From intent to action: the regenerative pivot
The regenerative transition requires moving beyond short-term performance management towards a systemic vision. Here are six steps to get the ball rolling—without claiming to solve everything.

Jacques Tassin, Vivre la Forêt (2025), Carol Sanford, The Regenerative Business (2017), Daniel Wahl, Designing Regenerative Cultures (2016), Rapport Shift Project (2022), Kate Raworth, Doughnut Economics (2017).
1 – Go back to your company’s core function
Pivot question: What are you fundamentally meant to contribute to life? Too many companies define their purpose by their product (we sell clothing), their market (we are in retail), or their performance (we generate returns). A regenerative company doesn’t define itself by what it extracts or sells; it defines itself by what it regenerates, supports, or enables.
- Run an immersive strategy workshop with your executive team and a few external stakeholders (life scientist, farmer, frontline employee, younger voice). Ask this unfiltered question: “If we disappeared tomorrow, what would the living world—human and non-human—truly lose?”
- Then craft a collective reformulation of your living contribution: which systems do we actively want to restore to health? Soil? Dignity? Food autonomy? Territorial cohesion?
Suggested tool: Business Contribution Canvas (inspired by the “raison d’être,” extended to the living world)
Don’t leave with a slogan—leave with a compass.
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