are you acting responsibly?
We support organisations in the field of social responsibility and sustainability.
Services
Make a positive impact
Acting Responsibly is a Swiss-based social entrepreneurship.
We support organisations in developing a strategic approach to social responsibility, considering the
economic, social, and environmental impacts.
We organise regular workshops on sustainability-related topics; develop customised management tools; conduct research projects; and support organisations in reporting on impacts and value creation.
Initiatives
Event Toolkit
We have launched a platform to support event organisers with simple tools in the field of sustainable event management.
Why should you work with us?
Responsible action is the basis for sustainable development
We all have the responsibility to consider the consequences of our actions and strive to make
positive contributions.
Should this come at the expense of creativity, sense of humour and joie de vivre? To the contrary, we believe that these values can only flourish under these conditions.
Workshop
Reporting with the GRI Standards: GRI Certified Training Course
16-17. February 2025, Online
Sustainability Strategy Development
We offer
- Sustainability Vision & Strategy Development
- Stakeholder Engagement Process Guidance
- (Double) Materiality Analysis
- Management of Sustainability Initiatives
- Sustainability Monitoring and Benchmarking Tools
- ISO 20121 certification
- Waste Management Support
Sustainability Reporting
We offer
- Handbooks and sustainability Guides
- Reports in accordance with the GRI Standards
- ESRS Reporting
- ESG Data Books
- Short and creative Sustainability Reports
- External Assurance of Sustainability Reports
Our Events & Workshops
Research
We offer
- Sustainability Impact Assessment
- (Social) Life Cycle Assessment
- Stakeholder Surveys
- ESG Due Diligence
- GRI Gap Analysis
Latest News
The latest ISSB news
12.02.2026
The very high number of datapoints, combined with a massive amount of qualitative information and recommendations that cannot really be checked, turned the ESRS into an administrative monstrosity. The ambition to develop additional sector standards (despite existing frameworks such as SASB being far more advanced) was more wishful thinking than down-to-earth guidance. The revision therefore comes at the last minute. The remaining hope is that the EU has not killed the momentum for transparency on sustainability-related issues with a policy approach of ‘two steps forward and one step backward’.
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