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GRI 404: Training and Education 2016 · Topic Standard · Cross-sectoral
Disclosure GRI 404-3

Percentage of employees receiving regular performance and career development reviews

Practical guidance for preparing this disclosure. Use this card to identify datapoints, verify claims and organise supporting evidence. For exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.

Dr Ross Kurinko, GRI Certified Trainer
Reviewed by Dr Ross Kurinko · GRI Certified Trainer LRA educational guidance · Not issued or endorsed by GRI
Disclosure focus

This disclosure asks an organisation to report what share of its employees had a regular review of their performance and career development during the reporting period. In practice, it is about showing how widely these reviews are used across the workforce, rather than simply saying that a review process exists.

The main focus is coverage: whether the organisation applies these reviews across its operations and employee groups, or only in certain parts of the business such as head office or flagship sites. A useful report will make clear the basis of the percentage, so readers can understand who was included and how complete the process is.

* This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.

Before you start

A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.

Preparation
Key datapoints to prepare
DatapointWhat to captureEvidence hintOwner
GenderThe gender groups used for reporting, with the wording and categories taken from the organisation’s own employee records or self-identification fields.HRIS employee profile fields, workforce reporting extract, and the internal category definitions used for the period.HR / People Analytics
Employee groupingThe employee groups the organisation uses to classify its workforce for this disclosure, using the same definitions applied in internal reporting.HR policy or reporting dictionary, workforce segmentation report, and the source extract from HRIS or payroll.HR / People Analytics
Review coverage rateThe share of all employees who had a regular performance and career discussion during the reporting period, calculated against the correct total employee population for the same period.Performance review tracker, HRIS headcount extract, and the calculation showing reviewed employees divided by total employees.HR / Performance Management
Show GRI 404-3 sub-elements (LRA working checklist)
  • Identify the employee group being reported on.
  • State the workforce split by gender.
  • Show what share of all employees had a routine review of performance and career progress in the reporting period.

LRA working checklist - paraphrased; see official source

How to prepare
  1. Set the reporting boundary first: decide which workforce population you will include in the disclosure, and keep that scope consistent across the figures and any narrative.
  2. Define the categories you will use for the breakdowns, using gender and employee groupings that match your internal records so the data can be traced back cleanly.
  3. Pull together the supporting records for the period, including the evidence behind the headcount split and the performance-and-career review information.
  4. Calculate the share of employees who had a regular review during the period, making sure the percentage is based on the total employee population you have chosen to report on.
  5. Prepare the disclosure text or table so it shows the gender split, the employee-category split, and the percentage result in a clear and consistent way.
  6. Record any exclusions, scope changes, or data limitations, then check the final output against the official source to confirm the wording, coverage, and figures still align.
Want to do this on a real report? Practise GRI social disclosures live with Dr. Kurinko — GRI Standards Certified Training. Explore →
Request the review coverage data from HR / People Analytics

Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.

What share of our workforce had a routine performance-and-development conversation during the reporting period, split by gender and employee group?

Use your organisation’s own labels first, then map them to the reporting categories. For example, if you talk about appraisal, check-in, talent review, development conversation or one-to-one review internally, use those terms in the request and only translate them afterwards for reporting.

Weak request

Can you send the GRI 404-3 data showing the the evidence needed for GRI 404:GRI 404-3, split by gender and employee category?

Why it fails: It uses reporting-framework language first, which can force the owner to translate before they can recognise their own data. It also leaves out the population, source, counting basis, and the internal name of the review process, so the result may be hard to verify or reconcile.
Better request

Can you send the review coverage extract for [reporting period] from [system/file]? Please show, for each internal employee group and gender, how many people were in scope, how many had a routine performance/development conversation during the period, and the resulting percentage. Include the population rules, exclusions, counting method, and extract date. I’ll map your terms to the reporting categories after I receive it.

Formal email template
Subject: Data request for [reporting period] review coverage

Hi [name/team],

I’m preparing a sustainability reporting data pack and need your help with the review coverage figures for [reporting period].

Please send a table showing, for the employee groups you use internally, how many people were in scope and how many had a routine performance and development conversation during the period, split by gender and employee category. Please also include the percentage covered.

Could you return the data with the following details:
- the period covered
- the employee population included and any exclusions
- the internal name of the review process used
- the source system or file
- the counting method used
- the date the extract was run
- any notes on data quality, gaps, or assumptions

Please use your own internal terms in the extract, and I will map them to the reporting categories afterwards. A possible LRA training template is attached for reference only; please adapt this to your organisation and check the official source before sign-off.

Thanks,
[preparer name]
Short Teams / Slack version
Hi [name/team] — could you send the [reporting period] review coverage data? I need the headcount in scope, the number who had a routine performance/development conversation, split by gender and employee group, plus the % covered. Please include the source system, population rules, and any exclusions. Use your internal terms and I’ll map them afterwards. Thanks.
Industry examples
Retail

Context. Store-based workforce with seasonal staff and a separate head office population.

Adapted request. Please send the review coverage data for [reporting period] for store colleagues and head office staff, split by gender and the employee groups you use internally. Include permanent and fixed-term staff only, exclude agency workers, and show how many people were in scope, how many had an appraisal or development check-in, and the percentage covered.

Example response. Store colleagues: women 1,200 in scope, 960 reviewed, 80.0%; men 800 in scope, 600 reviewed, 75.0%. Head office: women 300 in scope, 270 reviewed, 90.0%; men 200 in scope, 180 reviewed, 90.0%. Source: performance system export; extract date: 5 Jan 2027.

Manufacturing

Context. Shift-based workforce with production and engineering job families, plus office staff.

Adapted request. Please provide the [reporting period] review tracker from HRIS for production, engineering, and office teams. Show the number of employees in each internal group, split by gender, who had a formal performance and development discussion during the period, plus the percentage covered. Please note whether contractors and agency labour are excluded.

Example response. Production: women 150 in scope, 120 reviewed, 80.0%; men 850 in scope, 680 reviewed, 80.0%. Engineering: women 40 in scope, 36 reviewed, 90.0%; men 260 in scope, 234 reviewed, 90.0%. Office: women 90 in scope, 81 reviewed, 90.0%; men 110 in scope, 99 reviewed, 90.0%. Source: HRIS and appraisal tracker; exclusions: contractors and agency labour.

The full request pack — response form, data table, evidence metadata and sign-off — is in the Download Centre.

Draft your disclosure

LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.

Method note

State how you defined the employee groups and the review measure, and note whether the percentage is based on headcount or another agreed workforce basis for the reporting period.

Context note

Explain that the figures show how widely formal development conversations were used across the workforce, and that differences between groups can point to uneven access or inconsistent practice.

Fluctuation statement

If the figures moved materially from the prior period, link the change to practical drivers such as changes in workforce mix, coverage of the review process, or timing of the assessment cycle.

Content index entry

GRI 404-3 Percentage of employees receiving regular performance and career development reviews — [location / page] / [notes]

Assurance readiness
For each claim, check the evidence
ClaimRiskEvidence to check
We prepared the coverage figure by splitting the workforce into the relevant people groups we use internally, so the number reflects the categories applied in our reporting system rather than a broad headcount only.The assurer may test whether the grouping logic is consistent, whether any staff were placed in the wrong bucket, and whether the reported figure could be distorted by inconsistent category definitions across sites or systems.Workforce classification policy or reporting instructions; HR system extracts showing the category fields used; mapping between internal people-group labels and the reported figure; reconciliation from source records to the published number; review notes showing any reclassifications or exceptions.
We built the disclosed figure from the employee set we treated as in scope for the period, using our normal employment records to decide who counted and avoiding double counting where someone moved between roles or locations.The assurer may probe whether the scope was applied consistently, whether joiners, leavers, transfers, part-time staff, or temporary workers were handled correctly, and whether the same person could have been counted more than once.Population definition used for the period-end or average calculation; payroll/HR extracts; joiner-leaver and transfer logs; reconciliation between source population and the published figure; controls over duplicates and manual adjustments; sign-off showing the scope decision was reviewed.
For the review-rate figure, we used the records of employees who had a formal performance and development discussion during the year and checked the underlying logs before publication to confirm the count was complete and correctly calculated.The assurer may test whether the review records are complete, whether the timing window was applied correctly, whether the numerator and denominator were built from the same employee base, and whether the percentage was calculated accurately.Performance review tracker or HR system reports; evidence of the review cycle dates used; employee population used as the denominator; calculation workbook showing the percentage formula; sample review records or manager attestations; management review and approval evidence; checks for missing, duplicate, or late-recorded reviews.
The reporting boundary used for this disclosure is documented.Coverage exclusions or late scope changes are not evidenced.Boundary memo, entity or site list, and sign-off record.
Evidence pack to prepare
  • The governing policy or written commitment behind this disclosure
  • A methodology / definition note setting out how the disclosure was scoped and prepared
  • Source-system exports the figures or facts were drawn from
  • The internal approval / sign-off record for the disclosure before publication
  • Minutes or records evidencing the relevant engagement or consultation
Common reporting gaps
  • A percentage is stated without the underlying counts (numerator and denominator).
  • The denominator — what the figure is a share of — is not explained.
  • Partial scope is reported as if it were complete coverage.
  • One-off activities are counted as if they were ongoing programmes.
  • Boundary or period changes that move the figure are not flagged.
  • Exclusions from the reported scope are not listed or explained.
Examples
Illustrative examples

Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.

UK retail banking · synthetic · written by LRA

Synthetic illustration only. During the year, we completed formal performance-and-development conversations for 1,260 of our 1,400 employees, equivalent to 90% of the workforce.
- By gender, 92% of women and 88% of men had a review.
- By job level, the figures were 94% for senior leaders, 91% for managers and 89% for other staff.

This example shows how to describe coverage of regular review conversations using a simple narrative, while splitting the result by gender and by employee level. The figures are internally consistent and illustrative only.
Food manufacturing · synthetic · written by LRA

Synthetic illustration only. We carried out annual development reviews for 735 of our 900 people, which is 82% overall.
- By gender, 84% of women and 80% of men were covered.
- By employee group, 90% of supervisors, 83% of skilled operatives and 75% of office staff received a review.

This example demonstrates a second way to present the same disclosure, using different sector language and a different employee grouping. The numbers are made up for training purposes and remain mathematically consistent.
Draft output & visualisation ideas

How to turn the collected data into a draft disclosure. Suggested visuals and a GRI content-index line generated from this disclosure's datapoints.

Suggested visuals

  • Review coverage by gender and employee group — stacked bar: How the share of people who had a formal review is split across gender and employee category, allowing side-by-side comparison of coverage across workforce segments.
  • Coverage rate by employee category — bar: The proportion of employees who received a review in each employee category, making it easy to compare participation across job levels or groups.
  • Coverage rate by gender — bar: The proportion of employees who received a review for each gender group, highlighting any difference in review coverage between genders.
  • Review coverage matrix — table: A cross-tab of gender against employee category with the review percentage shown for each combination, useful where the reporter wants a precise breakdown.
From a number to a disclosure

What separates a figure from a disclosure.

Basic

We reported that 78% of our employees had a regular performance and career development review during the period.

Better

We reported that 78% of our employees had a regular performance and career development review during the period, split by gender and employee group.

Best

We reported that 78% of our employees had a regular performance and career development review during the period, covering all staff and split by gender and employee group; the figure was unchanged from last year because our review cycle and coverage stayed steady.

From company reports
Real published reports Compare side by side →Get it free

Real reports where this topic is disclosed. The confidence label shows how closely each match maps to GRI 404-3 — these are report practice, not exact disclosure examples.

CompanySector · CountryYearMatchPageReportAssurance
Re Sustainability Limited Solid Waste Management Utilities · India 2025 Exact p. 340 →p. 349 →p. 90 → Re Sustainability Integrated Annual Report FY 2024-25 → ey
Evidence in Re Sustainability Limited’s report

What the report shows

Re Sustainability Limited’s 2025 report provides data on employee demographics by age and gender, including detailed breakdowns for those under 30 years old (p.90). It also includes information on employee benefits such as paternity and maternity leave entitlements (p.91), and reports the percentage of employees receiving regular performance and career development reviews (p.349). However, the report does not clearly present comprehensive data on broader workforce diversity metrics or detailed sustainability-related employee programs beyond these points.

Evidence-based summary of this company’s own report — not a disclosure template to copy, and not a compliance verdict.

Datapoint coverage

DatapointStatusPage
GenderA reported value was found on this page. covered p. 90
Employee groupingA reported value was found on this page. covered p. 275
Review coverage rateA reported value was found on this page. covered p. 349

Source trail

  • p. 90Category Age Group <30 Age Group <30 Male Male Male Male Male Male Female Female Female Female Female Female
  • p. 91employees. Male employees can avail of 5 days of paternity leave. Female employees are entitled to 26 weeks
  • p. 89Category Category Age Group <30 Male Female Others Age Group <30 Male Female Others Male Female Others Age Group
  • p. 87Male Female Others Age Group <30 Male Female Male Female Others Age Group 30-50 Male Female Age Group 30-50 Male
  • p. 90Category Category Age Group <30 Age Group <30 Male Male Male Male Male Male Female Female Female Female
  • p. 88Category Category Category Age Group <30 Age Group <30 Age Group <30 Male Male Male Male Male
  • p. 88gender and age and socio-cultural considerations. In FY 2024-25, we hired 7,356 persons, with 14% being women
  • p. 87Category Category Age Group <30 Male Female Others Age Group <30 Male Female Male Female Others Age Group
  • p. 275Employee stock option plan. 13. Financial liabilities: 13A. Borrowings 31 March 2025 31 March 2024 Non Current Current Non Current
  • p. 126Category Scope 3 Category Capital Goods Business Travel Employee Commute Downstream Transportation FY 2022-23 FY 2022-23 23,94,039 28,315 6,929 967 8,811 5,53,222 32,742 42,354 734 7,598 4,09,070 5,98,244 4,92,595
  • p. 206employee benefits (9,103) 490 - - (8,613) -Other liabilities (418) (30) - - (448) -Remeasurement of defined benefit plans 44 - (2) - 42 (1,878) 119 (2) (91) (1,852) 2023-24 Deferred
  • p. 349employee skills and transition assistance programs 404-3 Percentage of employees receiving regular performance and career development reviews
  • p. 52women in the full time employees • 100% of employees receive performance and career development reviews • 7 (out of 10) Employee
  • p. 95female employees in our Indian operations received 21.3 training hours, while their male counterparts benefited from 14.6 hours of training
  • p. 21women in the total full time employees 2.1 Lakh+ Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) beneficiaries 488 Million Units Electricity generated
  • p. 340employee skills and transition assistance programs 404-3 Percentage of total employees by gender and by employee category
  • p. 147Employee wise details of options granted to i. Key managerial personnel Name of KMP No of Options granted % of total
  • p. 88Male Male Male Male Male Male Male Male Male Female Female Female Female Female Female Female Female Female Age Group
  • p. 96Career Development Program (CDP) aims to empower employees to steer their personal and professional journeys by helping them identify
  • p. 340employee category who received a regular perf ormance and career development review during the reporting period Human Capital
Grupo Cibest S.A. Banks / Diverse Financials / Insurance · Colombia 2025 Partial p. 7 →p. 184 →p. 190 → Management Report 2025 → PwC
Evidence in Grupo Cibest S.A.’s report

What the report shows

Grupo Cibest S.A.'s 2025 Management Report provides detailed data on gender distribution and salary differences, showing that senior management is 39% female with an average monthly salary 4.29% below that of men (p.183). The report also includes information on performance evaluations by gender and job category, indicating 100% of men and women received evaluations (p.190), and references salary weighting by employee category, grade level, and gender (p.329). However, the report does not clearly present comprehensive data on other diversity categories or a full breakdown of salary gaps across all employee levels.

Evidence-based summary of this company’s own report — not a disclosure template to copy, and not a compliance verdict.

Datapoint coverage

DatapointStatusPage
GenderA reported value was found on this page (%). covered p. 183
Employee groupingA reported value was found on this page. covered p. 329
Review coverage rateA reported value was found on this page (%). covered p. 190

Source trail

  • p. 183Gender 2025 % of population Average monthly salary % below men Senior Management Female 39% COP 21,522,812 4.29% Male 61% COP 23,166,880 Mid-Level
  • p. 190category Women Men Total % by job category Senior Management 143 227 370 1.61% Mid-Level Management 1,458 1,319 2,777 12.05% Professional
  • p. 329employee category, grade level, and gender = 1 - (Salary weighting of female employees by employee category, grade
  • p. 325employee category in each of the following diversity categories: i. gender; ii. age group: under 30 years old, 30-50 years
  • p. 321employee category. The information reported in the 2025 Management Report with respect to this indicator corresponds only to the information
  • p. 190Men with performance evaluation** 8,861 100% 9,120 100% Employees with performance evaluation by job category Women
  • p. 181women in commercial roles 762 58% 747 57% Number and % of women in STEM (employees with expertise in science
  • p. 250women and men, as well as the representation of employees by age range, for the Asset Management Vice Presidency
  • p. 326employee category by age group = (Total active employees of each company included in the scope by age group
  • p. 325employee category by gender = (Total active employees of each company included in the scope by gender at the close
  • p. 322employee category = (Total training hours provided to employees by employee category in the companies included in the scope
  • p. 323total employees by gender and by employee category who received a regular performance and career development review
  • p. 324employee category who received performance reviews at the close of the year under report / Total employees
  • p. 324employee category who received performance reviews at the close of the year under report / Total employees of the companies
  • p. 323employee category who received a regular performance and career development review during the reporting period. The information reported
Thai Beverage Public Company Limited Food and Beverage Processing · Thailand 2024 Partial p. 176 →p. 177 →p. 185 → Sustainability Report 2024 → LRQA
Evidence in Thai Beverage Public Company Limited’s report

What the report shows

Thai Beverage Public Company Limited's Sustainability Report 2024 provides detailed data on workforce composition, including gender distribution with 81.25% male and 18.75% female employees, and nationality breakdown showing 12.5% Thai and 87.5% Singaporean on page 141. The report also covers employee hires, turnover, and benefits for full-time employees on page 186, and includes gender-disaggregated percentages of employees receiving regular performance reviews on page 177. However, the report does not clearly present comprehensive data on employee training outcomes or detailed diversity metrics beyond gender and nationality.

Evidence-based summary of this company’s own report — not a disclosure template to copy, and not a compliance verdict.

Datapoint coverage

DatapointStatusPage
GenderA reported value was found on this page (%). covered p. 141
Employee groupingA reported value was found on this page. covered p. 186
Review coverage rateA reported value was found on this page. covered p. 177

Source trail

  • p. 141Gender Male Female 81.25% 18.75% Nationality Thai Singaporean 12.5% 87.5% Independence Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director Non-Independent/ Non-Executive
  • p. 105women and men to affordable and quality technical, vocational, and tertiary education, including university 4.4 By 2030, substantially increase the number
  • p. 186employee hires and employee turnover 166-179 401-2 Benefits provided to full-time employees that are not provided
  • p. 179Employee • Number of cases Persons 2 1 0 0 0 • Rate Per 1,000,000 Hours 0.02 0.01 0.00 0.00 0.00 2. Non-Employee
  • p. 178Employee Persons 43,422 49,105 52,347 51,719 56,647 Percent 100 100 100 100 100 2. Non-Employee
  • p. 177Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female GRI 404-3 Percentage of employees receiving regular performance
  • p. 176Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female GRI 102-8 Total number of employees ThaiBev Group 43,422 49,105 52,347 51,719 58,346 Total
  • p. 79Male Female Total number of employees that were entitled to parental leave 18,277 14,184 Total number of employees
  • p. 72standard of living • Right to health Vulnerable Groups • Women, Migrant workers, Third-party employees, LGBTQI+, People with disabilities Human Rights 72
  • p. 176employee by gender, and by employee category ThaiBev Group Total employee (by gender) avr. training hour/head/yr
  • p. 84employee performance management system and expand channels for system accessibility that meets the needs of employees in all age groups
Check your understanding
A people team has headcount records for the year and a review tracker showing which staff had a scheduled performance-and-development conversation during the reporting period. Some workers joined late in the year, and a few were on long leave, so the team is unsure whether to count them in the total.How should the preparer decide who sits in the denominator, and what evidence should support the percentage reported?
Model answer. Use the organisation’s total employee count for the period as the base, then calculate the share of that group who had a regular review during the year. Keep supporting records that show both the employee count and which individuals had a review, so the percentage can be traced back to source data.
Why this matters. The percentage should be built from a clear employee total and traceable review records, not from an informal estimate.
A business has separate employee groups: permanent staff, fixed-term staff, and a small number of interns. The HR system can show review completion for each group, but the team is unsure whether the disclosure should be split by gender and employee category or presented only as one overall figure.What breakdown needs to be prepared alongside the overall percentage?
Model answer. Prepare the overall percentage for all employees, and also break the information down by gender and by employee category. The disclosure is not complete if it only shows the combined figure, because the data also needs those two views.
Why this matters. Report the overall result and the two required breakdowns, so the picture is not hidden inside one total.
At year-end, the HR team finds that some managers held annual review meetings, while others used mid-year check-ins and informal coaching notes. They want to count all of these as the same thing because each employee had some form of development discussion.What judgement should be made about which conversations count toward the reported percentage?
Model answer. Only include employees who received the organisation’s regular performance-and-career review process during the period. Casual coaching, ad hoc check-ins, or other one-off conversations should not be counted unless they are part of that regular review process and can be evidenced as such.
Why this matters. Count only the organisation’s normal review process, not every type of development conversation.
A preparer has calculated that 84 out of 120 employees had a regular review during the year, which gives 70%. The same dataset shows 50 of 60 women and 34 of 60 men received reviews, but the team is unsure whether the subgroup figures need to align with the overall total.How should the preparer check the numbers before sign-off?
Model answer. Check that each subgroup is internally consistent and that the combined employee counts do not exceed the total workforce. In this example, 84 out of 120 equals 70%, and the gender split also adds up correctly because 50 plus 34 equals 84, while 60 plus 60 equals 120.
Why this matters. Before sign-off, make sure the subgroup counts reconcile to the overall workforce and the overall review total.
Analyse this disclosure across real reports

See how companies actually report GRI 404-3 — drawn from their own published reports, with the exact pages, and an LRA AI-assistant that works through it with you. Available to LRA Community members and to students throughout their platform access.

Related framework references

How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.

GRIPrimary
GRI 404-3
within GRI 404: Training and Education 2016
Open official source →
ESRSRelated
ESRS S1
Own Workforce — closest topical match (post-Omnibus ESRS catalogue).
IFRSNo equivalent
No direct IFRS S1/S2 topical equivalent.
Related & explore
Questions this page answers
How do I use the GRI 404-3 page to draft the disclosure from scratch?

Start with the plain-language explainer, then work through the step-by-step preparation section, the datapoints to prepare, and the draft-output section. The page is designed to help you turn source data into a draft narrative, a content-index line, and supporting visuals. ↑ section

What data do I need to collect for GRI 404-3 on training and education?

The page highlights three datapoints to prepare: gender, employee grouping, and review coverage rate. Use those as the core inputs when you are gathering data for the disclosure. ↑ section

How should I set the scope for GRI 404-3 training and education data?

Use the page’s step-by-step preparation guidance and the employee grouping datapoint to decide which workforce groups are included in your dataset. Keep the scope consistent across the data table, narrative, and evidence pack. ↑ section

Who should own the GRI 404-3 data collection and sign-off process?

The page is useful for a sustainability/ESG manager, HR or data owner, and assurance reviewer, so ownership should sit with the person who can gather the source data and maintain the evidence pack. The workbook and assurance section are there to support that handover and review. ↑ section

What evidence should I keep to make a GRI 404-3 disclosure assurance-ready?

The page includes an evidence pack with five items and four assurance claims to verify, each with a claim, risk, and evidence angle. Use those to build a file that shows how the figures were prepared and checked. ↑ section

What are the common mistakes to avoid when reporting GRI 404-3?

The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes, so it is a good check against missing scope, weak evidence, or unclear methodology. Review those before finalising the draft so the narrative, data table, and supporting documents line up. ↑ section

How do I use the Prep & Assurance workbook for GRI 404-3?

The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is meant to support preparation and assurance readiness. Use it alongside the page’s step-by-step guidance, evidence pack, and draft-output section. ↑ section

What can I take from the synthetic example disclosure for GRI 404-3?

The page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative table, to show how the disclosure can be presented. Treat these as examples only and use them to shape your own draft structure and wording. ↑ section

How do I turn my GRI 404-3 data into a draft narrative and content index line?

The draft-output section gives visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a GRI content-index line. Use those outputs to convert your prepared data into a first draft that is easy to review and update. ↑ section

Can I reuse my GRI 404-3 data for ESRS S1 Own Workforce reporting?

The page notes ESRS S1 (Own Workforce) as the closest correspondence, so the data may be reusable across frameworks. That does not mean the reporting requirements are identical, so check the other framework separately before relying on the same dataset. ↑ section

More questions this page can help with
  • GRI 404-3 training and education workbook download how to use it
  • GRI 404-3 evidence pack what should be included
  • GRI 404-3 review coverage rate how to calculate and explain
  • GRI 404-3 employee grouping data collection guidance
  • GRI 404-3 gender split reporting example synthetic
  • GRI 404-3 common mistakes in training and education disclosure
  • GRI 404-3 assurance claims evidence risk claim table
  • GRI 404-3 draft narrative starter wording
  • GRI 404-3 content index line example
  • GRI 404-3 from company reports examples where disclosed
  • GRI 404-3 plain language explainer training and education
  • GRI 404-3 ESRS S1 own workforce data reuse
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Sources, status and disclaimer

This LRA assistance tool is designed for educational and internal data-collection purposes. It is not an official interpretation of the GRI Standards, IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards or EU CSRD/ESRS requirements. When applying these frameworks in professional practice, users should consult and double-check the official standards, guidance and applicable regulatory sources.