Snowballing into misunderstanding
Every leader has been in that meeting where people struggle to agree on fluid concepts, without anyone noticing and without anyone to blame. Let’s take the case of the double materiality assessment component of the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) to illustrate the problem.
In March 2026, the new Omnibus I Directive (EU 2026/470) was published, providing firms and member state legislators with a simplified framework for CSRD reporting duties across the EU. While the number of data points firms must report on has been significantly reduced, qualifying firms are still expected to conduct double materiality assessments. The underlying principle of a double materiality assessment is laudable: organizations are invited to think about, map, and report upon how their operations affect their operating environment from two perspectives:
- Impact materiality assessment requires firms to take an inside-out view (How does the firm affect the environment and society?)
- Financial materiality assessment prompts an outside-in view (How do sustainability considerations affect risks and opportunities for the firm?).
Double materiality assessments start in the boardroom. However, when cross-functional teams get together, the CFO, the COO, the sustainability officer, and the firm’s general counsel are bound to produce different judgments on what materiality, risk, impact, or fairness mean. Not because these executives fundamentally disagree, nor because they hold different information, nor because the concepts they work with are ambiguous or contested, but because materiality, risk, and fairness may have different interpretations due to the professional lens through which each stakeholder views the world. A finance officer interprets an inside-out view and an outside-in view in terms of financial risk. A sustainability officer may think of stakeholder impact before financial impact. For operations, impact refers to process disruption, whereas the legal team sees liabilities.
For example, on the materiality of carbon emissions, the finance team may read such impact as carbon credit exposure, while in operations, they look at process efficiency and report on incremental improvements having been made. Conversely, the sustainability team reads carbon emissions as a Scope 3 reporting obligation. One concept interpreted across three corporate functions leads to three distinct assessments that fail to speak to each other. Likewise, for workforce diversity, HR reads this as a talent pipeline metric. Legal perceives it as anti-discrimination compliance. For finance, the term excludes potential bottom-line exposure, while the sustainability team flags it as a core social impact indicator under ESRS S1. In brief, four distinct interpretations, with structural rather than informational divergence. Each interpretation is justified, yet each triggers misunderstanding in the materiality assessments.
This problem extends beyond the boardroom. Leaders leverage concepts to guide conversations about operations, finance, strategy, culture, and sustainability. Concepts like value, risk, impact, and materiality carry different weight across different applications. Think about how these concepts get carried out of one meeting and into different layers of the organization. Think about how they shape interactions with external stakeholders, how they are interpreted between functional silos, and how they trickle down to the shop floor. It takes clarity and consistency to ensure that words cascade through the organization as they were intended. Messages get distorted in transit and land differently with different people, not because of what is being discussed, but because of who sits at the table. If interpretation is corrupted before the message gets out of the boardroom, misalignment is bound to snowball.