Context
A national innovation and sustainability network wanted to raise its members' awareness on the digital dimension of their environmental impact.
Sector backdrop. Non-profits typically have lean IT teams, mission-driven boards and a strong appetite for evidence-based action. A structured Sustainable IT programme helps them practise internally what they often advocate externally.
Highlights
- Full digital lifecycle (manufacturing, use, end of life).
- Impacts beyond CO2: water, rare metals, waste, energy.
- Material, software and psychological obsolescence.
- Impact of data and AI, with concrete examples.
Why this matters
Awareness workshops only work when they translate into changed habits. The most reliable predictor is that participants leave with concrete actions tied to their own job, not generic advice that could apply to anyone.
A few patterns came out of the engagement that tend to repeat across organisations of similar scale: teams engage far more when they see numbers from their own organisation, not generic averages.
How the MIKUJY platform supported the work
The MIKUJY platform was used end-to-end to structure the engagement, host the data and consolidate results in dashboards the teams could revisit at any time.
More specifically, the Gamify module fed the awareness workshops with the organisation's own numbers and challenges, so participants could engage with their real footprint rather than generic averages.
MIKUJY consultants brought hands-on professional support throughout the engagement, facilitating workshops, validating data and helping translate the platform outputs into a concrete action plan.
Want a similar trajectory?
MIKUJY helps organisations turn collective Sustainable IT awareness into a measurable, governed and recognised Sustainable IT programme. Reach out to discuss your context and goals.