B Corp Certification: Beyond the Badge
Over the past few years, I’ve noticed the same logo cropping up more and more often. On coffee cups. On websites. In email signatures and fancy social posts. The familiar B Corp badge, quietly signalling that a business is trying to do things differently. With our horizons widening post-treaty, this globally-relevant badge could become a way of promoting your CSR values to an international market.
As someone who’s long been interested in conscious consumerism and the idea that business can be a force for good, it caught my attention. Not because it felt trendy, but because it raised a simple question. What does this badge actually mean in practice, and is it something smaller businesses can realistically aim for?
That curiosity led me down a rabbit hole of reading, conversations, and examples, and to a clearer understanding of what B Corp certification offers, where it falls short, and how relevant it really is for businesses operating right here in places like Gibraltar.
Where B Corp came from and what it stands for
The B Corp movement began in 2006, when B Lab was founded in the United States. Its starting point was a challenge to the traditional idea of business success. Profit matters, of course, but should it be the only measure?
B Lab’s answer was no. Instead, it set out to promote a model where businesses are judged not just on financial performance, but on how they treat their people, how they engage with their communities, how they govern themselves, and how they impact the environment.
Nearly twenty years on, B Corp has grown into a global movement, with thousands of certified companies across dozens of countries. Some are household names. Others are small, founder-led businesses with teams you could fit around a table. What links them is a shared commitment to balancing profit with purpose, at least in principle.
What the certification process actually involves
One of the first things I learned is that becoming a B Corp is not a light-touch exercise. The heart of the process is the B Impact Assessment, which digs into five areas of a business: governance, workers, community, environment, and customers.
The questions are practical and often revealing. Do you have formal policies in place? How do you choose suppliers? How transparent are decision-making processes? How do you support staff development and wellbeing? Apparently, to qualify, a business needs to score at least 80 points out of 200. Most companies don’t get there first time. In fact, the average score for first-time assessments sits much lower, which tells its own story about how demanding the framework can be.
There’s also verification. B Lab reviews evidence, asks for documentation, and challenges assumptions. Certification lasts three years, after which the business must recertify and show progress. It also requires a legal commitment to consider wider stakeholder interests, not just shareholder returns.
The costs of becoming a B Corp
While the B Impact Assessment itself is free to complete, certification does come with time and financial commitments. Once a business reaches the minimum qualifying score of 80 points, it must submit its assessment for verification and pay a fee that is scaled to turnover. For smaller businesses, this typically means a verification cost in the low thousands, followed by an annual certification fee that can start at around £1,000 and rise with revenue. The process involves providing evidence to support claims, making a legal commitment to consider wider stakeholder impact, and recertifying every three years. For many SMEs, the bigger investment is staff time, with the full process often taking six to eight months depending on the complexity of the business.
Why businesses are drawn to it
Talking to people who have gone through the process, the appeal is easy to understand.
For some, it’s about credibility. In a world where claims about sustainability and ethics are everywhere, independent verification carries weight. The badge can reassure customers and partners that values are backed up by action. For others, it’s internal. Purpose matters more than it once did, especially to younger employees. Having a clear framework can help businesses articulate what they stand for and create a sense of shared direction.
There are also commercial considerations. In certain sectors, particularly where ESG credentials are increasingly part of procurement decisions, B Corp status can open doors or strengthen bids.
Where the cracks start to show
At the same time, the more I looked into it, the clearer it became that B Corp is not universally loved.
One criticism you hear often is around scale. As larger corporations have joined the movement, questions have been raised about whether certification standards are being stretched. The term “B Corp washing” has entered the conversation, reflecting concerns that some businesses may tick enough boxes to qualify while still operating in ways that feel at odds with the spirit of the movement.
Then there’s the practical reality for smaller firms. The time required to complete the assessment, gather evidence, and make changes can be significant. For a business without a dedicated sustainability or compliance team, that burden can feel heavy.
There’s also a broader question about whether one framework can fairly assess businesses of vastly different sizes, sectors, and geographies. I don’t think it can.
Doing good without the badge
Let’s be clear, meaningful impact does not require a logo or a badge.
Locally there are plenty of businesses that have been doing the right thing long before ESG became a talking point. Masbro Insurance has supported the local community since 1985, embedding responsibility into its culture through action rather than accreditation. Trusted Novus is widely recognised for its commitment to responsible business practices and community engagement, without needing external validation to prove it. Many businesses actively raise money for charity or run initiatives that support community.
These examples matter. They remind us that values-led business isn’t new, and it doesn’t start with certification.
So, is B Corp worth it?
After spending time understanding B Corp, my view is this. For some of Gibraltar’s businesses, particularly those operating internationally or in highly competitive sectors, the structure and recognition can be worth the investment. For others, especially smaller firms rooted in local markets, similar outcomes can be achieved through simpler, more organic steps.
At the end of the day, what matters most is intent backed by action – especially here in Gib. Treat people well. Be thoughtful about suppliers. Contribute to the community in ways that are authentic and sustainable. Be honest about where you are and where you want to improve.
OTHER
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