GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Paulus Gerardus Josephus Maria Polman

Paulus Gerardus Josephus Maria Polman

Former Unilever CEO, business leader, and sustainability advocate

Netherlands / United KingdomBorn 1984managerUnileverIMAGINEThe B TeamUnited Nations Global CompactSaïd Business School
64
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

64/100

Raw Score

55/85

Confidence

65%

Evidence

Strong

About

Paul Polman used a major multinational platform to push long-term sustainability, human-rights language, and stakeholder-focused business leadership well beyond standard corporate philanthropy.

His public record is clearly stronger on social responsibility and pressure-tested leadership than on publicly observable worship, and it is complicated by controversies around tax politics and later lobbying alignment.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview64%(16/25)
Contribution to Others67%(20/30)
Personal Discipline50%(5/10)
Reliability60%(3/5)
Stability Under Pressure73%(11/15)

Polman's record is materially positive where he uses corporate power to advance sustainability, labor dignity, refugee inclusion, and human-rights language. The score stays out of the top band because his record is not free of stakeholder contradictions, and because his private devotional discipline is only lightly visible in public evidence.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication3/5

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently2/5
Gives obligatory charity3/5

Core Worldview

Belief in god4/5
Belief in unseen order3/5
Belief in revealed guidance3/5
Belief in prophets as examples3/5
Belief in accountability last day3/5

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives2/5
Helps the poor or stuck4/5
Helps people who ask directly3/5
Helps free people from constraint4/5
Helps orphans or unsupported young people3/5
Helps travelers strangers or cut off people4/5

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during personal hardship3/5
Patient during financial difficulty4/5
Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

2009

Took over Unilever and ended short-term earnings guidance

When he became CEO, Polman removed quarterly earnings guidance and signaled that Unilever would be managed for longer-term social and financial durability rather than short-term market appeasement.

The move became the defining governance signal of his tenure and drew early investor skepticism.

high
2010

Launched the Unilever Sustainable Living Plan

Polman put environmental reduction targets and social-impact goals into Unilever's operating model rather than leaving them as side philanthropy.

The plan became one of the most visible corporate attempts to tie scale, growth, and social responsibility together.

high
2012

Joined the UN Secretary-General's High-Level Panel on the post-2015 agenda

Ban Ki-moon named Polman to the panel that helped shape the development framework that became the Sustainable Development Goals.

This extended his public commitments from company policy into multilateral development work.

medium
2017

Resisted Kraft Heinz's hostile takeover bid

During intense shareholder pressure, Polman defended Unilever's longer-term operating model against a takeover he framed as hostile to the company's broader responsibilities.

The bid collapsed within days, strengthening his reputation for holding course under pressure.

high
2018

Publicly backed business protection of civic freedoms and human rights defenders

As Unilever CEO and B Team chair, Polman publicly argued that business has a responsibility to defend civic freedoms and human-rights defenders.

This added direct rights language to his corporate-responsibility profile, beyond climate and sustainability branding.

medium
2018

Headquarters and dividend-tax fight damaged his stakeholder credibility at home

Polman's support for abolishing the Dutch dividend tax and the failed London-to-Rotterdam headquarters plan drew public backlash and shareholder resistance, complicating his public claims about broad stakeholder balance.

The move was scrapped and became one of the clearest integrity blemishes of his tenure.

high
2023

Organized business-leader pressure over human rights in Nagorno-Karabakh

Polman published and signed an open letter urging Azerbaijan's government to uphold human rights and allow safety, dignity, and freedom of movement for people in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The action showed he still uses his network publicly on human-rights issues after leaving corporate office.

medium
2025

Backed Dutch coalition to expand refugee hiring

His public channels amplified Tent Nederland's launch, aligning his advocacy with a concrete employment pathway for refugees and asylum seekers in the Netherlands.

This reinforced a pattern of using business infrastructure to support displaced people rather than only issuing abstract statements.

medium

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Global financial crisis backdrop and early investor skepticism

2009

Polman began his Unilever tenure during the aftermath of the financial crisis while rejecting the usual short-term reporting rhythm.

Response: He doubled down on long-term strategy instead of quickly reverting to market appeasement.

positive

Kraft Heinz hostile takeover attempt

2017

A major takeover bid threatened the strategy and governance model he had been building.

Response: He defended the company publicly and held to the argument that Unilever should not be milked for short-term extraction.

positive

Dividend-tax and headquarters backlash

2018

Shareholders and the Dutch public reacted sharply against the proposed headquarters move and associated tax politics.

Response: He defended the move, but the episode exposed a real gap between his stakeholder language and how the plan was received.

mixed

Progression

crisis years

Public ideals met hard tests from investors, takeover pressure, and tax politics.

mixed

current stage

Post-CEO life continues the same public mission through networks, media, and rights advocacy.

stable

early years

Catholic family formation and service language appear early in his public self-understanding.

forming

growth years

Corporate leadership expanded into a broader theory of responsible business.

upward

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Moves social responsibility into the core business model instead of treating it as charity at the edges.
  • Uses elite networks for coalition-building around sustainability, rights, and refugee inclusion.
  • Keeps speaking in morally accountable terms even when that creates friction with short-term investors.

Concerns

  • Public rhetoric about broad stakeholders was tested by the dividend-tax and headquarters fight and did not fully convince critics.
  • Recent lobbying-related criticism complicates his image as a purely clean sustainability actor.
  • Public evidence is much stronger on institutional ethics than on private religious discipline or close-person obligations.

Evidence Quality

9

Strong

4

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: strong

This profile measures public behavior and evidence, not hidden intention, private sincerity, or spiritual standing before God.