Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Tuesday 03 November 2020 6:19 am  |  Updated:  Tuesday 03 November 2020 6:30 am

CEOs, take note: Hygiene is now a boardroom issue

By: Simon Sassoon

Add as a preferred source on Google
Bars Reopen Across New Zealand Under COVID-19 Alert Level 2
Smart chief executives know that their company’s reputation among stakeholders now involves hygiene strategy as much as any other area of business

The history of business is full of inflection points. 

Some are instantly easy to recognise, and fatal for non-innovators: the iPhone surpassed and killed the once ubiquitous Blackberry, while digital streaming rendered Blockbuster obsolete. 

Others are more gradual and harder to see. Entertainment venues, for example, took anti-smoking legislation in their stride and transformed, while health and safety has gradually become embedded in workplaces. 

We are now on the cusp of a similarly significant shift with hygiene — and it is moving very rapidly. 

While the headline focus right now is on the looming second UK lockdown and the race for a vaccine, zoom out to see the bigger picture. We are now reaching an inflection point on how we as a society view hygiene, which will increasingly take on a core role in future business strategy, long after Covid-19 is a distant memory.

Smart chief executives know that their company’s reputation among stakeholders now involves hygiene strategy as much as any other area of business. Investors who have seen national cinema chains shut and commercial property companies struggle to collect rent amid widespread safety concerns are watching. Plotting hygiene risk in great detail is now a business imperative.

Companies that directly serve consumers — already highly sensitive to customer perceptions about corporate behaviour — now have hygiene reputations to manage too. And from an HR side, there is increased scope for directors to be personally liable if employees claim that the company’s duty of care in terms of health has not been fulfilled.

The pandemic has also increased focus on non-Covid viruses — both their preventability, and the hours lost through poor general hygiene in the form of staff absences. 

Read more

Nigel Farage asks the crudest question: are you with me or against me?

Nigel Farage speaking at a podium during a press conference, addressing current political issues and public concerns

Overnight, we suddenly became aware of how viruses lurk in our everyday lives. Recent medical guidance published by the Australian government’s scientific research agency, which received global media attention, showed that flu viruses remain on surfaces for 17 days. (The new coronavirus can remain on surfaces for a staggering 28 days.) We never used to consider whether we were washing our hands enough or properly cleaning work surfaces. Well, we’re considering it now.

All of the above mean that hygiene’s place in both our societal consciousness and in the business world will be transformed — for good.

At the very least, companies will continue to score the easy points — disinfecting primary cross-contamination points such as door handles, using temperature scanners at entry, and investing in air purification systems that reduce transmission. But as this trend develops, a more integral focus on hygiene will be required.

There are clear parallels with cyber security’s journey from the IT department to the boardroom. What was once the responsibility of a company division graduated to being firmly on the C-suite agenda. Just as no modern M&A transaction completes without a company’s cyber defences being robustly due-diligenced, hygiene is now impossible to ignore.

We should therefore expect hygiene to sit alongside other big beasts of internal corporate life such as advertising, sales and marketing, legal, and accounting. It will be intrinsic to how a company grows, strategises, and manages its stakeholders.

We may not have chief hygiene officers in place to save this Christmas, but change is looming. And, as with all inflection points, we may soon struggle to remember how we ever did it any other way.

Main image credit: Getty

Read more

If Burnham wants firms to hire young people, he needs to get out of their way

Labour's Rachel Reeves has been urged to offer a tax relief to curb the number of Neets in the UK.

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Jobs and Money
  • Opinion

Categories

  • Opinion
  • Personal Development

Trending Articles

  • Billionaire Easyjet founder in line for £800m payday from takeover

  • Pension pressure to help swell UK debt to three times size of economy

  • As it happened: FTSE 100 slump as oil soars; Trump says Iran will be ‘hit hard’ tonight

  • Construction sector cuts jobs again as house building slumps

  • Burnham told to launch £100bn tax reform package

More from City PM

  • Nigel Farage asks the crudest question: are you with me or against me?

    Opinion
    Nigel Farage speaking at a podium during a press conference, addressing current political issues and public concerns
  • If Burnham wants firms to hire young people, he needs to get out of their way

    Opinion
    Labour's Rachel Reeves has been urged to offer a tax relief to curb the number of Neets in the UK.
  • Takeovers aren’t the reason the London Stock Exchange is shrinking

    Opinion
    Canada skyline featuring iconic skyscrapers and modern architecture against a clear blue sky
  • The seven growth tests every Budget must pass

    Opinion
    Chancellor holding iconic red budget box outside Downing Street, symbolizing UKs annual budget announcement
  • Britain can’t afford a self-harming tourist tax

    Opinion
    Business professionals in formal attire engaged in a lively discussion at a corporate meeting in a modern office setting.
  • Finally, a regulator is ahead of the curve on AI

    Opinion
    FCA reception area highlighting UKs shift to market-led innovation post-Brexit in financial regulations debate
  • The City should hire on character again

    Opinion
    Diverse group of office workers collaborating at desks with laptops and paperwork in a modern, well-lit workspace.
  • The Debate: Should Britain set up a No 10 North?

    Opinion
    Andy Burnham supporters rallying with banners and signs at a political event, showcasing enthusiasm and solidarity

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy