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ESG Measure

Measuring Social Impact: Reporting Guidance for HR Pros

Alice Wright, GoodPAYE

If you’ve ever sat in a meeting where someone asked, “So, what’s our social impact this year?” and the room fell into an awkward silence, you’re not alone. Measuring social impact has become one of those phrases that’s handed to HR with a shrug and a “you’ll sort it, won’t you?”

Well, the good news is it’s far less daunting than it first appears, provided you approach it with the right structure and data.

This guide walks through what social impact reporting involves, why it matters more than ever, and how to build a process that’s credible and drives consistent improvement. If you’re also working on the wider picture of employee benefits and wellbeing, this fits neatly alongside that work.

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What Do We Mean by “Social Impact”?

Social impact refers to the effect your organisation has on people and communities, both inside and outside the business. That includes your workforce, your supply chain, the local community, and wider society.

For HR specifically, this often covers areas such as:

  • Employee wellbeing and mental health support
  • Diversity, equity, and inclusion outcomes
  • Learning and development opportunities
  • Fair pay and reward practices
  • Volunteering and community engagement
  • Workplace safety and working conditions

Social impact reporting, then, is the process of capturing, measuring, and communicating the above.

Why Measuring Social Impact Matters (Beyond Ticking a Box)

There’s a temptation to view social impact reporting as a compliance exercise: something you do because a regulator, investor, or client asks for it. And whilst there’s little doubt that pressure is real, there’s a more compelling reason to take it seriously…

People genuinely care. 

Employees increasingly choose where to work based on an organisation’s values and behaviours, not just its salary bands. Candidates ask about social impact in interviews now, not just what the pension scheme looks like. Many of these expectations tie directly into how organisations think about reward and recognition, so it’s worth keeping the two conversations connected.

Getting this right helps with:

  • Attraction and retention, since people want to work somewhere that does good, not just looks good on paper
  • Investor and stakeholder confidence, with ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) reporting now firmly part of the mainstream
  • Internal decision making, because you can’t improve what you don’t measure
  • Reputation, since social impact reporting done well builds trust, and done badly does the opposite

For a useful primer on how this fits within wider sustainability expectations, the CIPD’s guidance on sustainable business is a solid starting point.

Here’s How To Measure Social Impact

Step 1: Define What “Good” Looks Like for Your Organisation

Before diving into spreadsheets and surveys, take a step back. What does social impact mean for your business specifically?

A manufacturing company might focus heavily on workplace safety and local employment.
A professional services firm might prioritise volunteering hours and pro bono work.
A tech startup might centre its efforts on inclusive hiring and flexible working.

There’s no universal template, so sit down with leadership, sustainability pros (if you have anyone in that capacity) and key stakeholders to agree on the priority areas.

 This becomes your framework, and everything else builds from here.

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Step 2: Choose Your Metrics Wisely

This is where many HR teams tend to either go too big or too small. Too big, and you’re drowning in data nobody can interpret. Too small, and your report reads like a single, slightly apologetic paragraph.

Aim for a handful of meaningful, measurable indicators across your priority areas. For example:

  • Diversity: percentage representation across gender, ethnicity, disability, and age at different seniority levels
  • Wellbeing: employee engagement survey scores, absence rates, take up of mental health support
  • Learning and development: average training hours per employee, internal promotion rates
  • Pay equity: gender and ethnicity pay gap figures, living wage accreditation status
  • Community impact: volunteering hours, charitable donations, apprenticeships offered

The key is reporting consistency. Choose metrics you can track reliably year after year, so you can show progress, or honestly, areas where progress hasn’t happened yet, which is just as important to monitor.

Step 3: Get Your Data House in Order

Most of the hard work in social impact reporting is data collection, not storytelling.

Before you can report anything meaningful, you need to know where your data lives. Is it in your HR information system? Scattered across spreadsheets that three different people maintain? Sitting in someone’s head because Dave’s been doing it that way for years?

Take time to audit your data sources, identify gaps, and put processes in place to capture information consistently going forward. This might mean updating your HRIS fields, adding questions to onboarding forms, or simply documenting Dave’s processes!

Step 4: Be Honest, Even When the Numbers Aren’t Flattering

This is perhaps the most important point in this entire guide, so we’ll say it plainly: don’t be tempted to only report the good news.

Social impact reporting that reads like a highlight reel tends to raise eyebrows, particularly among employees who know what it’s actually like to work there. If your gender pay gap has widened, say so, and explain what you’re doing about it. If your employee engagement scores dipped, acknowledge it and set out your plan to tackle this.

Transparency builds credibility, whereas PR-spin erodes it. And in an age where employees can, and do, share their experiences publicly online, the gap between your reported values and lived reality tends to close fairly quickly, whether you like it or not. The UK government’s own gender pay gap reporting service is a good reminder of how publicly available some of this data already is.

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Step 5: Make It Readable

Once you’ve gathered your data, resist the urge to present it as a wall of tables. Nobody, not your board, not your employees, not your investors, wants to wade through dense spreadsheets to understand whether your social impact strategy is working.

Use a clear narrative alongside your data. Explain what the numbers mean, why they matter, and what you’re doing in response. Visual summaries, simple charts, and short case studies can bring the report to life without compromising on rigour.

Think of it less as a compliance document and more as a story about your organisation’s relationship with its people and communities. Admittedly it needs to be a story backed by evidence, but a story nonetheless.

Step 6: Align with Recognised Frameworks

If your organisation is required to report against frameworks such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Standards, or wider ESG reporting requirements, make sure your social impact metrics map across sensibly.

This doesn’t mean reinventing your entire approach to fit external frameworks, but it does mean being aware of how your internal reporting aligns with broader expectations. It saves duplication of effort and makes your reporting more credible to external stakeholders who recognise these standards.

Step 7: Review, Reflect, and Repeat

Social impact reporting isn’t a once a year fire drill, even though it can sometimes feel that way. The most effective approach treats it as an ongoing process, with regular check-ins on progress, adjustments to targets, and continuous improvement to data quality.

Build in time, perhaps quarterly, to review how things are tracking against your goals. This makes the annual reporting process far less stressful, and far less likely to involve last minute panic.

A Few Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Vanity metrics: numbers that look impressive but don’t reflect meaningful change. “500 hours of training delivered” sounds great until someone asks what people learned, or whether it changed anything.
  • Inconsistent definitions: if “volunteering hours” means something different across departments (eg one team counts time spent organising an event, another only counts time on site), your data won’t add up, and you’ll spend more time reconciling numbers than reporting them.
  • Overcomplicating things: you don’t need fifty metrics. A focused set tracked well beats a sprawling set tracked badly, and it’s far easier to explain to a board member who has two minutes to spare.
  • Forgetting the why: data without context doesn’t tell a story. A pay gap figure on its own raises questions; a pay gap figure with an explanation and a plan answers them.
  • Treating it as a one-off project: pulling everything together in a last-minute scramble each year tends to produce patchy data and patchier reporting. Build it into routine HR processes rather than reinventing the wheel annually.

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Where to Go From Here

Measuring social impact and producing meaningful social impact reporting shouldn’t be a box-ticking exercise. Nor should it involve producing the most impressive looking document in the industry. Instead, it should centre on understanding the real effect your organisation has on the people connected to it, being honest about where things stand, and using that understanding to do better.

For HR professionals, this is genuinely an opportunity, as you’re often closest to the data and the stories that matter most: how people are treated, supported, and developed. Done well, social impact reporting doesn’t just satisfy external requirements, it becomes a useful tool for shaping a better workplace.