The 8 Most Common Mistakes Corporate Social Impact Leaders Make (and how to avoid them)

Mark Horoszowski

Mark Horoszowski is the co-founder and CEO of MovingWorlds.org.

Over 60% of corporate social impact projects fail. In this post, we explore how to stop checking boxes and focus on building the programs your company—and the world—really needs.

You Didn’t Take This Job to Play Small

You took this job because you care. Because you believe business has a role to play in solving real-world problems. But somewhere between employee giving campaigns, executive requests, and year-end reporting, it’s easy to find yourself buried in busywork instead of building impact.

And you’re not alone. Corporate social impact leaders are stretched thin, navigating internal politics, external expectations, and shifting global events—often without clear roadmaps or sufficient resources.

But here’s the thing: this moment in time demands more than business as usual. It demands strategy, courage, and a long-term vision.

To meet the moment, make sure to avoid the 8 most common pitfalls we see CSR leaders make:

Mistake #1: Short-Term Thinking That Ignores Long-Term Sustainability

In many organizations, success is measured quarter by quarter, and that pressure often bleeds into CSR work. It can be tempting to prioritize short-term wins—a high-visibility campaign, a fast spike in employee participation, or a press release-worthy event. But when programs are built for momentary impact rather than enduring value, they often fade quickly. Without a strategic roadmap that looks beyond the next fiscal cycle, initiatives become fragmented, team energy gets spread thin, and stakeholders start questioning the program’s value.

Sustainability in CSR isn’t just about the planet—it’s about ensuring your social impact work has the time, buy-in, and structure to grow. Consider setting 3- to 5-year goals with measurable milestones. Frame initiatives as long-term commitments, not one-off experiments. Remember, real change takes time. In fact, a recent analysis found that nearly 60% of CSR initiatives ultimately fail to meet their objectives, largely due to short-term thinking and poor stakeholder engagement.

Mistake #2: Saying Yes to Executive Pet Projects That Lack Strategy

It’s natural to want to support a senior leader’s enthusiasm for a cause, especially when that support might unlock budget or visibility. But when initiatives are built solely on the interests of one executive—without aligning with company-wide strategy or employee values—they risk becoming distractions rather than drivers of impact.

Programs without strategic grounding often lack clarity, sustainability, or measurable outcomes. And when the executive sponsor shifts roles or priorities, these efforts often disappear. Instead, aim to channel executive interest into strategically aligned initiatives. Bring data and insights to the table to show how their passion can connect with existing CSR goals, employee energy, or business outcomes. That way, you harness influence without losing direction. Research from Harvard Business School found that 77% of CSR programs are not aligned with business strategy—highlighting how easy it is to veer off course.

Mistake #3: Failing to Proactively Plan for Inevitable Crises

Crises aren’t rare events anymore—they are part of the operating environment. Whether it’s a natural disaster, a geopolitical shock, or a moment of social unrest, CSR leaders are often looked to as first responders. Unfortunately, many find themselves reacting under pressure because their organizations haven’t invested in proactive planning.

The best time to prepare for crisis response is before the crisis. That means developing playbooks, aligning with legal and communications teams, defining guardrails for political engagement, and outlining decision-making processes in advance. By preparing for the inevitable, you ensure your team can act quickly, responsibly, and with credibility when it matters most. According to a Benevity executive report, nearly half of CSR leaders report being underprepared to respond to emergent crises, citing lack of structure and internal alignment. That means that 1 in 2 corporate social impact leaders will have their plans derailed in the coming year.

Mistake #4: Overemphasizing Days of Service and Giving Campaigns

There’s a rhythm to every company’s CSR program: Earth Day volunteering, Giving Tuesday giving campaign, a year-end match, maybe a volunteer week. These programs are familiar, relatively easy to manage, and often expected by leadership and employees alike. But familiarity can breed complacency. Just because everyone else is doing it doesn’t mean it’s moving the needle. In fact, these programs end of taking the majority of your limited time while producing no real impact or business benefit.

When too much time and energy is spent on low-differentiation, low-impact activities, CSR teams often miss opportunities to build deeper engagement and more strategic value. CECP’s 2023 Giving in Numbers report revealed that average employee volunteering participation was just 19.8%—down from 29% in 2019. The implication is clear: these activities, while well-intentioned, often fail to resonate broadly or drive sustained engagement.

That doesn’t mean you should cancel them all. But it does mean you should evaluate them critically: What’s working? What’s not? Are they aligned with your company’s values and long-term goals? Focus on doing fewer things better—and building from there.

Mistake #5: Copying What Worked for Someone Else

It’s tempting to replicate high-profile CSR models. Patagonia’s activism is often referenced as gold standard, but few company’s have such resolute founder support. At one time, every Bay Area company seemed to be copying Salesforce’s 1/1/1 model, only to see it shuttered because of a lack of impact, leaving many CSR leaders to then scramble and build something meaningful.

In one global CSR study, only 13% of professionals said their organization’s CSR strategy was “purpose-driven,” suggesting that many companies adopt initiatives without fully tailoring them to their own mission or identity.

When you try to copy-paste another company’s CSR approach without adapting it to your own context, you often end up with superficial programs that struggle to gain traction. Instead, take time to understand your own company’s unique strengths, challenges, and culture. What issues do your employees care about? What capabilities can your business uniquely contribute? A strong strategy starts from the inside out.

Mistake #6: Designing Programs Without Understanding Employee Behavior

CSR programs are often designed by small teams working in isolation, with the best intentions but limited input. It’s easy to assume what employees will care about or participate in, but assumptions don’t drive engagement—insights do.

Behavioral misalignment leads to underused platforms, flat participation, and wasted resources. To avoid this, treat your employees like stakeholders in product design. Conduct surveys, host listening sessions, and collaborate with ERGs. Pilot new ideas before rolling them out broadly. By co-creating programs with employees AND external partners, you build ownership, increase relevance, and improve results. A Psicosmart study found that up to 60% of CSR programs fail due to a lack of employee engagement and tailored strategy—proof that the “design in a cave” approach is no longer viable.

Mistake #7: Underestimating the Power of Skills-Based Volunteering

When most people think of corporate volunteering, they imagine planting trees or serving food. While these activities can build camaraderie, they often don’t make full use of the talent your employees bring to the table.

Skills-based volunteering allows employees to contribute their professional expertise to causes they care about—whether it’s helping a nonprofit with strategic planning, building a website, or offering pro bono legal advice. It creates more meaningful experiences, deeper community impact, and stronger alignment with business goals like employee development and retention.

Despite its higher ROI, many CSR programs hesitate to invest in skills-based initiatives due to perceived complexity. But with the right partners and planning, these programs are not only achievable—they’re transformative. According to Deloitte, employees who participate in skills-based volunteering are up to 50% more likely to report high levels of job satisfaction and retention—clear business benefits tied to deeper impact.

Mistake #8: Waiting for Executives to Give You a Strategy and Budget

It’s easy to fall into a holding pattern: waiting for clearer guidance from the C-suite, more budget, or alignment from legal. But the reality is that clarity often follows action, not the other way around.

When CSR leaders wait too long for perfect conditions, promising ideas stall. Instead, use what you have to start small. Build pilot programs. Collect data. Share employee stories. Demonstrate value and momentum. These early wins become the foundation for advocating for bigger investments and broader support. According to ACCP’s 2023 survey, over half of CSR professionals say they lack sufficient resources to meet growing expectations—yet the most successful teams are those that use small wins to unlock more support over time.

You don’t need permission to lead. Start by building the case, and the clarity will come.

You’re Not Alone—But You Are the Spark

Corporate social impact work is complex, often thankless, and increasingly urgent. But it’s also one of the most meaningful roles inside any company.

So give yourself time to think. Audit your programs. Identify what matters most.

And then: take bold action.

If you need a thought partner to help you play big, book time with MovingWorlds. We’re here to help you turn potential into impact.