This disclosure asks an organisation to explain which stakeholder groups it has considered and what their interests, concerns and views are in relation to the sustainability matters that are material to the business. In practice, the report should show that stakeholder input is not just acknowledged in general terms, but has been used to understand what matters most to different groups and how those views have informed the organisation’s assessment and reporting.
The practical focus is on breadth and relevance: the organisation should cover the stakeholder groups and parts of the business that are actually affected, rather than relying only on a few well-known or flagship sites. The aim is to show how the organisation has identified and reflected stakeholder perspectives across its operations, value chain and material topics in a way that is proportionate to its footprint and impacts.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official EFRAG source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request stakeholder engagement and board briefing evidence
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own labels first, then map them to the disclosure. For example, use your usual names for stakeholder groups, consultation channels, leadership packs, and board updates rather than framework terms.
Please provide the stakeholder engagement evidence for SBM-2.
Why it fails: It uses framework language only, gives no clue which internal team should respond, and does not say what records, dates, channels, or leadership updates are needed. That makes it hard to find the right evidence and easy to return an incomplete pack.
Please send the stakeholder engagement log, consultation notes, and board or committee update pack for [reporting period], showing the groups we spoke to, how we heard from them, the main issues they raised, and where those points were summarised for [board / committee name]. Include the source file, date range, and owner for each record.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
State which stakeholder groups were included, how they were grouped, and what counts as an engagement method, interest, or board briefing in this disclosure.
Explain what the stakeholder map shows about who the organisation listens to, how it gathers views, and how those views reach the board.
If the mix of groups, engagement channels, or board reporting changed, note whether that reflects a shift in priorities, coverage, or the way input is escalated.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for SBM-2 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
We keep the board updated through a standing pack for each meeting, plus ad hoc briefings when a material issue emerges. Our main external groups are employees, suppliers, customers, local communities, investors and regulators; we hear from them through site visits, surveys, grievance channels, supplier reviews, customer panels and community meetings. - The views we hear most often are about safe working conditions, product quality, timely payment, lower emissions, packaging reduction and clearer reporting. - In the last year, 1,240 employees took part in surveys or town halls, 86 suppliers joined review calls, 420 customers gave feedback through panels or complaints, and 18 community meetings were held; each of these feeds into the papers sent to directors and committee members before decisions are made.
Illustrative only: shows how a company can describe who it engages, how it does so, what those groups care about, and how that information reaches the board.
We use tenant forums, contractor meetings, investor calls, resident drop-ins and regulator check-ins to gather views from the groups most affected by our operations. Those groups include tenants, building users, contractors, investors, nearby residents and public authorities, and their main concerns are building safety, energy use, service quality, accessibility, rent affordability and complaint handling. - During the year, 64 tenant meetings were held, 27 contractor sessions took place, 12 investor updates were delivered, and 9 resident forums were run; the board receives a monthly summary plus escalation notes where issues need a decision. - Committee chairs also receive a short digest of recurring themes so that directors can see where expectations are changing and where management action is still needed.
Illustrative only: shows a different sector using different engagement channels while still covering the same four disclosure points.
How companies report SBM-2 in practice
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A group of warehouse workers has raised concerns about shift patterns, while local residents near a distribution site have focused on traffic and noise. The reporting team has also heard from a lender that wants clearer climate transition information.
A preparer has minutes from town-hall meetings, a supplier survey and a grievance log, but no single document that summarises all engagement activity. The board asks for a concise description of how the company has gathered stakeholder input during the year.
During drafting, the sustainability team has a long list of comments from employees, investors and community groups. Some comments are operational requests, while others are broader concerns about safety, pay, emissions and local access to jobs.
The sustainability report is being finalised, and the board pack contains a dashboard of stakeholder issues, a summary of engagement outcomes and a note on unresolved concerns. The chair wants to know how the board itself was kept up to date.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Start with the plain-language explainer, then work through the step-by-step preparation section and the listed datapoints. The page also gives draft-output prompts, so you can turn the collected information into a first-pass narrative rather than starting from a blank page.
The page says to prepare four datapoints: stakeholder groups, engagement approach, stakeholder concerns, and the board briefing route. Use those as your minimum data set before drafting.
Use the page’s stakeholder-groups datapoint as the starting point and make sure the scope is clear enough to support the narrative and any evidence pack. The page does not give a fixed list, so you need to align the scope to your own reporting context and document it consistently.
Capture the approach in a way that shows how engagement was carried out and how it links to the concerns reported. The page’s preparation section and evidence pack are the main places to anchor that documentation.
The page is useful for splitting ownership across ESG, HR, data owners and governance contacts because it names the key datapoints and the board briefing route. Assign each input to the person or team that can evidence it, then keep the ownership trail in the workbook.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items and five assurance claims to verify, so use those as the core of your file set. Build the pack around claim, risk and evidence so a reviewer can trace each statement back to support.
Treat them as a check-list for what a reviewer is likely to test: each claim should have a clear risk and supporting evidence. The page is designed to help you verify the disclosure before it goes into a draft or assurance process.
The page lists common reporting gaps and mistakes, so use that section as a pre-submission review. It is especially helpful for spotting missing datapoints, weak evidence, or a narrative that does not line up with the underlying records.
The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format, which is intended to help you organise the preparation and assurance steps. Use it alongside the page’s datapoints, evidence pack and assurance claims to build a draft that is easier to review.
Yes, the page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative table where relevant. Use them as a formatting and drafting aid only, and make sure your own figures and narrative stay internally consistent.
The draft-output section gives visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a content-index line to help you convert the prepared data into a usable draft. Start with the narrative starters, then use the content-index line to show where the disclosure sits in your report.
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