At IKEA, we believe it is not only about what we create and offer to our customers, but also how we do it, that matters. IWAY, the IKEA way of responsibly procuring products, services, materials and components, is an important part of that how. We choose partners that share our values and seek to be a force for good for people, society and the planet. Through IWAY, we strive to ensure decent and meaningful work for workers, promote a positive impact on the environment, secure children’s rights and improve the welfare of animals across the IKEA value chain.
The IKEA value chain includes all the steps to bring IKEA products to our customers – from design and sourcing of raw materials to manufacturing and distribution of products to IKEA customer meeting points. Our value chain also includes services, from construction and cleaning services, home delivery and product assembly, to bringing back products to reuse and recycle in our efforts to become circular. The IKEA value chain touches millions of lives around the world.
IWAY is the IKEA supplier code of conduct, and it is so much more than that. The IWAY system includes requirements, principles and processes for how we work together with suppliers. It’s a complete system for enabling people and planet positive development for both IKEA and its value chain. We work with more than 1,500 direct suppliers for home furnishing, transport, logistics and distribution services, components, and food, and thousands of other direct suppliers and service providers who help run our business.
Here's how we do it.
Before the start of a new business partnership, we conduct risk assessments and evaluate whether a potential new supplier* is capable and willing to meet the IWAY requirements. These risk assessments continue throughout the partnership.
To understand the risks, we evaluate several different data sets connected to the specific supplier, including:
Based on the risk analysis, we plan implementation and verification activities with the supplier, including focus and frequency of these activities. For a potential new supplier, this risk assessment helps to determine whether we can start up a partnership and what support the supplier will need to implement IWAY requirements and maintain them over time.
Our suppliers take ownership for implementing IWAY in their value chain to fit their business setup, and IKEA takes responsibility for providing support along the way. To secure this way of working, development of IWAY is a continuous journey:
IKEA teams located in different regions around the world play an important role in supporting our suppliers to implement the IWAY requirements. They keep daily contact with suppliers, developing the business to reach our common goals. They also provide trainings on specific topics, facilitate peer learning and provide capacity-building projects, by, for example, helping to develop and execute performance improvement plans.
In every business partnership, we believe in building long-term collaboration based on trust, openness and dialogue. Our suppliers know their business best, and we value their knowledge and expertise to produce home furnishing products, supply delicious meals or provide great services to the IKEA customers. For example, the average length of collaboration with our home furnishing suppliers is 11 years.
Still, we recognise that ensuring compliance every day plays an important role. We use verification activities to complement implementation of IWAY at our suppliers and as a tool to continuously develop the business. Through verification – such as auditing - we can understand whether the supplier achieves the positive impacts that we aim to create by working with IWAY.
At IKEA, we have our own teams of approved IWAY auditors who conduct the majority of IWAY verification activities at our suppliers. These activities are supplemented with additional independent third-party audits. All verification activities are paid for by IKEA. This means that where we conduct audits, we have first-hand knowledge of our supplier practices and can provide our suppliers with support, when needed. This first-hand knowledge is crucial in understanding and leveraging the relation between business performance and social and environmental conditions at the suppliers.
Each year we perform more than 1,000 verification activities at IKEA suppliers. They include gap assessments for new suppliers and full or focused audits for existing suppliers. Frequency of IWAY audits at our suppliers is defined based on regular risk assessments.
Every IWAY verification activity is conducted based on principles of integrity, confidentiality, impartiality, objectivity and evidence. IWAY auditors are responsible for documenting and reporting findings truthfully and accurately.
No verification is the same as our goal is to identify risks or problems and help suppliers implement sustainable changes to improve. Here’s a glance at the typical approach to IWAY verification:
Some examples:
At a sewing factory an auditor may look at how materials arrive at a warehouse, get unpacked, then get cut, sewed, and packed. They also pay attention to workers’ canteen and resting areas, as well as other areas that workers use. The site tour will include visiting areas which can incur environmental impact, such as waste areas or an effluent treatment plant, if there is one at the supplier.
During an audit at a customer delivery service provider, the site tour can include, for example, visiting loading bays, warehouse, inspecting vans or trucks, drivers’ rest areas, outdoor environment etc.
Following up
Following a verification activity, the IWAY auditor evaluates the supplier’s performance against each IWAY Must and IWAY Basic requirement in the relevant IWAY Standard Sections. Follow up action is dependent on the outcome. For example:
We have been working with IWAY since 2000. We are continuously revising it and updating our approach to make sure that IWAY stays relevant, reflects global changes and challenges, and contributes to the commitments in the IKEA sustainability strategy and the IKEA supply strategy.
IWAY is reviewed, by analysing internal and external inputs and trends, comments and feedback from IKEA suppliers, IKEA organisations, as well as from external stakeholders.
As we revise and update the IWAY requirements, we also revise and improve our ways of working with IWAY. An important part of this process, is feedback and concerns that we receive through grievances and appeals process.
Competence development of our co-workers and suppliers is one of the key success factors, along with transparent and open dialogue on our journey, to continuously improve and contribute to creating positive impact for people, society, and the planet.
*Supplier - a company or organisation with which an IKEA company has an agreement and also any sub-contractors to that agreement that supply products, services, materials or components. Here the term supplier applies to suppliers, service providers and other contracting parties.
Product added to your favorites
Product removed from your favorites