Sustainability careers haven’t disappeared — but they have changed.
After more than a decade of rapid growth, hiring has slowed and roles are evolving quickly. Automation, AI, and shifting regulations are transforming what employers expect from sustainability professionals, especially those early or mid-career.
The good news? Companies are still hiring sustainability talent. But hiring managers increasingly want candidates who combine purpose with practical, execution-ready skills.
A new report from BIG Innovation Group, Sustainability Hiring in a Time of Transformation, draws on conversations with corporate sustainability leaders, investors, and hiring managers to identify what makes candidates stand out today.
Here are 10 insights from the report for anyone pursuing a career in sustainability.
Regulations, markets, and corporate priorities are shifting quickly.
Employers value candidates who stay grounded and proactive even when the landscape is unclear. Demonstrating adaptability, resilience, and creative problem-solving in past roles — sustainability-related or not — signals that you can thrive in a fast-changing field.
You don’t need to start from scratch.
If your background is in supply chains, finance, engineering, marketing, or operations, frame yourself as someone applying that expertise to sustainability challenges. Employers consistently say they value professionals who can translate existing business skills into mission-driven contexts.
Networking remains one of the most effective ways to enter the field.
Focus on mentorship, informational conversations, and communities of practice, not just open job postings. Fellowships, professional associations, and alumni networks often create pathways to both learning and employment.
Sustainability teams are often small and depend on other departments to implement change.
Hiring managers look for candidates who can collaborate across teams, understand competing priorities, and frame sustainability initiatives in ways that resonate with finance, legal, procurement, and operations.
Non-linear careers can actually be an advantage.
Experience across NGOs, startups, different industries, or multiple corporate functions can build the systems thinking and cross-functional perspective that sustainability roles increasingly require.
Generalists are finding it harder to stand out.
Many employers recommend building deep expertise in one area — such as carbon accounting, sustainable finance, supply chains, renewable energy, or sustainable packaging — while maintaining broad literacy across the field.
Some skills are now simply expected.
Strong Excel skills, comfort working with data, and the ability to build clear, professional presentations are baseline requirements. Depending on your path, tools like GHG accounting software, life cycle assessment, or data visualization platforms can also help differentiate you.
AI is becoming part of everyday work.
It can help with research, data analysis, and drafting — but employers want candidates who treat AI as a tool, not a decision-maker. Being able to question, interpret, and refine AI-generated outputs demonstrates critical thinking.
Mission still matters.
Employers want people who genuinely care about sustainability and justice — but who can translate that passion into business-relevant action. Curiosity, initiative, and follow-through often matter as much as technical expertise.
Sustainability work is deeply shaped by regulation and market forces.
Candidates who understand emerging climate policy, industry pressures, and global sustainability trends signal that they can think strategically about where the field is headed.
In today’s market, passion opens the door — but skills, strategy, and adaptability help you get hired.
The professionals who stand out are those who combine purpose with business fluency, technical capability, and the confidence to lead change from wherever they sit.
For a deeper look at how sustainability hiring is evolving — and what employers are looking for — read the full report: Sustainability Hiring in a Time of Transformation from BIG Innovation Group.