Map where your products are marketed and which rules apply. The FTC Green Guides frame US expectations; the CMA Green Claims Code guides UK practice; the EU’s proposal adds proof and penalties; the ACCC pursues misleading claims. Sector advertising codes, like ASA CAP guidance, also matter. Keep counsel informed, document interpretations, and update templates promptly. Cross‑border teams should default to the strictest common denominator until jurisdiction‑specific language can be produced, reviewed, and version‑controlled carefully.
Do not repeat what you cannot prove. Require certificates, test reports, or declarations for every claim inherited from vendors, and verify dates, scopes, and coverage. Include substantiation warranties in supplier agreements, and define corrective actions for inaccuracies. Build a red‑flag lexicon to catch risky words early. This discipline stops well‑meaning teams from amplifying errors, protecting your clients while nudging your supply chain toward better data, consistent formats, and timely renewals tied to product updates.
Maintain a substantiation file for each marketed statement: claim text, supporting documents, version history, reviewer approvals, and expiration reminders. Store FSC invoices, lab results, and LCA summaries with traceable filenames. Establish retention timelines and ownership. When a client sustainability lead or regulator asks for proof, respond within days, not weeks. Fast, organized transparency earns trust, reduces stress, and keeps teams focused on delivering design value rather than scrambling to reconstruct missing evidence.