sustainability tangible in the daily work experience and organizational culture.
Only when employees see the sustainability promise reflected in their own experience can the UK close its credibility gap and fully leverage this powerful driver of engagement.

